Cinema for Peace awards
Cinema for Peace Awards are prizes awarded by the Cinema for Peace Foundation, a Berlin-based initiative that claims to raise awareness for the social relevance of films. Since 2002, Cinema for Peace has been inviting film makers, humanitarian and human rights activists, and public figures to its annual awards ceremony in Berlin to honor a selection of cinematic works on humanitarian and environmental issues. The event occurs at the same time as (but not as part of) the Berlin International Film Festival.[1]
History
Following the September 11 attacks in 2001, Jaka Bizilj launched the Cinema for Peace initiative with the annual gala as a platform for communicating humanitarian, political and social issues through the medium of film. Bob Geldof described the awards gala as "the Oscars with brains".[2]
Activities
Cinema for Peace as global initiative regularly acts in many countries. Cinema for Peace screenings, campaigns, advocacy events, and galas have been taking place for example at the Filmfestival in Cannes,[3] in Los Angeles on the occasions of the Golden Globes [4] and on Oscar weekend, in Uganda at the conference of the International Criminal Court,[5] and in Berlin, where Cinema for Peace annually highlights the most valuable films of the year at the Cinema for Peace Gala.
The Cinema for Peace Foundation organizes various monthly screenings, mainly through partnering cinemas, such as the Schikaneder in Vienna [6]
Cinema for Peace distributed the Bosnian Oscar-winning war satire No Man's Land by Danis Tanovic. In 2014, Jaka Bizilj as the Founder of Cinema for Peace invited Pussy Riot to the Olympic Games in Sochi[7] and brought them to Hollywood[8] and to Washington[9] in order to promote global human rights responsibility and advocate a global Sanction List for human rights offenders.
Committee and supporters
Among the Cinema for Peace speakers have been: Buzz Aldrin, Antonio Banderas, Deepak Chopra, George Clooney, Catherine Deneuve, Leonardo DiCaprio, Bob Geldof,[10] Richard Gere, Dustin Hoffman,[11] Elton John, Nicole Kidman, Sir Christopher Lee, Sean Penn, Tim Robbins, Susan Sarandon, Hilary Swank, Wim Wenders, Ban Ki-Moon,[12] Luis Moreno-Ocampo and Fatou Bensouda as well as Mikhail Gorbachev.
Award winners
2002
- Honorary Award: Istvàn Szabo, for portraying the Jewish struggle for survival after WWII
2003
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Danis Tanovic for No Man's Land
2004
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: John Boorman and Robert Chartoff for In My Country (based on the autobiographical memoir Country of My Skull)
- Honorary Award: Lars von Trier
2005
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Terry George, Alex Kitman Ho, Sam Bhembe, Roberto Cicutto and Don Cheadle for Hotel Rwanda
2006
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: George Clooney and Grant Heslov for Good Night, and Good Luck
- The Most Valuable Work of a Director, Producer or Screenwriter: David Yates and Richard Curtis for The Girl in the Café
- Honorary Award: Michael Winterbottom
2007
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Clint Eastwood for Flags of our Fathers and Letters from Iwo Jima
- The Most Valuable Film Director: Bille August for Goodbye Bafana
- The Most Valuable Film Actor: Forest Whitaker in The Last King of Scotland
- Pioneer Award: Bob Geldof
- The International Human Rights Film Award: Coca – The Dove from Chechnya and Eric Bergkraut
- Brehm & V. Moers Talent Grant: I Don't Feel Like Dancing
2008
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Persepolis, by Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: Trouble - Teatime in Heiligendamm by Ralf Schmerberg and Dropping Knowledge
- Most Valuable Work of Director, Producer or Screenwriter: Juno and Jason Reitman, Diablo Cody, John Malkovich, Mason Novick, Russel Smith and Lianne Halfon
- Best Short Film: The Spirit by Joseph Fiennes
- The International Human Rights Film Award: Malalai Joya for Enemies of Happiness
- Clean Energy Award: Earth by Alix Tidmarsh, Sophokles Tasioulis, Alastair Fothergill, Mark Linfield, Nikolaus Weil and Stefan Beiten
- Honorary Award: Ben Kingsley for portraying Simon Wiesenthal, Itzhak Stern in Schindler's List, and Mahatma Gandhi
- Special Award: the makers of The Experimental Witch, initiated by Paolo Coelho and created with the original work of 14 filmmakers[13] from around the world.[14][15]
2009
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Milk by Gus Van Sant, Bruce Cohen, Dan Jinks, Dustin Lance Black, Michael London and Sean Penn
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: The Heart of Jenin by Ismael Khatib, Leon Geller, Marcus Vetter
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice: Pray the Devil Back to Hell by Gini Reticker, Abigail Disney, Vaiba Flomo
- The International Human Rights Film Award: Burma VJ – Reporting form a Closed Country by Anders Østergaard, Lise Lense-Møller, Aung Htun and The Democratic Voice of Burma
- The Most Inspirational Movie: The Day After Peace by Jeremy Gilley & Peace One Day; Menachem and Fred by Menachem Mayer, Fred Raymes, Jens Meurer, Ofra Tevet and Ronit Kertsner; and Valkyrie by Tom Cruise, Bill Nighy, Christian Berkel, Matthias Schweighöfer, Bryan Singer and Philipp von Schulthess
- Contribution to the UN millennium development goals: 8 by Jane Campion, Gael Garcìa Bernal, Jan Kounen, Mira Nair, Gaspar Noé, Abderrahmane Sissako, Gus van Sant and Wim Wenders
- The International Green Film Award: Leonardo DiCaprio
- Honorary Award: Roger Waters
2010
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: The White Ribbon by Michael Haneke
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: The Picture of the Napalm Girl by Marc Wiese, Nick Út and Kim Phúc
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice (presented by Luis Moreno-Ocampo): Children of War by Bryan Single; The Stoning of Soraya M. by Cyrus Nowrasteh; Women in Shroud by Mohammad Reza Kazemi and Farid Haerinejad
- Most Valuable Work of a Director, Actor, Producer: Triage and Danis Tanovic, Cedomir Kolar, Colin Farrell and Christopher Lee
- The International Human Rights Film Award: Tibet in Song and Ngawang Choephel
- Award for Reconciliation: Five Minutes of Heaven and Oliver Hirschbiegel, Liam Neeson and James Nesbitt
- The International Green Film Award (presented by Mikhail Gorbachev and Leonardo DiCaprio): Crude by Joe Berlinger
- Honorary Award: As We Forgive and Laura Waters Hinson and Paul Kagame
2011
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Of Gods and Men
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: Skateistan – Four Wheels and a Board in Kabul
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice: Blood in the Mobile
- The International Human Rights Film Award: Marco Arana Zegarra in The Devil Operation
- The International Green Film Award: Jane's Journey; A Message from Pandora; Harmony
- Honorary Award: Sean Penn for his aid work with the J/P Haitian Relief Organization
- Award for Fighting AIDS: Bill Roedy for the "Staying Alive" campaign, the "Ignite" campaign and Shuga
2012
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: In the Land of Blood and Honey
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory (West Memphis Three)
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice: Justice for Sergei on Sergei Magnitsky; Granito: How to Nail a Dictator
- The International Human Rights Film Award: The Lady and Aung San Suu Kyi
- The International Green Film Award: Burning in the Sun
- Honorary Award: Angelina Jolie and cast for In the Land of Blood and Honey
2013
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Lincoln
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: Searching for Sugar Man; The Gatekeepers
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice: No; Class Dismissed on Malala Yousafzai
- The International Human Rights Film Award: Call Me Kuchu, David Kato and Frank Mugisha
- The International Green Film Award: Bitter Seeds
- Honorary Award: Nicole Kidman for her work with UN Women
- Award for Opposing Antisemitism: Veronica Ferres, Marga Spiegel and Charlotte Knobloch
2014
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: 12 Years a Slave, directed by Steve McQueen.
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: Alias Ruby Blade by Alex Meillier; Children on the Frontline by Marcel Mettelsiefen and Anthony Wonke; Dirty Wars by Rick Rowley; Everyday Rebellion by Arash Riahi and Arman Riahi; Ground Zero: Syria by Robert King; Pussy Riot: A Punk Prayer by Mike Lerner and Maxim Pozdorovkin; Recycling Medea by Asteris Kutulas; The Family by Stefan Weinert; The Kill Team by Dan Krauss; The Missing Picture by Rithy Panh; The Square by Jehane Noujaim.
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice: #chicagoGirl: The Social Network Takes on a Dictator by Joe Piscatella.
- The International Green Film Award: Big Men by Rachel Boynton.
- Honorary Award: Nelson Mandela; the makers of Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom; Christopher Lee.
2015
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Selma by Ava DuVernay, Unbroken by Angelina Jolie and Timbuktu by Abderrahmane Sissako.
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: Drone by Tonje Hessen Schei and E-Team by Katy Chevigny and Ross Kauffman.
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice: Three Windows and a Hanging by Isa Qosja and Miners Shot Down by Rehad Desai.
- The International Green Film Award: Virunga by Orlando von Einsiedel.
- Special Award: Til Schweiger and Honey in the Head; Ennio Morricone.
- Honorary Award: Ai Weiwei.
2016
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Beasts of No Nation by Cary Fukunaga
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: Cartel Land by Matthew Heineman
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice: Watchers of the Sky by Edet Belzberg
- The International Green Film Award: Racing Extinction by Louie Psihoyos
- Special Award for The Most Valuable Film on Refugees: A Syrian Love Story by Sean McAllister
2017
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Hacksaw Ridge by Mel Gibson
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: Keep Quiet by Sam Blair and Joseph Martin, Disturbing the Peace by Stephen Apko and Andrew Young, Tickling Giants by Sara Taksler, Peshmerga by Bernard-Henri Lévy, The White Helmets by Orlando von Einsiedel and When God Sleeps by Till Schauder.
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice: Snowden by Oliver Stone
- The International Green Film Award: The Ivory Game by Kief Davidson and Richard Ladkani
2018
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: The Post by Steven Spielberg
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: Cries from Syria by Evgeny Afineevsky
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice: The Breadwinner by Nora Twomey
- The International Green Film Award: Jane by Brett Morgen
2019
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Capernaum by Nadine Labaki
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: The Heart of Nuba by Kenneth Carlson
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Women's Empowerment: RBG by Betsy West, Julie Cohenhe Cinema for Peace Award for The Political Film of the Year
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Political Film of the Year: Watergate by Charles Ferguson
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice: Two Catalonias by Gerardo Olivares, Álvaro Longoria
- The International Green Film Award: The Elephant Queen by Mark Deeble, Victoria Stone
2020
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: 1917 by Sam Mendes
- The Cinema for Peace Award for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: The Cave by Feras Fayyad
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Women's Empowerment: A Girl from Mogadishu by Mary McGuckian; Maiden by Alex Holmes
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Political Film of the Year: The Report by Scott Z. Burns; Official Secrets by Gavin Hood
- The Cinema for Peace Award for Justice: The Collini Case by Marco Kreuzpainter; A Regular Woman (Nur eine Frau) by Sherry Hormann
- The International Green Film Award: Sanctuary by Álvaro Longoria; Sea of Shadows by Richard Ladkani
- Honorary Award: Crescendo by Dror Zahavi; Costa-Gavras; Vanessa Redgrave; Gerard Butler
2021
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: Quo Vadis, Aida? by Jasmila Žbanić
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: Welcome to Chechnya by David France; The Mole: Undercover in North Korea by Mads Brügger
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for Women’s Empowerment: Nasrin by Jeff Kaufman
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for The Political Film of the Year: Mayor by David Osit
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for Justice: The Dissident by Bryan Fogel
- The International Green Film Award: David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet by Alastair Fothergill, Jonathan Hughes and Keith Scholey
- The Cinema for Peace Dove on Global Health: Coronation by Weiwei Ai
2022
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: CODA by Sian Heder
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: Flee by Jonas Poher Rasmussen
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for Women’s Empowerment: Writing with Fire by Rintu Thomas and Sushmit Ghosh
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for The Political Film of the Year: Not Going Quietly by Nicholas Bruckman; Courage by Aliaksei Paluyan; The Caviar Connection by Benoit Bringer
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for Justice: Navalny by Daniel Roher
- The International Green Film Award: Milked by Amy Taylor
- The Cinema for Peace Dove on Global Health: Introducing, Selma Blair by Rachel Fleit
2023
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for The Most Valuable Film of the Year: All Quiet on the Western Front by Edward Berger
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for The Most Valuable Documentary of the Year: 20 Days in Mariupol by Mstyslav Chernov
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for Women’s Empowerment: She Said by Maria Schrader
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for The Political Film of the Year: The Corridors of Power by Dror Moreh
- The Cinema for Peace Dove for Justice: Argentina, 1985 by Santiago Mitre
- The International Green Film Award: All That Breathes by Shaunak Sen; The Territory by Alex Pritz
- The Cinema for Peace Dove on Global Health: How to Survive a Pandemic by David France
References
- "Das ist das obszönste Foto meines Lebens" [This is the most obscene photo of my life]. stern.de (in German). 2016-02-18. Retrieved 2019-10-03.
- Moore, Tristana (12 February 2007). "BBC NEWS - Entertainment - Film awards aim for better world". News.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
- http://www.filmfestivals.com/blog/cannes_market_dailies/cinema_for_peace_cannes_2015_indias_daughter?page=4
- "Cinema for Peace Awards Celebrate Real Heroes".
- https://asp.icc-cpi.int/iccdocs/asp_docs/RC2010/Invitation_SpecialEveningOnJustice.pdf
- "Schikaneder - Kino - Bühne - Bar - Schwerpunkt Detail".
- "Russia: Pussy Riot Releases Music Video Showing Cossack Beating". Time. 20 February 2014. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
- "Can Pussy Riot Conquer Hollywood?". LA Weekly. 25 November 2014. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
- "Pussy Riot asks U.S. To sanction more Russian officials - the Washington Post". www.washingtonpost.com. Archived from the original on 11 May 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
- "Deirdre Corley"
- "Look to the Stars"
- "UN"
- "Experimental Witch Videos". Paulo Coelho's Blog. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
- "The Experimental Witch". Paulo Coelho's Blog. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
- "Receiving the Cinema for Peace Award". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-19. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
- "Cinema for Peace 2015 — Cinema for Peace Foundation". cinemaforpeace-foundation.com. Archived from the original on 23 February 2015. Retrieved 5 February 2018.
- "Cinema for Peace Foundation". Archived from the original on 2016-04-11. Retrieved 2016-04-08.
- "Nominations 2017". Cinema for Peace Foundation. Retrieved 2019-05-09.
- "Nominations 2018". Cinema for Peace Foundation. Retrieved 2019-05-09.
- "Nominations 2019". Cinema for Peace Foundation. Retrieved 2019-05-09.
- "Nominations 2020". Cinema for Peace Foundation. Retrieved 2019-05-09.
- "Awards 2021". Cinema for Peace Foundation. Retrieved 2022-12-29.
- "Awards 2022". Cinema for Peace Foundation. Retrieved 2022-12-29.