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From Sir Sean with love … one new movie star patron for Film Festival



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Published Date: 30 June 2008
ROBERT Carlyle has been recruited as a patron of the Edinburgh International Film Festival, The Scotsman has learned.
In a major coup for its campaign to build on a growing reputation for showcasing the best in British and international film, Sir Sean Connery asked the Trainspotting actor to join him as a patron of the event, alongside Oscar-winner Tilda Swinton.

Carlyle yesterday won the festival's top performance award for his part as a petrol station attendant in the film Summer.

He also appeared in another festival premiere – Stone of Destiny, the story of the 1950s theft of the Stone of Scone from Westminster Abbey – his first Scottish-set film in a dozen years.

The patrons, lead by Sir Sean, are seen as a key factor in maintaining the event's profile and network of contacts, drawing new films, stars and film-makers to the city.

A source yesterday described Carlyle as an accomplished actor who "exemplified the spirit of the festival".

The Film Festival held its first formal awards ceremony yesterday, with Sir Sean Connery handing out the trophies, at the Filmhouse cinema. He declared this year's move to June from August a "tremendous success".

The ceremony is part of the campaign to raise the festival's profile. The prize money for the Michael Powell Award for New British Film, the top trophy, was this year increased from £5,000 to £20,000.

The prize went to Somers Town, directed by Shane Meadows, whose previous film, This Is England, was critically acclaimed. The story of two teenaged boys in the Somers Town neighbourhood of London, the brief black-and-white piece was originally shot as a promotional film for train company Eurostar, whose St Pancras terminal is close by.

The documentary Man on Wire, a favourite from the start of the festival, won the Standard Life Audience Award, with votes counted on ballots as audiences left cinemas.

Directed by James Marsh, the film chronicles Frenchman Philippe Petit's 1974 high-wire walk between the Twin Towers in New York, mixing stunning period footage and interviews with the teams that secretly strung a cable between the towers. Sir Sean yesterday called it "one of the best three films I have ever seen".

The Best Documentary Award went to Encounters at the End of the World, by the 65-year-old veteran German director Werner Herzog.

Good Dick, a film by Mariana Palka, who before she went to the US to study lived in Glasgow with her Polish parents, won the Skillset New Directors Award. The piece was called a "new and original take on romantic comedy" – it is the story of a young woman being pursued by the clerk at the store where she regularly rents porn videos.

Robert Carlyle's character in Summer, Shaun, leads a dead-end life in a northern British town, struggling with dyslexia and disability, but the film's story is ultimately an uplifting one. It won him the PPG Award for Best Performance in a British Feature Film.

The performance was called "one of the best of his career" by The Scotsman critic, Alistair Harkness.

The festival awards jury, chaired by the actor and director Danny Huston, said the vote for Carlyle was unanimous, recognising a "flawless performance in a film that touches the heart – and at the film's heart a triumph of a performance by an actor who inspired all of us."

AWARD WINNERS

• Michael Powell Award for Best New British Feature Film: Somers Town (director: Shane Meadows)

• PPG Award for Best Performance in a British Feature: Robert Carlyle (Summer)

• Best Documentary: Encounters at the End of the World (director: Werner Herzog)

• Skillset New Directors Award: Marianna Palka (Good Dick)

• Scottish Short Documentary Award: Christmas with Dad (director: Conor McCormack)

• UK Film Council Award for Best British Short: Son (director: Daniel Mulloy)

• European Film Academy Short Award: 2 Birds (director: Rúnar Rúnarsson)

• McLaren Award for New British Animation: Space Travel According to John (directors: Jamie Stone & Anders Jedenfors)

• Mirrorball Best British Music Video: Happiness (director: Dougal Wilson)


The full article contains 693 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 30/06/2008 00:09:07

All this 'Hype' recently on Sir Sean, makes one wonder if he is wanting to return to his 'nesting place' as his,..

'Resting Place',?
2

Scotindy,

Los Angeles 30/06/2008 01:48:18
Sean Connery should be made the High Commissoner for SCOTLAND, what a great advertisement for our country and INDEPENDENCE.
3

Boy Wonder,

30/06/2008 09:22:29
Bobby Carlyle is a brilliant actor. Big Tam however, while not a brilliant actor ... is one of the last ever bona-fide movie stars in the grand Hollywood tradition. He is larger than life ... and if he recommends Bobby ... that should be good enough for the rest of you!
4

donald,

glasgow 30/06/2008 09:35:08
The Old Firm have to rely on Loyalists, Royalists and anti Scots like Sir William Connolly, the Court Jester, as well John Reid ex Governor of the Six Occupied Counties
5

Mork the Orkan,

30/06/2008 10:38:31
Is the best we can do really a tax-exile who advertise Japanese whisky?

Connery didn't mind claiming benefits and the dole as he swanned around waiting for his big break, but he seems rather reluctant to pay back into the system now. Typical.
6

Geoff,

sa 30/06/2008 10:46:30
6 Mork the Orkan-"Six occupied Counties?" Occupied by who?
7

Geoff,

sa 30/06/2008 10:54:08
Sorry Mork! My question was addressed to Donald at 5.
8

ptdoug,

30/06/2008 12:17:55
Old Firm, Mark the Orkan...

Sean Connery has done more for Scotland in a day than you Labour numptys will achieve in a lifetime.

He pays full UK taxes when he works here and has contributed over £1 million to his educational trust for gifted, but poor, Scottish kids.

And he should banned from speaking out on political issues just because he is an actor??? Democracy Labour style?

As for your beloved Labour....

"Labours Heartland, the East End of Glasgow,is the poorest and unhealthiest constituency in Britain. It is clogged by unemployment, drug abuse, depression and obesity.

Male life expectancy across the East End is 68, five years less than the Scottish average, while in Shettleston it drops to just 63. Women, meanwhile, live on average to 74, which is still three years less than the national average. Across the area, 30 per cent of the population is described as "deprived", while 25 per cent are unemployed, compared with a national average of 5 per cent. Mortality rates from cancer and heart disease are all above average, with smoking in some pockets running at 50 per cent.

While large swathes of Glasgow have been transformed in recent years, the East End has lagged behind (thank you, beloved Labour) with many residents still stuck in poor-quality, run down housing and troubled by anti-social behaviour."

The Glasgow East Enders have been betrayed by Labour.
Taken for granted for decade after decade. And for what? Read above stats.

Shocking. Truly shocking that anyone can even contemplate voting again for such a corrupt, trough guzzling, dishonest, wide as the Clyde bunch of incompetents that constitute todays Labour party.
9

Geoff,

sa 30/06/2008 12:27:13
5 Donald-ok, whilst I try not to get involved with these old arguments let me answerfor you. Look at North america,Britain and ireland as GEOGRAPHIC terms. Scotland and England both derive their names from invaders from elsewhere-occupiers if you will. The Scotti originally came from Ireland. Cromwell sent some of them back along with some other brits-welsh and english. Throw in a number of Spaniards from the Armada not to mention some more recent immigrants and you have modern Ireland in two political units-much like North America-the USA and Canada. If N Ireland is occupied I presume you support their integration with the rest of Ireland. I also asume you support the DIS integration of the Island of Britain. Original inhabitants? Occupiers? Who are the occupiers donald?
10

Geoff,

30/06/2008 12:31:05
9 PTDoug-I am not necessarily agreeing/disagreeing with you here but maybe one needs to look at other impoverished areas and see who is in charge there to establish definite causes and effects
11

ptdoug,

30/06/2008 13:13:50
Geoff,

Absolutely. It is a Scotland wide problem and no one party is to blame completely. But Labour must shoulder the vast majority of the responsibility and blame... especialy in the Glasgow schemes. They have had virtualy unfettered control for 50 years and done pretty much nothing for these people.

As an ex-resident of Barlanark I saw kindness and humanity on a grand scale. The sense of community was palpable.

All the more reason the betrayal of these folk is so painful.

I would like to see the SNP Government put together some kind of "Marshal Plan" for Scotlands neglected communities... I mean something awesome and revolutionary. And if such a plan was conceived (with serious input from the communities concerned) laid out and presented to the East End and communities in similar situations.... yes... I think the SNP could win the hearts and minds of these betrayed Labour supporters.

Lets see Salmond and his top ministers on the streets of the East-End offering the type of sincerity that was never forthcoming from "Scottish" Labour.
12

Ribbonman,

30/06/2008 20:26:43
#2 Aye! Our Scottish high commissioner with an English title. Sir Sean just would not sound good in an Independent Scotland. All hail the Scottish nationalist "SIR SEAN" what a joke!
13

CelticMo,

Falls Church 30/06/2008 23:29:28
Sir Sean - get your deriere back to Scotland. It's lovely the fact that you are resting on your laurels elsehwere. Nice cop out. The Scots have given up! Their women getting pregnant to qualify for council housing? Their young men AND women drunk from one end of the day to the other? New Years Eve - a young women staggers from the pub trying to make her way home, and is found dead from exposure the next morning behind a ditch (the New Year)? What has happened to the Scots? Scotland has reverted to the poor-pitiful-me RUBBISH that BEGGED for English intervention. We are BETTER than this. This situation has NOTHING to do with England. It's the Scots. Sick at heart. They've given up. Struggling with local political rhetoric and not seeing the whole picture. Sir Sean - get back there and be the VOICE of Scotland. It's lovely that you have the OPTION of stepping back and leaving it to the Scottish people. I'm happy for you. But the SCOTTISH generation(s), THREE from what I can see, are a bunch of sniveling, whinging, idiots. Please. They need a SCOTTISH LEADER! As for you whingers out there. Shut up. If you can't find work, MAKE work. Do what you need to survive! Don't bother with the, "Oh, it's easy for you tae sae...!" No, it's not. It never was. Get off your respective derieres. You are PATHETIC! Waiting for handouts from the effing local governments! SCOTS WHA HAE W' WALLACE BLED, scot whae bruce hae often led, welcome tae yer gory bed, or to vicory... WHAT'S IT GOING TO BE, YA NUMCH O' PUSSIES? I AM ASHAMED OF YOU.
14

CelticMo,

Falls Church 30/06/2008 23:32:38
Please, let me hear your individual excuses. You whingin' ladies. If the men can be strong, then the women raise the standard and GET IT DONE. NOW! Forget the touchie-feelie rubbish of th English government. Scotland for Scotland. ENOUGH!
15

CelticMo,

Falls Church 30/06/2008 23:34:40
WHAT? No comments? Gosh, big surprise. Keep your political rhetoric - it's not welcome. WHAT DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE STATE OF AFFAIRS IN SCOTLAND? WHAT THE HELL DO YOU FEEL ABOUT SCOTLAND? Do tell.
16

CelticMo,

Falls Church 30/06/2008 23:37:28
If this blog disappears, feel free to send an email - I'm registered with this website. Say what you want in pretty much any way you want, but hold the curse words. Not interested in rants. Only in feelings.
17

Dr Blockbuster aka Vince,

01/07/2008 10:17:00
Dr Blockbuster asks ... presumably Robert Carlyle said Yesch?

 

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