Movies

Spain’s Goya Awards Crown ‘Champions’

MADRID  — Javier Fesser’s “Champions” won best picture at the 33rd Spanish Academy Goya Awards, having seemed to have been locked out of major awards.

Spain’s Oscar entry, a blockbuster hit on home turf for UPI Spain, earning €18.5 million ($21.1 million) and sold near worldwide, the comedy turns on an off-the-rails Spanish coach sentenced to train a basketball team of special-needs players.

Before director Javier Fesser climbed the stage on Saturday night to take best picture, the film had won just two of 10 nominations, for breakthrough actor (Jesús Vidal) and song (Coque Malla’s “Este es el momento”).

Rodrigo Sorogoyen’s “The Realm,” a full-on kinetic, political thriller was the other big winner of Saturday night, sweeping most big Spanish Academy Goya Awards including best picture, actor (Antonio de la Torre), original screenplay (Isabel Peña, Rodrigo Sorogoyen), and original score (Olivier Arson), among a total seven Goyas .

Beating out not just Penélope Cruz (“Everybody Knows”) but Najwa Nimri (“Quien te cantara”) and Lola Dueñas (“Journey to a Mother’s Room”), Susi Sánchez won best actress for “Sunday’s Ills,” directed by Ramón Salazar and chosen as a Variety’s Critic’s Pick.

A dazzling animation/live-action mix, capturing war correspondent Ryszard Kapuściński’s life-haunting experience of 1975’s Angola Civil War, “Another Day of Life” capped a triumphant year, after winning best animation film at the European Film Awards, by taking the Spanish Academy Award for best animated feature.

Best documentary Goya went to Almudena Carracedo and Robert Bahar’s heartrending “The Silence of Others,” backed by the Almodóvar brothers, chronicling a campaign to end Spain’s Pact of Forgetting of crimes under Franco and aged Spaniards’ attempts to just give loved ones, executed in the Civil War, a decent burial.

Often a platform for revindication – opposition to Spain’s involvement in the 2003 Iraqi War, support for gender equality or demands for funding for the film industry itself – the 33rd Goya Awards were the least issue-centered of recent years in terms of speeches.

Where last year’s ceremony preached but failed to deliver on progressive ideals, this year’s demonstrated them thoroughly. Three of the four nominees for Breakout Director were women, ethnically diverse music was performed throughout the night, and in one of the evening’s most touching moments, special needs actor and “Champions” star Jesús Vidal won the award for Breakout Actor and gave a heartwarming speech about the importance of inclusion in cinema.

This year’s hosts, husband and wife team Silvia Abril and Andreu Buenafuente, were an undeniable hit, charming the audience every time they took the stage.

A tranquil Saturday night also reflects the paradoxical situation of the Spanish film industry. After incentives were slashed during Spain’s double-backed recession, Spain’s film industry, especially its arthouse sector, remains underfunded when it comes to state incentives, compared to Europe’s big five countries,

But movies are being made in a country where it is increasingly difficult to crew up with first-class technicians given their employment on the exploding number of drama series being made for pay TV and OTT platforms, some of which are among the most-watched series in the world (think “La Casa de Papel,” “Elite”).

In a year with only one Spanish blockbuster, “Champions,” Spanish movies still notched up a 17.5% share.

This year’s Spanish Academy Honorary Goya was presented to Narciso “Chicho” Ibáñez Serrador, a pioneer of Spanish fantastic cinema, who made two milestones in its early cannon, 1970’s “La Residencia” (“The House That Screamed”) and 1976’s “¿Quién puede matar a un niño? (“Who Can Kill a Child”) – which anticipated Spain’s surge in upscale genre auteur.

The award was presented by Alejandro Amenábar (“The Others”), J.A. Bayona (“The Oprhanage”), Jaume Balagueró and Paco Plaza (“[REC]”), Rodrigo Cortés (“Buried”), Juan Carlos Fresnadillo (“28 Weeks Later”) and Nacho Vigalondo (“Colossal”) – one indication of the ample influence Ibañez Serrador has had on one of Europe’s most-talented smart genre generations.

2019 GOYA AWARDS

 And the winners are:

FILM

“Champions,” (Javier Fesser)

DIRECTOR

Rodrigo Sorogoyen, (“The Realm”)

BREAKOUT DIRECTOR

Arantxa Echevarría, (“Carmen & Lola”)

ACTRESS

Susi Sánchez, (“Sunday’s Illness”)

ACTOR

Antonio de la Torre, (“The Realm”)

SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Carolina Yuste, (“Carmen & Lola”)

SUPPORTING ACTOR

Luis Zahera, (“The Realm”)

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

Isabel Peña, Rodrigo Sorogoyen, (“The Realm”)

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

Álvaro Brechner, (“A Twelve-Year Night”)

CINEMATOGRAPHY

Josu Incháustegui, (“Gun City”)

ORIGINAL SCORE

Olivier Arson, (“The Realm”)

ORIGINAL SONG

“Este es el momento,” (Coque Malla, “Champions”)

BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMANCE, ACTOR

Jesús Vidal, (“Champions”)

BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMANCE, ACTRESS

Eva Llorach, (“Quién te cantará”)

ANIMATED FEATURE

“Another Day of Life,” (Raúl de la Fuente, Damian Nenow)

FOREIGN SPANISH-LANGUAGE FILM

“Roma,” (Alfonso Cuarón, Mexico)

EUROPEAN PICTURE

“Cold War,” (Pawel Pawlikowsky, Poland, France, U.K.)

DOCUMENTARY

“The Silence of Others,” (Almudena Carracedo, Robert Bahar)

HONORARY GOYA

Narciso “Chicho” Ibáñez Serrador

LIVE-ACTION SHORT FILM

“Cerdita,” (Carlota Pereda)

ANIMATED SHORT FILM

“Cazatalentos,” (José Herrera)

DOCUMENTARY SHORT

“Gaza,” (Carles Bover Martínez, Julio Pérez del Campo)

EDITING

Alberto del Campo, (“The Realm”)

LINE PRODUCTION

Yousaf Bokhari, (“The Man Who Killed Don Quixote”)

COSTUME DESIGN

Clara Bilbao, (“Gun City”)

ART DIRECTION

Juan Pedro de Gaspar, (“Gun City”)

SOUND

Roberto Fernández, Alfonso Raposo, (“The Realm”)

MAKEUP AND HAIR DESIGN

Sylvie Imbert, Amparo Sánchez, Pablo Perona, (“The Man Who Killed Don Quixote”)

SPECIAL EFFECTS

Lluís Rivera, Laura Pedro, (“Superlópez”)

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