麻豆社国产

Skip to content

'Riceboy Sleeps' and 'Until Branches Bend' win top film prizes at VIFF

VANCOUVER 鈥 Anthony Shim's coming-of-age drama "Riceboy Sleeps" is proving to be a hit on the festival circuit, taking home the Best Canadian Film Award at the Vancouver International Film Festival.
20221007141056-6340764e4202af331aa0e562jpeg
Vancouver writer-director Anthony Shim attends the Toronto International Film Festival Awards in Toronto on Sunday Sept. 18, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

VANCOUVER 鈥 Anthony Shim's coming-of-age drama "Riceboy Sleeps" is proving to be a hit on the festival circuit, taking home the Best Canadian Film Award at the Vancouver International Film Festival.

The film,which is based on Shim's experiences growing up in British Columbia in the 1990s, also won the prestigious Platform Prize at the Toronto International Film Festival last month.聽

The bilingual story stars Korean actress Choi Seung-yoon as a mother who is looking for a fresh start in Canada with her son. The Best Canadian Film prize, announced Friday in Vancouver, is worth $15,000.聽

Director Sophie Jarvis' first-time feature 鈥淯ntil Branches Bend鈥 also saw a strong showing at VIFF, winning the $10,000 Best British Columbia Film award.聽

Set in Okanagan Valley, 鈥淯ntil Branches Bend鈥 stars Edmonton-born actor Grace Glowicki who confronts an invasive insect that becomes a far bigger problem than initially expected.聽

The $15,000 Best Canadian Documentary prize was awarded to Nova Scotia-born director Jacquelyn Mills for 鈥淕eographies of Solitude.鈥

Other awards from this year鈥檚 VIFF, which wraps on Sunday, include Best Canadian Short, which went to Meran Ismailsoy and Anya Chirkova for 鈥淏aba." Additionally, Charlotte Le Bon came away with the Best Emerging Director Award for her feature, "Falcon Lake".聽

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 7, 2022.

Noel Ransome, The Canadian Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks