German Film Award – Wikipedia
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German national film award
The German Film Award (German: Deutscher Filmpreis), also known as Lola after its prize statuette, is the national film award of Germany. It is presented at an annual ceremony honouring cinematic achievements in the German film industry. Besides being the most important film award in Germany, it is also the most highly endowed German cultural award, with cash prizes in its current 20 categories totalling nearly three million euros.
From 1951 to 2004 it was awarded by a commission, but since 2005 the award has been organized by the German Film Academy (Deutsche Filmakademie). The Federal Commissioner for Cultural and Media Affairs has been responsible for the administration of the prize since 1999. The awards ceremony is traditionally held in Berlin.
History[edit]
The award was created in 1951 by the Federal Ministry of the Interior and was first given out during the Berlin Film Festival. A practice that was kept for the upcoming decades. Since 1999 it is commissioned by the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media.
In the first years the awards had numerous trophies that were handed out for different categories. Aside from the main categories for Best Picture, Director and Screenplay most others from the inaugural edition have been short lived such as Film that promote democratic values due to the constant change of the awards constitution in the early years.[1] As a rule stated that awards would only be awarded for outstanding achievements, not every category had a winner each year. Over time, the award in the shape of a film tape became the most common trophy, either in gold or silver. The Golden Bowl became the highest honour for Best Picture, however due to not being handed out for more than 17 years, the award was abolished in 1996.
Due to the confusing mechanism as well as changing categories, the award lost its relevance. With only a press conference and no televised broadcast, it did not attract the public’s interest in West Germany. Since the reunification of Germany in 1990, constants efforts have been made to underline the award’s significance as a national correlation to similar awards honours such as the Academy Awards or the Césars. In 1995 for the first time, winners were announced during a glamorous telecast in Friedrichstadt-Palast, one of the most prestigious venues of former East-Berlin.[2] In the following years, other locations were chosen that were symbolic for the once divided city such as the Berlin Tempelhof Airport[3] or the Brandenburg Gate.[4]
Since 1999, the various category winners are awarded a statuette, the LOLA. The name refers to Marlene Dietrich’s role in Der blaue Engel, Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s film Lola and Tom Tykwer’s very successful movie Lola rennt.
Mechthild Schmidt, Partner of HouseWorks digital media, New York about her 1999 design: “I wanted to symbolize motion. Film IS movement. I wanted the statue to express confidence without being stern, strength without being static. It was important to me to give the “Deutschen Filmpreis” its own identity, not trying to borrow what other awards already successfully symbolize. While the Oscar is the strong, firm standing fighter and winner, I wanted the Filmprize statue to symbolize the dynamics of movement, the muse, the inspiration necessary to make a work of art, to become a winner. The movement is carried through to the asymmetrical conical base.
Stylistically, I was looking for a timeless modern design as well as a historical reference to the first golden era of German film, the Art Deco in the 1920s.”[5]
From 1999 to 2002 the show was televised by a private broadcaster ProSieben.[6] Since 2003 it has rotated each year between the two major German public broadcasters ARD and ZDF.
Before the founding of the German Film Academy (Deutsche Filmakademie) in 2005 a single prize was awarded for the technical categories of cinematography, film editing, production design, art direction and musical score in the category “Outstanding Singular Achievement”.
Selection process[edit]
Borrowing from the American model, the awards have been made by an academy, the Deutsche Filmakademie, since 2005. The academy replaces a much-criticised jury which was constituted according to the principle of political proportionality, and on which politicians and clergymen also sat. Now the jury consists of the members of the German Film Academy, which makes them a well specialised jury.
The selection process has three main steps:
- Registration and pre-selection
- Nomination
- Election of the award winners
Nominations are decided by a pre-determined jury from each branch. Except for the film categories, usually three nominees are announced. More nominees are allowed in case of a tie. The nominations for the film categories are endowed with 100.000 Euro (Documentary), 125.000 Euro (Best Children’s Film) and 250.000 Euro (Feature Film). Winners in each individual categories get 10.000 Euro, whereas the main winner in the Film category gets 500.000 Euro (including the nomination reward). The Best Film category features six nominees with the three most voted winning a bronze, silver and gold award respectively.
Categories[edit]
Merit awards[edit]
- Best Fiction Film
- Best Documentary Film
- Best Children’s Film
- Best Director
- Best Screenplay
- Best Actress
- Best Actor
- Best Supporting Actress
- Best Supporting Actor
- Best Cinematography
- Best Editing
- Best Costume Design
- Best Production Design
- Best Sound Editing
- Best Score
- Best Make-Up
- Best Visual Effects and Animation
Special awards[edit]
- Honorary Award for Outstanding Contributions to German Cinema
- Bernd Eichinger Memorial Award
- Audience Award for the highest grossing Film of the Year
Retired awards[edit]
- Best Foreign Film
- Audience Award for Best Picture and Actor/Actress
Ceremonies[edit]
Films that received six or more German Film Awards[edit]
“Big Five” winners and nominees[edit]
Winners[edit]
- Best Film: Toni Erdmann
- Best Director: Maren Ade
- Best Actor: Peter Simonischek
- Best Actress: Sandra Hüller
- Best Writing: Maren Ade
- Best Film: System Crasher
- Best Director: Nora Fingscheidt
- Best Actor: Albrecht Schuch
- Best Actress: Helena Zengel
- Best Writing: Nora Fingscheidt
Nominees[d][edit]
Four awards won
Three awards won
Actors with two or more competitive awards[edit]
See also[edit]
- ^ the award for best unproduced screenplay was given out in 2002
- ^ tincluding one Audience Award and an award for unproduced screenplay
- ^ tincluding an audience award
- ^ only after the inclusion of nominations in screenplay in 2005 are considered
- ^ the screenplay award was won year before
- ^ Best Young Actor 1960
- ^ Best Ensemble 1970
- ^ Best Young Actress 1971
- ^ Best Ensemble 1970
- ^ Best Young Actor 1958
- ^ Best Ensemble 1975
- ^ Best Ensemble 1975
References[edit]
External links[edit]
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