Victor Nuñez’s “Rachel Hendrix” Named Best Feature Narrative at Woodstock Film Festival

Victor Nuñez‘s latest project is earning critical acclaim…

The 78-year-old Peruvian American film director and college professor’s film Rachel Hendrix has been awarded the Best Feature Narrative Award at the 24th annual Woodstock Film Festival, the top narrative prize at the festival.

Victor NuñezNuñez wrote and directed the drama film starring Lori Singer about a professor who experiences a relapse of grief one year after the death of her husband, received WFF’s top narrative prize.

Narrative jurors includes director Ramin Bahrani, producer Ted Hope and Blair Breard.

Rachel Hendrix Movie by Victor NuñezIn a joint statement, the jurors said: “Independent film arrived over 50 years ago with th promise of a grand yet humble ambition, to deliver emotionally truthful, highly specific tales on an economy of means. Our prize winner did this and more. For its soulful, sincere and thoughtful examination of character, place and loss, an inspiring confidence in its choices and commitment to authenticity. The film displays an honest and necessary pace and tone, and a truly amazing and unique performance that captures a life lived in both love and challenges, while never falling short in anything it deliver, but most of all, showing love and commitment to family despite the many hardships that come with it, and ignites the rarest of phenomena: true honest emotion.”

The five-day festival, which ran from September 27 to October 1 in New York’s Hudson Valley, about 100 miles north of Manhattan.

Nuñez’s previous credits include Ulee’s Gold, Ruby in Paradise and A Flash of Green.

Here’s the full list of the WFF winners:

Best Feature Narrative Award: Victor Nunez’s “Rachel Hendrix”
Best Feature Documentary: Madeleine Gavin’s “Beyond Utopia”
Best Narrative Editing Award: “Asleep In My Palm,” edited by Max Ethan Miller
Best Documentary Editing Award: “Beyond Utopia,” edited by Madeleine Gavin
Haskell Wexler Award For Best Cinematography: “Asleep In My Palm,” directed by Henry Nelson, cinematography by Tatjana Krstevski
NYWIFT Excellence in Documentary Filmmaking Awards: “No Accident,” directed by Kristi Jacobson, and “Three Birthdays,” directed by Jane Weinstock
World of Ha Change-Maker Award: “Razing Liberty Square” directed by Katija Esson
Best Documentary Short Award: “Deciding Vote.” directed by Jeremy Workman and Robert Lyons
Best Narrative Short Award: “Ricky,” directed by Rashad Frett
Best Animated Short Award: “Sunflower Field,” directed by Polina Buchak
Ultra Indie Award: “No Right Way,” directed by Chelsea Bo
Best Student Short Award: “Swim Captain,” directed by Christa Haley

Netflix Unveils Trailer for the Rodrigo Santoro-Starring Thriller “7 Prisoners”

Rodrigo Santoro is ready to thrill

Netflix has released the official trailer for 7 Prisoners, a Brazilian thriller starring the 46-year-old Brazilian actor.

Rodrigo Santoro

The film, produced by Oscar nominees Ramin Bahrani and Fernando Meirelles, is set to open in select theaters and debut globally on the streamer in November, and may well be put forward for the Academy Award competition for Best International Feature Film.

The second feature from Alexandre Moratto centers on 18-year-old Mateus (Christian Malheiros), who hopes to find a way to provide a better life for his working-class family in the countryside. Accepting a new job in São Paolo, he is shuttled into the city with a handful of other teenage boys from his town, unaware of what awaits them: exhausting work in a scrapyard and the seizure of their identity cards by a vicious taskmaster and exploiter, Luca (Santoro), who threatens them with the unthinkable if they try to escape. But, as Mateus learns, even the boss has a boss. And if he wants to find a way out, what will he have to become?

Moratto wrote the script for 7 Prisoners with Thayná Mantesso. Bruno Rocha, Vitor Julian, Lucas Oranmian, Cecília Homem de Mello, and Dirce Thomaz also star.

The film premiered in the Horizons Extra section of the 78th Venice Film Festival on September 6, subsequently going on to make its North American premiere in Toronto.