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REVISED November 30, 2004

Forgotten Polish film takes Grand Prize at Banff Mountain Film Festival
 

A film made 36 years ago at a Polish film school has taken the Grand Prize at this year’s Banff Mountain Film Festival. Odwrót (Retreat) recreates an anonymous climber’s epic solo descent in the wake of a mountaineering accident. Produced in 1968 by director Jerzy Surdel at the National College of Theatre and Film in  Lódz, Poland, and filmed in black and white in the Tatra Mountains, Odwrót follows the climber’s desperate retreat to find help for his injured partner. “Impeccable directing and editing create a film of poetic ambiguity,” says film festival jury member Liam Lacey. Fellow jury member Mike Libecki describes Odwrót as “timeless and irreproducible.” The Grand Prize award is co-sponsored by Mountain Equipment Co-op and Suunto.
 
This festival’s 2004 award for Best Film on Mountain Sports goes to a film that celebrates the sheer bliss of powder skiing. Sinners (Canada), directed and produced by Bill Heath, extols the exquisite beauty of deep snow. “This is a film of flowing grace that captures the essence of deep powder,” says Libecki. The mountain sports award is sponsored by Big Rock Brewery.

"Sinners"
 

Alone across Australia (Australia), which tells the story of Jon Muir’s 2500-kilometre unsupported trek across Australia, takes the 2004 award for Best Film on Mountain Environment, sponsored by Gore. “This film is very real, very powerful, very raw, and absolutely original,” says Libecki. Directed by Muir and Ian Darling, the film follows Muir and his dog, Seraphine, on an arduous 128-day journey across the continent. Alone across Australia also wins the People’s Choice Award, voted on by the festival audience and sponsored by Ortovox.

"Alone across Australia"
 

The Alpine Club of Canada award for Best Film on Climbing goes to Daughters of Everest (USA), directed and produced by Sapana Sakya and Ramyata Limbu. The film tells the story of the first-ever expedition of Sherpa women to climb Everest. “A delightful and very honest film that captures the camaraderie of a group of women who take pride in their mountains,” says jury member Florian Camerer.

"Daughters of Everest"
 

The Story of the Weeping Camel (Germany) takes this year’s award for Best Feature-length Mountain Film, sponsored by MSR. Directors Byambasuren Davaa and Luigi Falorni follow the adventures of a family of camel herders in the Gobi Desert who face a crisis when a mother camel rejects her newborn. “This film depicts a disappearing way of life, capturing it in a charming story,” says Liam Lacey.

"The Story of the Weeping Camel"
 

The award for Best Short Mountain Film goes to Hike Hike Hike (USA). Directed and produced by Anouk Iyer, this four-minute animated film on dog-sledging “manages to say a lot with a little,” says Lacey. The award is sponsored by Mountain Equipment Co-op.

"Hike Hike Hike"
 

The Reindeer People (France), directed by Hamid Sardar, takes the 2004 award for Best Film on Mountain Culture, sponsored by Petzl. The film is an intimate portrait of a family of Dukha reindeer nomads as they follow a migration route through the forests of northern Mongolia. “This film takes us inside a vanishing way of life,” says Camerer.

"The Reindeer People"
 

The jury also awarded a Special Jury Award in the Mountain Sports Category to Soul Purpose (USA) directed and produced by Todd Jones, Dirk Collins, Steve Jones, and Corey Gavitt.

The inaugural Banff Centre Audio Post-Production Award goes to producers and directors of Dolpo - Children of the Mountains (France). This award provides up to $10,000 in audio post-production resources at the Banff Centre’s state-of-the-art recording facilities for a future film production.

"Soul Purpose"

 

The 2004 Banff Mountain Film Festival jury included film critic Liam Lacey (Canada), climber and adventurer Mike Libecki (U.S.A.), film sound engineer Florian Camerer (Austria), mountaineer and journalist Rebecca Stephens (U.K.), and adventure film festival manager Cléo Poussier (France).The festival screened 57 finalist films, chosen from more than 330 entries from 46 countries.

Entry forms for next year’s Banff Mountain Film Festival will be available in spring 2005 on the festival’s web site at www.banffmountainfestivals.ca

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MEDIA CONTACTS:

Jill Sawyer
Media & Communications Officer
The Banff Centre
403.762.6475
Jill_Sawyer@banffcentre.ca
 

The 29th Annual Banff Mountain Film Festival
Presented by National Geographic and Dunham Bootmakers
Sponsored by Patagonia, MSR – Mountain Safety Research and Air Canada
With assistance from Lake Louise Mountain Resort, PETZL, Deuter,
Mountain Equipment Co-op, CBC Radio-Canada,
and the Alberta Foundation for the Arts
 
Mountain Culture at The Banff Centre promotes understanding and appreciation of the world’s mountain places by creating opportunities for people to share - and find inspiration in - mountain experiences, ideas, and visions.

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