Esteves’ “Rey’s Education” Wins Big at San Sebastian Festival’s Films in Progress

Santiago Esteves is pulling a double

The Argentine director’s latest project “Rey’s Education” won both the prizes up for grabs at the San Sebastian Festival’s Films in Progress, one of the highest-profile pictures-in-post competitions in Europe.

Santiago Esteves

It’s a rare double for Esteves’ film, which was first conceived as an eight-segment television mini-series that won a fiction contest at Argentina’s Television Digital Abierta.

The cop thriller-drama took home both the Films in Progress 30th Industry Award, given by a clutch of Spanish distributors and service houses, and the Caci/Ibermedia TV Films in Progress Award.

Esteves’ first feature, “Rey’s Education” kicks off with Reynaldo Galindez, a 14-year-old petty criminal, pulling his first job. Escaping, he falls into the patio of a retired security guard, damaging his home. The guard proposes a pact: Rey repairs the damage caused to his home in return for not being handed over to the police. As Rey begins working, the guard attempts to tutor him in the lessons of life. But Rey’s past begins to catch up with him..

“It’s a classic story featuring one person who is getting to the end of his life and another who is just beginning,” said Esteves at San Sebastian, after the Films in Progress award ceremony.  He added: “This is very common in the crime world. We’ve tried to transfer the classic training of a warrior to the west of Argentina, which is rarely seen in Argentine movies.”

The Films in Progress 30th Industry Award is supported by companies Daniel Goldstein, Deluxe-Spain, Dolby Iberia, Laserfilm Cine y Video, Nephilim Producciones, No Problem Sonido and Wanda Vision. It covers the cost of a film’s post-production and offers distribution in Spain.

Backed by Caci, the association of Latin American film agencies, the Ibermedia TV Films in Progress Award consists of a grant of $25,000 for non-exclusive broadcast rights on Ibermedia TV, a program screening movies from Latin America, Spain and Portugal on public broadcasters in the region.

Camara Wins Best Actor Award at San Sebastian Film Festival

Javier Camara is having a Shell of an awards season…

The 48-year-old Spanish actor picked up the Silver Shell for Best Actor at the San Sebastian Film Festival, alongside co-winner Ricardo Darin.

Javier Camara

Camara and Darin won the double Silver Shell for their starring roles in Cesc Gay’s Truman, which was the most-applauded prize of the evening.

The film centers on Tomás (Camara), who returns to his hometown Madrid in order to convince his childhood friend Julian (Darin), whom he hasn’t spoken to in years, to continue his chemotherapy treatment.

Darin, a favorite at San Sebastian, quoted a tweet about the film that said, in Spanish: “at 23 I went to see a film about death and I think I learned everything about life.”

Meanwhile, Yordanka Ariosa took home the Silver Shell for Best Actress for her performance in The King of Havana, Agusti Villaronga‘s adaptation of the Pedro Juan Gutierrez novel.

It was a surprise win for the previously unknown Ariosa, who beat out Freeheld´s Oscar-tipped powerhouse Julianne Moore and Ellen Page.

In addition to the official awards, San Sebastian offered coveted cash prizes for competitions from many of the sidebars.

Argentinean filmmaker Santiago Mitre’s Paulina won the €35,000 cash prize that goes with the Horizontes Award for Latin American films.

Spanish filmmaker Asier Altuna’s Amama won the Irizar Basque Film Award with €20,000, given to a film with 20 percent financing from the local region. 

Brazilian director Eliane Caffe’s The Cambridge Squatter won the Films in Progress top prize, which awards post-production financing to a nearly finished film, in addition to a spot at the festival next year.