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Mantas Kvedaravičius Film Award 2024

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Background

Anthropologist and acclaimed director Mantas Kvedaravičius was a member of our association and this film award in his name is a way for us to celebrate his memory and pay tribute to his unique work. The Award also gives an opportunity to keep focus on the ongoing Russian war in Ukraine,and reaffirm our unambiguous support to Ukraine’s anti-imperialist engagement illustrated by Mantas’s work. The Award provides an occasion for our community to affirm our values and recognize Mantas’s intellectual, political and artistic legacy of courage and love.

The Mantas Kvedaravičius prize distinguishes a medium or long feature documentary that is remarkable by its cinematographic anthropological and engaged dimensions, and as such, in the wake of Mantas Kvedaravičius’s path in research, creation and action. Mantas Kvedaravičius’s approach was that of a documentary tradition with strong narrative construction and storytelling, close to the visual codes and grammar of feature films (he is also the director of feature films Prologos and Partenonas that premiered in venice in 2019).

Mantas Kvedaravičius’s cinema was ethnographic in the sense that it resulted from long-term engagement on the field, and explored ethnographic questions such as memory, lived experiences of violence, temporality, the everyday of conflicts, etc. His work on dangerous and sensitive fields was in touch with burning political and social issues, and recognized as an important contribution to the advancement of human rights. However, his visual research was clearly distinct from ‘investigative’ approaches: it was attached to a poetry of images (minute attention to light, long shots, slowness, sensitive dimension focusing on the texture of things and beings through a work of image and sound). In this sense, Kvedaravičius’s cinema was not about denouncing but capturing the everyday and profound experience of conflicts on our social bodies, through the visible and the invisible.

Film Festival Jury

Hanna Bilobrova – Filmmaker, Co-director of “Mariupolis 2,” and Journalist

Rosa Barotsi – lecturer and researcher, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

Chowra Makaremi – Tenured Research Scholar, CNRS Paris

2024 Winner

Living conditions in Majdanpek, Eastern Serbia, are so bad that even the dragons are leaving. With a long tradition as both miners and dragon hunters, the Marković family struggle to keep the magic alive as their town gets swallowed up by the demands of industry.

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Photo credit: MFA Lithuania

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