Sundance win for 'Beasts of the Southern Wild'

Beasts of the Southern Wild and The House I Live In won the top awards at the Sundance Film Festival last night, making them…

Beasts of the Southern Wild and The House I Live In won the top awards at the Sundance Film Festival last night, making them likely favourites for independent movie audiences in 2012.

Directed by Benh Zeitlin and set in impoverished Louisiana, Beasts of the Southern Wild picked up the jury prize for best drama as well as best cinematography with its poetic tale of the bond between a father and a daughter.

The documentary winner, The House I Live In, was one of many documentaries at Sundance 2012 that looked at a struggling America at Sundance 2012. It is an examination of America's long war on drugs and critiques of US drug policies, its court system, prisons and their impact on minorities.

"The war on drugs is a terrible scar on America," said director Eugene Jarecki.Special juries of industry professionals vote on winners, and those are considered the top prizes but audiences also vote for their favourites.

READ MORE

James Marsh’s Shadow Dancer, produced by Dublin-based Element Pictures, also earned high praise. The film is a “heart-wrenching” thriller set in Belfast during the 1990s.

The Surrogate, which stars Helen Hunt and John Hawkes and is about a man's quest to lose his virginity while mostly confined to an iron lung, won the Audience Award for best drama.

The film, based on the life of poet and journalist Mark O'Brien, fetched one of the highest selling prices at the festival - a reported $6 million (€4.5 million) - and with its mix of comedy and drama could turn out to be one of the bigger US indie hits in cinemas to come out of the festival.

"Love is a journey, that's it," said director Ben Lewin when accepting his trophy, quoting a line from the film.

The Audience Award for documentary was given to The Invisible War, about an epidemic of sexual assault in the US military and shining a light on a little known problem.

Other documentary special jury prizes went to Love Free or Die, about the Episcopal Church's first openly gay bishop, Gene Robinson; and Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry, about the Chinese artist and activist who was detained for 81 days last year.

Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry director Alison Klayman took a picture of the crowd upon accepting the award and promised to send it to the Chinese artist who felt it was too risky to attend the festival from China.

Sundance, which is backed by Robert Redford's Sundance Institute for filmmaking, is the largest US gathering for independent movies.

Festival winners go on to become some of the most talked about films in art houses.

However, many of the more hyped films for Sundance 2012 did not live up to their buzz, with many including Red Lights starring Robert De Niro and Spike Lee's Red Hook Summer disappointing critics, although films have still sold.

Reuters