‘A Tale of Shemroon’ Takes Top Prize at Marrakech, as Tilda Swinton Receives Emotional Tribute

Emad Aleebrahim Dehkordi’s story of brotherly bonds and criminal excess “A Tale of Shemroon” took home top honors at the Marrakech Film Festival on Saturday, closing out a 19th edition that saw a robust and welcome return to in-person events after two year’s of pandemic-forced delays.

Dehkordi’s feature debut follows a pair of brothers pulled deeper into the drug trade as they supply any number of illegal thrills to Tehran’s wealthy and hard-partying youths. While remaining a family drama above all, the Marrakech winner certainly evokes the simmering ennui felt by a young generation of Iranians and now boiling over into protest and rage on the real streets of Tehran.

Visibly moved, director Emad Aleebrahim Dehkordi’s collected his Etoile d’Or by dedicating the prize to “all the Iranians fighting for their freedoms, to those who are faced with death sentences. This award is for the women and youth of Iran.”

Cristèle Alves Meira’s “Alma Viva” and Maryam Touzani’s “The Blue Caftan” split the Jury Prize, essentially tying for second place. Both films will represent their respective countries as Portugal and Morocco’s International Feature Film Oscar submissions, and both premiered at the Cannes Film Festival earlier this year.

“Thunder,” filmmaker Carmen Jaquier’s story of female emancipation set against the suffocating religious climate of turn of the last century Switzerland, won the directing prize, while acting honors went to Choi Seung-Yoon for “Riceboy Sleeps” and Arswendy Bening Swara for “Autobiography,” adding to an impressive overall haul for Makbul Mubarak’s Indonesian thriller and Anthony Shim’s Canadian immigration drama, which collectively have won prizes in Venice, Toronto, Taipei, and Vancouver.

Saturday’s closing ceremony kicked off with a tribute to Tilda Swinton, who had served as jury president at the previous edition of the Marrakech Festival, and who evinced genuine shock when her daughter, actress Honor Swinton Byrne, made a surprise appearance to deliver the prize.

After “Triangle of Sadness” director Ruben Ostlund called Swinton onstage by calling her “the David Bowie of cinema” in reference to her otherworldly and chameleon-like qualities, the festival honoree displayed a side of herself all too rarely seen onscreen as her jaw fell open with shock and eyes welled with joy when her daughter strode onstage. 

More to come.

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