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《TAIPEI TIMES》 Documentary wins Grand Prize at Taipei awards


Actors Wang Po-chieh, left, and Lu Hsiao-fen pose for pictures after winning Best Leading Actor and Best Leading Actress at the Taipei Film Awards on Saturday. 
Photo: Hu Shun-hsiang, Taipei Times

Actors Wang Po-chieh, left, and Lu Hsiao-fen pose for pictures after winning Best Leading Actor and Best Leading Actress at the Taipei Film Awards on Saturday.  Photo: Hu Shun-hsiang, Taipei Times

2023/07/10 03:00

/ Staff writer, with CNA

Diamond Marine World (鑽石水族世界), a documentary about an ambitious Taiwanese man struggling to survive in Myanmar, was awarded the Grand Prize and Best Documentary awards at the Taipei Film Awards on Saturday.

The film by director Huang Hsiu-yi (黃琇怡) documents the journey of a Taiwanese shrimp farmer who plans to make a fortune by starting a venture in Myanmar, but is accused of criminal activities shortly after arriving there.

Diamond Marine World is a film about Taiwanese trying to chase prosperity in Southeast Asia, Huang said after accepting the Grand Prize, which includes NT$1 million (US$31,918) in prize money.

She added that “it is a story about trust, love and forgiveness.”

The jury said Huang’s documentary showed her ability to sift through the vast amount of footage she had shot in Myanmar and condense it into an “honest and touching” work about the struggles of people with different values and cultural backgrounds.

The jury also commended Huang for her dedication to the work, highlighting that she had filmed in Myanmar for several years on an “extremely tight budget.”

Huang received a grant of NT$800,000 from the government-funded National Culture and Arts Foundation in 2019 to make the documentary, government data showed, but the film’s total budget is unknown.

This year’s Best Narrative Feature Award was given to Gaga (哈勇家), a story about an Atayal tribal family struggling to cope with one unfortunate incident after another.

With an absurd local election as the backdrop, Gaga delicately presents the close bond between the members of the Atayal family and the various challenges facing them and their tribe, the jury said.

Director Laha Mebow (陳潔瑤), who is an Atayal, said in her acceptance speech that it takes a lot of passion to work in the film industry, because “there is often more agony than joy” in the filmmaking process.

Mebow said she would embrace this pain and continue making films to tell more stories about Taiwan’s indigenous people.

Saturday’s big winner was director Lin Chun-yang’s (林君陽) film Eye of the Storm (疫起), which was awarded the Best Director, Best Actor, Best Art Design, Best Visual Effects and Outstanding Artistic Contribution awards.

The movie, inspired by the 2003 SARS outbreak in Taiwan, portrays a group of young medical workers grappling with a deadly disease and tense human relationships in a hospital that has been sealed off.

The Outstanding Contributions Award went to photographer Liu Chen-hsiang (劉振祥) in recognition of his still images for movies made by award-winning directors Hou Hsiao-hsien (侯孝賢) and Chung Mong-hong (鍾孟宏).

The Best New Talent Award was shared by Wilang Lalin (洪金輝) for his role as a father struggling with uncertain future prospects in Gaga, and Yeh Hsiao-fei (葉曉霏) for her role as a student protester in the coming-of-age film Who’ll Stop the Rain (青春並不溫柔).

The Taipei Film Awards received 292 submissions: 40 feature films, 61 documentaries, 160 short films and 31 animations. Of those, 29 films were nominated for the competition, the awards organizers said.

新聞來源:TAIPEI TIMES


Actors Yeh Hsiao-fei, left, and Wilang Lalin pose for pictures after winning the Best New Talent Award at the Taipei Film Awards on Saturday.
Photo: Hu Shun-hsiang, Taipei Times

Actors Yeh Hsiao-fei, left, and Wilang Lalin pose for pictures after winning the Best New Talent Award at the Taipei Film Awards on Saturday. Photo: Hu Shun-hsiang, Taipei Times

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