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SAN SEBASTIAN

Spain’s San Sebastián film festival gets underway

The San Sebastián film festival, Spain's most prestigious movie event, kicked off on Friday with celebrations marking its 70th anniversary, despite the last-minute withdrawal of Hollywood actress Glenn Close as jury president.

Spain's San Sebastián film festival gets underway
San Sebastian film festival begins. Photo: Enrique / Pixabay

The festival will pay homage to the career of French actress Juliette Binoche and Canadian director David Cronenberg, both of whom will receive an honorary Donostia Award.

A total of 17 films will be competing for the top prize in an official selection that began on Friday with the screening of Modelo 77 (Prison 77) by Spain’s Alberto Rodríguez.

The movie starring Miguel Herran of Netflix hit Money Heist follows a group of prisoners demanding amnesty in the early years of Spain’s transition to democracy after the death of dictator Francisco Franco in 1975.

Eight-time Oscar nominee and three-time Emmy winner Close, 75, was due to preside over the seven-member jury but dropped out on Tuesday due to “a family emergency”.

The judging panel will now be reduced to six members and chaired by Argentine producer Matias Mosteirin, who will announce the winners at the closing gala on September 24th.

The festival is the fourth major European film gala of the year, following Cannes, Venice and Berlin.

Hollywood stars including Penelope Cruz, Liam Neeson and actor and director Olivia Wilde are expected to tread the red carpet in the northern port city.

One highly anticipated screening is The Wonder, a British-Irish production about a young girl who survives months without food, directed by Argentina’s Sebastian Lelio, who won the 2018 foreign film Academy Award for A Fantastic Woman.

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CULTURE

San Sebastián: What to know about Spain’s biggest film festival

The San Sebastián International Film Festival, the most prestigious of its kind in Spain, kicks off on Friday September 20th. Here are 10 fascinating anecdotes and pieces of information that will help you understand its importance to Spanish culture.

San Sebastián: What to know about Spain's biggest film festival

The Local counts down ten essential facts about the most important film festival in the Spanish-speaking world, as it gets underway in the Basque seaside city.

1. The San Sebastián International Film Festival (Festival Internacional de cine de San Sebastián in Spanish and Donostia Zinemaldia in Basque) was founded in 1953. Although it was originally intended to honour Spanish language films, it soon allowed international films to compete and since 1955 has attracted the great and the good of world cinema.

2. The film festival was started by a group of San Sebastián businessmen and Spanish dictator Francisco Franco, perhaps surprisingly, immediately gave it his blessing. He saw the festival as an opportunity to present Spain as a more open and friendly country on the international stage.

Spanish dictator Francisco Franco repressed the Basque culture and language, but he allowed the San Sebastían festival to become international. (Photo by AFP)

3. This year’s festival – the 72nd – will take place between Friday September 20th and Saturday September 29th at the Kursaal Congress Centre and Auditorium on San Sebastián’s seafront, designed by Spanish architect, Rafael Moneo. It’s an impressive building, especially when lit up at night!

4. It is one of only 15 category ‘A’ film festivals accredited by the FIAPF (International Federation of Film Producers Associations) alongside such other illustrious film festivals as Venice, Cannes and Berlin.

5. Some of cinema’s most classic moments were brought to the screen for the very first time at San Sebastián. It hosted the international premiere of Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo, an event attended by the iconic film director himself, as well as the film’s star, James Stewart.

Alfred Hitchcock in 1972 in Cannes, one of Europe’s other big film festivals. (Photo by AFP)

6. Berlin has its Bear and Cannes its Palme, so what is the prize doled out at San Sebastián? Quite aptly for this seaside city, it is the Shell of course! The Golden Shell (Concha de Oro) is awarded to the best film of the festival, while the best actor and actress receive a Silver Shell.

US actor and director James Franco holds the “Concha de Oro” (Golden Shell) best film award for the film “The Disaster artist” in 2017. (Photo by ANDER GILLENEA / AFP)

7. While San Sebastián is not one of the most headline-grabbing events on the film festival calendar, it has attracted quite a few cinematic icons in its time. Elizabeth Taylor, Audrey Hepburn, Meryl Streep, Robert de Niro and Brad Pitt have all attended – among many others.

Brad Pitt and Quentin Tarantino during the presentation of “Inglorious Basterds” at the San Sebastián International Film Festival in 2009. (Photo by RAFA RIVAS / AFP)

8. The festival’s lifetime achievement award is the Donostia award, given every year to honour one more more actors for their work. In 2008, living legend Meryl Streep won alongside arguably the world’s most famous Spanish actor, Antonio Banderas. This year, Spain’s most iconic film director Pedro Almodóvar and Australian actress Cate Blanchett will receive the lifetime award.

9. In 1989 Bette Davis, one of the most classic stars from Hollywood’s golden age came to the festival to receive the lifetime achievement award. It would be her last ever public appearance, she died two weeks later. A documentary about Davis’ time in the Basque city was made in 2014, titled El Último Adiós (The Last Goodbye).

10. At this years edition, many big Hollywood names are expected, including Pamela Anderson, Javier Bardem, Monica Bellucci, Jamie Campbell Bower, Johnny Depp, Andrew Garfield, Isabelle Huppert , Noémie Merlant, Ángela Molina, Franco Nero, Lupita Nyong’o, Charlotte Rampling, Will Sharpe and Tilda Swinton.

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