FIRST PRIZE | IBEROAMERICAN DANZANTE AWARD, of €5.000 (five thousand euros) and a trophy goes to the short film NI OBLIT NI PERDÓ (Spain) by JORDI BOQUET CLARAMUNT, both for highlighting a story that continues to be a current affair and for its capability of moving us and generating debate.
*Directly classified to the pre-selection of the next Hollywood Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Short Film Award.
‘CACHO PALLERO’ IBEROAMERICAN DANZANTE AWARD of €2.000 (two thousand euros) and a diploma, goes to the short film CARMEN (Colombia) by RAÚL GUTIÉRREZ, for the mastery of cinematographic technique at the service of a story in which violence is terribly mundane.
ALBERTO SÁNCHEZ DEBUT IBEROAMERICAN DANZANTE AWARD, of €1.000 (one thousand euros) and a diploma, goes to the short film AMANHÁ (Brazil), by ALINE FLORES and ALEXANDRE CRISTÓFARO, for its elaborate dialogue that helps us build a story full of drama using a more humorous point of view. The photography and the good use of frame manage to get the most out of the space in which it occurs. This short film helps us to value, not only tomorrow, but also the present.
FIRST PRIZE | INTERNATIONAL DANZANTE AWARD of €5000 (five thousand euros) and a trophy, goes to the short film ALIVE (Sweden) by JIMMY OLSSON, for showing a different kind of protest film, from a poetic and humorous approach, to talk about human rights and moving us as much as a punch in the face.
*Directly classified to the pre-selection of the next Hollywood Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Short Film Award.
‘JINETE IBÉRICO’ ANIMATION INTERNATIONAL AWARD given by Instituto de Estudios Altoaragoneses, of €2.000 (two thousand euros) and a trophy, goes to the short film ON NE MOZHET ZHIT BEZ KOSMOSA (Russia) by KONSTANTIN BRONZIT, for shedding the superfluous to tell a deep story finding a balance between style, drama and technique.
INTERNATIONAL DEBUT DANZANTE given by Anselmo Pié Sopena Foundation, of €1.000 (one thousand euros) and a diploma, to the short film POSLEDNJA SLIKA O OCU (Serbia) by STEFAN DJORDJEVIC, due to its correct format in four thirds and its aesthetics, it takes us on a journey full of uncertainty, which manages to bring us close to a colder Europe and characters with a high emotional charge.
‘FRANCISCO GARCÍA DE PASO’ HUMAN VALUES MENTION, a diploma to the short film which best highlights human values, goes to the short film ODOL GORRI (France) by CHARLÈNE FAVIER, for showing in an honest and powerful way the situation of the centers of minors and exposing the importance of this problem which exists all around the world.
FIRST PRIZE | DOCUMENTARY DANZANTE AWARD of €5000 (five thousand euros) and a trophy goes to the documental short filml JULIETA Y LA LUNA (Chile) by MILENA CASTRO, for its delicate approach in dealing with family secrets, its use of sound and domestic archive footage to create a ghostly and mysterious atmosphere and for its intimate way of portraying the spaces and objects once inhabited by a family.
*Directly classified to the pre-selection of the next Hollywood Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Documentary Short Film Award.
‘JOSÉ MANUEL PORQUET’ IBEROAMERICAN DOCUMENTARY DANZANTE, of €2.000 (two thousand euros) and diploma, goes to the documental short film CARNE (Brazil) by CAMILA KATER for its honest account of five women’s personal stories, its openness in talking about their relationship with their bodies, and for its creative use of different animation techniques to create an astonishing portrait of womanhood.
ARAGÓN TELEVISIÓN AUDIENCE AWARD consisting of the purchase of the diffusion rights of the short film by Aragón Televisión for an amount of €900, including its promotion, goes to the short film FERROTIPOS (Spain) by NÜLL GARCÍA.
BEST SCRIP AWARD, of €800 (eight hundred euros) and a diploma goes to the short film A LA CARA (Spain), by JAVIER MARCO RICO, for mincing what it tells unveiling in successive phases the matters it seeks to expose, keeping the thrill along the film.