Short Film Grand Prize for JEONG Da-hee’s THE EMPTY
This year’s Grand Prize winner was Aryanto YUNIAWAN’s Battle of Surabaya from Indonesia. The film chronicles a battle between pro-independence Indonesian forces against the British during the Indonesian National Revolution. The Feature Film Competition jury also awarded a Jury’s Special Prize to the Japanese animation Miss Hokusai from director HARA Keiichi.
In the Short Film Competition,
JEONG Da-hee’s
The Empty picked up the Grand Prize. The film debuted at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival earlier this year. JEONG has already drawn worldwide acclaim for her work, which includes
Man on the Chair, which picked up the main prize in Annecy in 2014 and screened around the globe.
Meanwhile, Cold Coffee by French filmmakers Stephanie Lansaque and Francois Lero took home the Cultural Distinction, Culture Land Store Prize. A Jury Special Prize was awarded to Steve Warne’s Pombo Loves You from the UK and Erlking, a new work from renowned Swiss animator Georges Schwizgebel, picked up the Audience Award.
In the Student Film category, the Grand Prize went to About a Mother (Dina Velikovskaya, Russia), French short Ama earned the Cultural Distinction, Culture Land Store Prize, and Like a Parrot (Rohit Ashokan, India) was the Jury Special Prize awardee.
SICAF KID awardees included Rosa & Dara and Their Great Holiday Adventure (Martin Duda, Czech Republic), which received a Special Distinction, and Netizen’s Choice winner was And If You’ll Come (Tom Madar, Emily Noy, Israel).
Can You Decide (Lu Pulic, Italy) took the Special Distinction in SICAF Online while Brunfelsia (Anna Constantinova, Australia) earned the Special Jury Prize.
In the Special Competition, the Korean Prize went to
KIM Bom’s
The Hot Rain Is Falling Down, the SICAF ASIA prize was picked up by
The Tree (Sare Shafipour, Iran), the SICAF CHOICE award was won by
NO-GO ZONE (Atelier Collectif, Belgium), SICAF FANTASTICAL was taken by
Switch Man (Shao Kuei Tung, Taiwan) and the
Han byeol Kang’s
The Struggle brought home the SICAF Audience Prize.