Russians Snark to launch prestigious Rialto Channels New Zealand movie month. Tune in to catch this film!
Tagged Russian Snark
Russian Snark screens in Paris w/ Producer Q & A – watch the video excerpt here
The Abyss – The Russian Snark Prequel Game
Try out this prequel Russian Snark Game! NZ’s first game to come out with a film in the transmedia context!
Russian Snark picks up top award at Brussels International Film Festival
Award of the International Competition
GRAND PRIZE – BEST OF THE FESTIVAL
Assigned RUSSIAN SNARK – New Zealand
Director: Stephen Sinclair
AWARD FOR BEST ACHIEVEMENT
Attributed to Matariki – New Zealand
Director: Michael Bennet M
SPECIAL JURY AWARD
Attributed to ON BOARD – Morocco
Director: Leila Kilani
BEST ACTOR
Assigned to Iaheto Ah Hi tyrone fr lr ROLR in the film Matariki – New Zealand
AWARD FOR BEST ACTRESS
Attributed to Soufia ISSAM in the film THE BOARD – Morocco
Director: Leila Kilani
Attributed to HAYDER BRE – Turkey
Director: Orhan Oguz
TODAY’S FILM AWARD
Assigned to 18 DAYS – Egypt
Directors: Ahmad Abdullah, Mariam Abou Ouf , Kamla Abu Zikri ,Alaa Ahmed , Ali Mohamed , Sheriff Arafa , Sheriff El Bendary , Marwan Hamed , Khaled Marei and Yousry Nasrallah
BEST SHORT FILM
Awarded to Raju – India Germany
Director: Max Zahle
PRICE “Emile Cantillon” – CINEMA OF TOMORROW AWARD
Director: Auraeus Solito
Celeste Wong , actress in the film My Wedding and Other Secrets (New Zealand) received the honors of the jury and will be responsible for the prizes to filmmakers from New Zealand.
Price of the National Competition
GRAND PRIZE – BEST OF THE COMPETITION
Attributed to BADPAKJE of Wannes Destoop
AWARD FOR BEST ACHIEVEMENT – PRICE MICHAEL LOMBET
Assigned to CALL Cecile Mavet
BEST SHORT FILM
Price of the “Belgian Artistic Promotion” of SABAM
Attributed to RAFI ( cut) of Sandra Fassio
SPECIAL JURY AWARD
Attributed to NEW EARTH Bernard Lists
PRICES OF AUTHORS SACD
The price of the authors of the SACD is awarded to authors of a film (s) Writer (s) and the director. It rewards an original author – creating a personal world, developing a particular style, form in line with the visual context, exploration of new forms of narration, promotion of the experiment.
Awarded to BAD MOON Meryl Fortunat-Rossi and Xavier Seron
BEST ANIMATED FILM
Assigned to EYE OF THE HEAD of Jerome and Pierre Cauwe Musket
BEST SCENARIO
Attributed to FANCY FAIR François Vergani
Special Price Competition “Creation Filmed Deaf”
GRAND PRIZE – BEST OF THE COMPETITION
Assigned STREET
AWARD FOR BEST ACHIEVEMENT
Assigned to all the achievements of Julien Bourget – France
37 Degrees South Breakthrough Screening for Russian Snark in Melbourne
We were invited as a late entry into the prestigious 37 Degrees South Film Market in Melbourne! Screening Russian Snark as an official Market Screening was a great honor and we got a lot of great feedback as a result. Very exciting – Held over several days in tandem with the Melbourne Film Festival, this was a wonderful opportunity to screen our film to overseas sales agents and distributers and to explore new relationships. Thanks everyone for making this possible!
Russian Snark was selected to be one of 7 films screening at the Break Through Screenings, which run in conjunction with the Melbourne International Film Festival to potential sales agents and distributers who come from all over the world specifically to acquire projects and contacts for projects coming out of Australia and New Zealand. It was a unique opportunity for our film to be showcased to these potential new international partners, and I felt that I got a great overview of the current state of play in the market. It was however interesting that there were still quite traditional methods being explored despite the day and date and preponderance in practice today. It was clear that these were challenging times; with new systems in development abut not confirmed as being the final outcome of the currently state of play.
I felt I developed a number of better relationships with my time spent with the local NZ market, the other NZ producers and the NZFC bas we had the opportunity to spend time together, as well as a number of Australian producers who might be potential partners in the future as well as the Canadian co=production practitioners who were interested in re kindling what had been a common transpacific relationship with historic coproduction partnerships with NZ and Canada. Additionally, I will be following up with all the international contacts to continue the relationships and to ensure that when we meet next we will have something to further our connection with.
The success of the market specifically for me was in the first instance getting the opportunity to go and forget some international links for the first time, and I am very grateful to the NZFC for making this possible. Additionally in more concrete terms the leads I am now following for Russian Snark and the other projects would not have been passible with this attending this market and getting a chance to cut though and meet face to face is invaluable.
Bill Gosden from the NZ International Film Festival reviews Russian Snark for the catalogue
Stephen Sinclair’s directorial debut was inspired by the true story of a Russian couple who floated to New Zealand in a converted lifeboat. Screenwriter Stephen Sinclair turns writer/director with this bittersweet comedy about two refugee artists from Russia getting to grips with life in the South Pacific. The unworldly Misha and his vivacious wife Nadia leave their homeland in search of peace of mind and aesthetic freedom, landing like hopeful aliens in contemporary Auckland. Misha heads to the beach and immerses himself in experimental filmmaking, framing luminous B&W images of naked bodies on rocky foreshores. Nadia adjusts to her shiny new environment more pragmatically, but life as Mishas muse, model and breadwinner takes its toll. Stephen Papps (speaking Russian!) charms and vexes as the soulful man-child, while Elena Stejko brings a glowing blonde vitality to her every scene. Stephanie Tauevihi provides a sweet taste of Kiwi, as the unhappily separated PI neighbour who reaches out to Misha at his most forlorn, and brings him gently back to earth.