World
Madrid’s ECAM Forum Off to Flying Start as ‘Gods of Stone’ Pic, ‘Estrella del Green,’ ‘She and Me But Mostly Her’ Series Nab Awards
Under the auspices of Comunidad de Madrid and the prestigious ECAM film school, the four day ECAM Forum co-production market got off to a flying start with its inaugural session, closing June 13 with an awards ceremony at Madrid’s historical Matadero cultural space.
One of eight features in work in progress, the creative documentary “Gods of Stone” (“Deuses de Pedra”) by the Spanish Iván Castiñeiras Gallego scooped the new Comunidad de Madrid award and its €15,000 ($16,000) cash prize earmarked towards its post-production.
A trained cinematographer/filmmaker, graduate from ESTC in Lisbon, the Louis Lumiere School in Paris and ESCAC in Barcelona, Castiñeiras Gallego earned festival attention for his short docs “A raia” (2013) and “Where the Jungle Is” (2016).
Shot on 16mm, the Spain-Portugal-France co-production “Gods of Stone” is a non-linear compendium of stories portraying the way of life of a rural community located between Galicia and Portugal, on the oldest border in Europe. There, children’s stories merge with legends. Among the young people, Mariana grows up and aged 17, faces the decision to abandon her village and family to study abroad.
“The film we want to award tries to capture the essence of a timeless place and its people through a poetic and sincere gaze,” said the jury about the documentary produced by Spain’s Amateurfilms, with France’s Promenon-nous dans les Bois and Portugal’s Rua Escura and Primeira Idade.
In the ‘Films to Come’ competition, the three winners reflect the rich array of titles from Spain and Latin America, helmed by newcomers and seasoned filmmakers, showcased in Madrid.
One of five projects from the celebrated ECAM Incubator lab, “Memorial” from Sergi Lopez (a best film Gaudí Award winner for “The Long Way Home”), won the Filmin Award consisting of €30,000 ($32,000) in a minimum guaantee from the Spanish streamer. In it, we follow Manel, a curator of Flemish paintings at the Prado Museum, who is forced to move to Belgium a Rubens painting to which he is deeply attached, while dealing with personal grief and family secrets in Madrid.
The jury praised the “unique project which masterly combines family, memories and art in a physical and spiritual journey deep in the soul.”The Spanish pic is being produced by Edna Cinema, Sumendi, Bteam, and Noodles.
“Phantom”, the musical drama by Cristóbal Fernandez (co-helmer of the festival docu hit “Mudar la piel”) about a group of musicians from the band Phantom, shaken by personal tensions, scooped the Madrid Film Office Award. Spain’s El Gesto Cinematográfico is producing.
Meanwhile the comedy “For Gods Sake” (“El Milagro de Surudí”) by Montevideo-born Lorenzo Tocco, who scooped best short at Guadalajara for “The Anniversary,” won the IFFR Pro Award which gives it access to the next Rotterdam and Cinemart market.
In the Series competition, the Benidorm-set black comedy “Estrella del Green” by London-based Spanish writer-creator Denise Moreno, among HBO Access’ 25 emerging directors, was handed out the Series Mania Award and an invitation to the next Lille-based leading series festival and forum. The six-part series, in early development, turns on an unlikely duo – a pregnant zillennial and a bankrupt diva in her seventies, who set up a weed empire in Benidorm.
Pierre Ziemniak, head of the Series Mania Institute – a close partner to ECAM school – said the Series Mania Award rewards “the screenwriter of a profoundly Spanish series project with strong international potential” and a “story about two women that will attract audiences in several countries.” The U.K. co-production, spearheaded by Jonathan Duncan of Common People Films, was looking for a majority Spanish producer in Madrid.
Another standout Spanish comedy series project, “She and Me, But Mostly Her” (“Ella y yo sobre todo Ella”), penned byMarta Ambel Meyer, scooped the Serielizados Award. The humorous and heartfelt story tells of Claudia, 30, who would rather lie to her friends and to the world rather than accept her brother’s bipolar disorder. The creator told Variety that her aim with what she dubbed a ‘traumedy’ is to raise awareness and foster understanding on mental health issues through a well-balanced dose of humour and sensitivity.
Six other awards went to emerging Spanish talents and their short films:
Alba Menor won the best debut and Abycine Lanza awards for “Manu Drives at Night,” Claudia Gracia the Skyline Benidorm Award for “Turbocapitalend,”, Sara Domínguez the Short Film Lab Award for “You Will Grow Scales,” Matías García the Madrid Film Office Award for” No One Wants to Bury You” and Guillermo Chapa the Telemadrid Award for “Love to See You Again”.
Flawless First ECAM Forum
Expectations were high for the first ECAM Forum and its organisers-ECAM Industria head Rafa Alberola, ECAM Forum coordinator Alberto Valverde and their team. Even so, after four days of pitches, meetings and conferences in a warm and festive working atmosphere, the overall consensus from both attendees and organisers, was that the event ‘s ace kick-off beat all expectations.
Among the 50-plus international delegates that included a who’s-who of some of top world festival programmers, from Cannes’ Director’s Fortnight to Toronto, Sundance, Rotterdam and Locarno, the Berlinale’s Jacqueline Nisiah praised both the organisation and the program. “I thought ECAM Forum was very well organised, the information flow and hospitality were amazing. I felt very well taken care off, all the invited guests were super nice and we enjoyed enriching conversations.”
Regarding the works in progress she added: “the films presented at the Last Push were very well curated, it’s the first thing that sprung into mind, after the first day. I think the films were a good mix of fiction, documentary and hybrid, some with a stronger commercial appeal, others more experimental. Generally, I would say the standard of the films was high.”
Echoing Nisiah’s positive feedback, Stockholm-based Olivier Guerpillon (“Fox in the Snow”), producer of the acclaimed “Costa Brava, Lebanon” and Magnolia Pictures acquired-“Sound of Noise,” said “the Forum really delivered! We were obviously expecting good projects, good food and good weather, but the quality level of the projects really impressed us, as well as the great range of professionals invited. It was very friendly and well organised, and we think it can only grow in importance, when we see how Spanish and Latin American cinema are booming and bursting with creativity.”
On a business level, he said “as a Swedish company currently co-producing our first project with Spain [“Forastera” by Lucía Aleñar Iglesias], we want to develop bridges between Sweden and the Spanish-speaking countries so this was great. We had good co-production meetings with very exciting projects. The format allowed also for generous time for all the guests to get to know each other beyond the classic one-to-one meetings, which is really important to strengthen co-production bonds between companies and long-term connections with filmmakers.”
Also from Sweden, Jenny Gilbertsson from the leading Scandinavian regional film fund Film i Väst who was also exploring new co-pro ventures, said she was impressed “by the range of emerging new talent, with energy and creativity. Spain is a highly productive film country and the co-productions with Latin America were also interesting,” she said.
Ziemniak added: “I was struck by the buzzy atmosphere and fluidity of the event anchored in the reality of the current market.”
Booming Spanish Market
The reality of the Spanish – and Madrid region – audiovisual market, still on an upswing despite the challenging overall micro-economic climate and the need to consolidate and create new international bridges, was underscored by Gonzalo Cabrera Martín, head of the cultural department of the Comunidad de Madrid, ECAM Forum’s main backer.
“For a few years we’ve been working on how to improve the audiovisual industry in Madrid. We thought the best way was to work with ECAM, as they are one of 15 best film schools in the world and an excellent partner.”
“Through ECAM Forum, we want to stimulate co-productions, international cooperation, but also entice post-production works and filming here, as we have several top-end studios here,” he said, referring notably to Netflix’s Tres Cantos European Production Hub just north of Madrid hub and advantageous tax rebates of up to 30% in Madrid.
And indeed, according to the Madrid Film Office, 2023 was a year of intense filming activity in the Spanish capital which saw filming increase by 8% from 2022 with 930 medium and large projects including 15-plus international feature co-productions such as “Daniela Forever” by Nacho Vigalondo and ‘Volveréi’ by Jonás Trueba.
“Then education is key,” Cabrera Martin goes on. “We collaborate with the Torino Film Lab among prestigious international film initiatives, to bring different talents here. We are just trying to create a huge wide network of international collaborations on all levels,” he told Variety.
ECAM Forum 2025
Looking at 2025, Gonzalo Salazar-Simpson, ECAM general manager said the plan is to consolidate the new co-production showcase “as a short, efficient and memorable” event for students and professionals alike.
Reiterating the school’s DNA as a private non-profit organisation focused on education and post-education and industry-led initiatives, he said: “Our ultimate goal is about making the field fertile for talent to grow and flourish.”
For the next edition, Alberola promises to apply the same recipe of success of a focused and friendly working environment with a high-standard of projects and guests. “We wanted to created a spot where people could find projects, but also find each other.
“Projects change, you can’t control that, but if people come here and feel they are well treated and they can extend their network,” they will come back,” he asserts. “The biggest challenge is to keep up the level of this first edition!” he said.
Meanwhile Valverde said he will look into attracting perhaps ‘bigger’ names and making the best use of the cultural Matadero (a former abattoir) multi-disciplinary artistic space.
He said he also hopes to expand the conferences and seminars which welcomed this week, among other luminaries, U.S. indie production veteran Ted Hope and French cinematographer Hélène Louvart. “I’d love to expand the space for inspirational talks, bring in engineers, philosophers, other professionals who can explain how images, stories move us,” he said.
In total, more than 400 audiovisual students and professionals signed up for the ECAM Forum where 53 films and series in development and post-production were showcased over June 10-14 in Madrid.
World
Acid Attack in Indonesia Evokes Brutality of Suharto Era
Andrie Yunus, an outspoken critic of the military’s expanding power in Indonesia, was riding his motorbike last month in Jakarta when two men rode past and threw acid in his face. He suffered burns to 24 percent of his body and damage to his right eye.
The ambush, which recalled Indonesia’s decades under a military dictatorship, was captured on street surveillance cameras. Within days, the authorities arrested four members of a military intelligence unit — a captain, two lieutenants and a sergeant. Their trial in a military court began Wednesday.
But human rights activists say that many more people were involved in the attack, and that the rush to try the four men is part of an attempt to shield the mastermind who authorized it.
“This was an intelligence operation,” said Fadhil Alfathan, a member of the Advocacy Team for Democracy, a coalition of rights groups backing Mr. Andrie. “It was a well-planned and well-trained operation, starting with surveillance, stalking, then tailing, execution and escape.”
The assault on Mr. Andrie, 27, the deputy coordinator for the prominent rights group, Kontras, is reminiscent of the brutality of the 32-year dictatorship under Suharto, who stepped down in 1998 in the face of massive pro-democracy protests. Now rights activists fear that the military’s influence is growing again under the current president, Prabowo Subianto, Suharto’s former son-in-law and once a widely feared general.
Mr. Andrie’s supporters say the acid attack on the evening of March 12 was a premeditated attempt to kill him because of his criticism of the military’s increasing role in government, including a law adopted after Mr. Prabowo took office that allows active armed forces officers to hold more government posts.
More than 420 rights groups and hundreds of activists around the world have signed a statement condemning the attack and calling for it to be investigated “thoroughly and transparently.”
The police conducted an initial investigation of the attack and quickly identified two suspects who belonged to the military.
The Advocacy Team for Democracy obtained and analyzed street surveillance videos from the weeks before the assault and concluded that at least 16 operatives were involved in following and surveilling Mr. Andrie.
Mr. Prabowo promised a thorough investigation.
“This is a barbaric act, we must pursue it,” the president said in remarks released a week after the attack. “We must investigate. Who ordered them, who paid.”
Days later, the general who headed the military’s main intelligence arm, the Strategic Intelligence Agency, quietly resigned. He is not known to be facing any charges.
But on March 31, the police announced that the case had been transferred to the military, which meant that military prosecutors would have the ability to limit the scope of the investigation and determine what information is made public.
Mr. Andrie came to public attention in March of last year when he led a small group of protesters who barged into a closed parliamentary meeting at a luxury hotel in Jakarta. The lawmakers were discussing the measure to let active military officers hold government posts.
In a scene captured on video, Mr. Andrie railed against the legislation before security officers pushed the protesters from the room.
The measure was later approved by Parliament and signed into law by Mr. Prabowo.
In a letter this month to Constitutional Court judges who are reviewing the law,Mr. Andrie objected to the transfer of the assault case to a military court, saying such courts have been “a hotbed of impunity for soldiers who commit human rights violations.”
“In this case, if it is not tried in the public court,” he added, “it is a serious violation of the principle of equality before the law.”
The military prosecutor handling the case announced in mid-April that the attack by the four operatives was motivated by a “personal vendetta” against Mr. Andrie.
The suspects are charged with assault causing serious injury and premeditated assault. They face a maximum of 12 years in prison.
Mr. Andrie has been hospitalized since the attack. He has not been interviewed by anyone from the police or the military, said Lakso Anindito, a lawyer from the Advocacy Team for Democracy who is representing him.
Mr. Lakso said he does not expect that his client will be called to testify.
He said he believes the attackers moved to silence him a year after the hotel protest because he was relentless in his criticism of the military and the 2025 law.
“It’s because Andrie never stops,” he said. “He is persistent in fighting this law. And an attack like this doesn’t just happen. It takes at least two months for them before it leads to that day.”
The attackers were so bold that they rode up to him and threw acid in his face despite the visible presence of numerous surveillance cameras in the area.
One video that captures Mr. Andrie seconds after the ambush shows him jumping off his motorbike, ripping off his shirt and screaming in agony as a crowd quickly gathers. Doctors say he suffered severe chemical burns on his face, hands, neck and chest. His helmet and visor saved him from even more serious harm.
Doctors have operated on Mr. Andrie five times in an effort to save the sight in his right eye.
In a letter to the president, Mr. Andrie called on him to ensure that the trial of his accused attackers adheres to the principle of due process, free from “corrupt interests.”
“This case is not solely about me,” he concluded, “but about the state’s commitment to protecting its citizens and upholding the law fairly.”
Indonesia has a history of impunity in the handling of attacks on human rights activists and corruption fighters.
The assault on Mr. Andrie is similar to a 2017 acid attack against a leading anti-corruption investigator, Novel Baswedan. Two police officers were found guilty of splashing sulfuric acid in Mr. Novel’s face as they rode by on a motorbike. The attack left him blind in one eye and half-blind in the other.
Mr. Novel, a senior investigator for Indonesia’s respected Corruption Eradication Commission, has said he was never able to determine who was behind the attack but believes it was someone he investigated. The police officers were sentenced to 18 and 24 months.
Mr. Andrie’s case also recalled the 2004 murder of Munir Said Thalib, the Kontras founder. Mr. Munir, a prominent critic of the military, was poisoned with arsenic while flying from Jakarta to Amsterdam and died before the plane landed. An off-duty Garuda airline pilot was found guilty of planning the murder but allegations that the state intelligence agency was behind the killing were never fully investigated.
World
Tourist dies at luxury resort after cobra from snake show climbs up pants, bites him: police
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A German tourist has died after a venomous cobra featured in a snake show reportedly slithered up his pants and bit him on the leg, authorities said.
The freak accident occurred early April at a luxury resort destination in Egypt, according to the Bavarian State Police in Germany, which released details Monday.
“During the snake charmer’s performance, one of the snakes crawled into the trousers of a 57-year-old man, resulting in a bite to the German tourist’s leg,” officials said.
Police said the victim, whose identity was not released, was on vacation with two family members from the Unterallgäu region of Germany.
BILLIONAIRE’S DEATH AFTER SWALLOWING BEE RAISES QUESTIONS ABOUT RARE CARDIAC REACTION
A King Cobra stis up freely while inside a building in April 2010. (Patrick Aventurier)
Authorities said the snake charmer event was part of a hotel entertainment program in the resort city of Hurghada, a popular Red Sea destination known for its upscale all-inclusive packages, as well as nearby desert and water excursions.
Two snakes, believed to be cobras, were used in the show, officials said.
Investigators indicated that it is not uncommon for performers to allow snakes to interact closely with audience members, as some of the snakes were reportedly placed around guests’ necks during the act.
However, during one segment of the performance, a snake reportedly bit the German tourist after crawling into his clothing.
“He subsequently exhibited clear symptoms of poisoning and required resuscitation,” officials said.
He reportedly died shortly after arriving at a local hospital.
LAW STUDENT KILLED BY ELEPHANT DURING VACATION TO THAILAND: OFFICIALS
Tourists swim in the Sunny Days Elpalacio beach in the Egyptian Red Sea resort city of Hurghada. (MOHAMED EL-SHAHED / AFP)
The results of a toxicological examination are still pending, Bavarian police said.
The investigation is being handled by Germany’s Memmingen Criminal Police Inspectorate under the direction of the Memmingen Public Prosecutor’s Office (MPPO).
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Tourists swimming at the Red Sea Egyptian resort of Hurghada on June 18, 2020 (KHALED DESOUKI/AFP)
Cobras are known for being highly venomous snakes. Their bite can lead to rapid respiratory failure and paralysis without prompt medical treatment.
Fox News Digital has reached out to MPPO for more information.
World
US appeals court rejects Trump’s immigration detention policy
In a 3-0 ruling, court says Trump administration misread a decades-old immigration law to justify mandatory detention.
A United States federal appeals court has rejected the Trump administration’s practice of subjecting most people arrested in its immigration crackdown to mandatory detention without the opportunity to seek release on bond.
In a 3-0 ruling on Tuesday, a panel of the New York-based US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit said the administration relied on a novel but incorrect interpretation of a decades-old immigration law to justify the policy.
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Writing for the panel, US Circuit Judge Joseph F Bianco, a Trump appointee, warned that the government’s reading “would send a seismic shock through our immigration detention system and society”, straining already overcrowded facilities, separating families and disrupting communities.
Lawyers for the Trump administration say the mandatory detention policy is legal under the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act, passed in 1996.
But Bianco said the government had made “an attempt to muddy” the law’s “textually clear waters”, arguing that the administration’s interpretation “defies the statute’s context, structure, history, and purpose” and contradicts “longstanding executive branch practice”.
Under the Trump administration policy, the Department of Homeland Security last year took the position that non-citizens already living in the US, not just those arriving at the border, qualify as “applicants for admission” and are subject to mandatory detention.
Under federal immigration law, “applicants for admission” to the US are detained while their cases proceed in immigration courts and are ineligible for bond hearings.
The Department of Homeland Security has been denying bond hearings to immigrants arrested across the country, including those who have been living in the US for years without any criminal history, the Associated Press (AP) news agency reports.
That is a departure from the practice under previous US administrations, when most non-citizens with no criminal record who were arrested away from the border were given the opportunity to request a bond while their cases moved through immigration court, according to AP.
In such cases, bonds were often granted to people who were deemed not to be flight risks, and mandatory detention was limited to those who had just entered the country.
Amy Belsher, director of immigrants rights’ litigation at the New York Civil Liberties Union, said the appeals court ruling affirmed “that the Trump administration’s policy of detaining immigrants without any process is unlawful and cannot stand”.
“The government cannot mandatorily detain millions of noncitizens, many of whom have lived here for decades, without an opportunity to seek release. It defies the Constitution, the Immigration and Nationality Act, and basic human decency,” Belsher said in a statement.
Conflicting rulings set stage for Supreme Court review
The New York court’s decision comes after two other appeals courts ruled in favour of the Trump administration’s policy.
Acknowledging the opposing rulings, Judge Bianco said the panel was parting ways with them and instead aligning with more than 370 lower-court judges nationwide who have rejected the administration’s position as a misreading of the law.
The split among the courts increases the likelihood that the US Supreme Court will weigh in.
The latest ruling also upheld an order by a New York judge that led to the release of Brazilian national Ricardo Aparecido Barbosa da Cunha, who was arrested by immigration officials last year while driving to work after living in the US for more than 20 years.
“The court was right to conclude the Trump administration can’t just reinterpret the law at its own whim,” Michael Tan, a lawyer for Barbosa at the American Civil Liberties Union, said in a statement.
The Department of Justice, which is defending the mandatory detention policy in court, did not respond to a request for comment.
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