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Celebrations
as Tsotsi wins Best Foreign Language Film Oscar
There were celebrations
across South Africa and the local film and production industry today,
Monday, 6 March 2006, as South Africa's official entry for the 2006 Academy
Awards, Gavin
Hood's 'Tsotsi', walked away with the coveted Best Foreign Language Film
Oscar.
'Tsotsi' had
secured a string of awards on its road to the Oscars and was up against
57 other
films vying for nomination in the Best Foreign Language Film category
at the global film industry's
most prestigious film event: the Oscars. The nomination of 'Tsotsi' in
this prestigious Academy
Awards category set the entire industry on tenterhooks.
"The award is
considered the Holy Grail for international films seeking to break into
the US
market, and the competition is stiff," said Helen Kuun of Ster-Kinekor
Distribution Marketing at the
time of the nomination.
'Tsotsi', based on
the novel by Athol Fugard, is about six days in the violent life of a
young
Johannesburg gangster. Director Gavin Hood attributes the film's success
to its authenticity. "The
characters and the themes represented in 'Tsotsi' have had a profound
effect on audiences
around the world."
A story of hope and redemption, 'Tsotsi' challenges the audience to change
its attitude towards
the young gangster who has made bad choices in his life based on difficult
circumstances. The
word tsotsi means an urban criminal, street thug or gang member.
Tsotsi stars Presley
Chweneyagae, Terry Pheto, Zola, Kenneth Nkosi, Mothusi Magano,
Rapulana Seipemo and Zenzo Ngqobe among others.
Tsotsi cost US$5 million dollars to make and was filmed on location in
Kliptown, Gauteng. The
film was co-funded by South African and UK financiers, with local financiers
including the
Independent Development Corporation (IDC) and the National Film and Video
Foundation
(NFVF).
Awards
'Tsotsi' was the first film in more than seven years to win both
the Standard Life Audience Award
for most popular film and the Michael Powell Award for Best Film at the
58th Edinburgh
International Film Festival (EIFF).
Producer Peter Fudakowski,
commenting after the Edinburgh accolades: "The EIFF's discovery
of Tsotsi places the film in the excellent company of other Edinburgh
winners, such as 'Rabbit
Proof Fence, The Full Monty, Amelie, Billy Elliot, and Buena Vista Social
Club', so as co-producer
I am confident that Tsotsi will also turn out to be a great international
commercial success."
Accolades
'Tsotsi's' Oscar for Best Foreign Film at this morning's Academy Awards
is a triumph for all South
Africans... according to comment in hand at the time of publishing.
Leading SA producer, Anant Singh in his comments today: "Congratulations
to the 'Tsotsi' team
for bringing Oscar Gold to South Africa. It is fantastic that after many
years of isolation, South
Africa has had Oscar nominations in consecutive years with 'Tsotsi' this
year and 'Yesterday' last
year. This sends out a clear message to the world that the South African
film industry has come
of age.
"Our heartiest congratulations also go out to Cape Town based, Dion
Beebe for wining the Best
Cinematography Oscar for 'Memoirs of a Geisha'. Dion is a very talented
cinematographer and
his Oscar success is well deserved."
And from the IMC: "Once again we have shown that we can compete with
the best in the world
on any terrain," says the CEO of The International Marketing Council,
Yvonne Johnston. "Our
sportsmen and women are winning Olympic Gold, our scientists and inventors
are honoured with
Nobel Prizes and now a South African movie has won the highest possible
accolade in the
industry."
Johnston says 'Tsotsi' is a uniquely home-grown product that has captured
the imagination of the
global entertainment industry. "This is a South African story as
told through the eyes of South
Africans, made in this country with a local cast and crew. We want to
congratulate the director,
the actors, the producers and everybody involved in the making of the
movie. I am sure that the
world has taken note of this remarkable achievement and that this will
provide another shot in the
arm for the local film industry," says Johnston.
The Video Lab team made up the post production guru's,
and included: Brett Manson - SA's only
digital intermediate colourist who took cinematographer, Lance Gewer's
imagery further, giving
the film it's unique look through grading the digital intermediate in
Lustre; Isaac Lui - master
realistic 3D animator, who animated the tricky CG ants over the baby's
face. This 3D work was
pulled together by craftsman compositor Cyril Schuman. Jason Basson managed
the image data,
keeping track of multiple deliveries. Tracey Williams supervised and produced
the visual effects,
digital intermediate and multiple deliveries. Special thanks from Video
Lab also went to John
Brink, Gerhard Roets, Dominika Marcisz, Axel Kompat, Leila Wreyford, Desmond
Allen, Greg
Kirby, Tallen Chow, Wiggie Ellenberger & Gerhard Kriel.
And blowing their own trumpet, University of KwaZulu-Natal's Opera School
& Choral Academy
(OSCA) graduate, Mark Kilian, co-wrote the score for Tsotsi with another
South African
composer, Paul Hepker.
More accolades are expected to stream in today as the news is digested.
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