Jane Campion
Jane Campion © Patrick Swirc / Locarno Film Festival

Director Jane Campion will be honored with the prestigious Pardo d’Onore Manor, the award for outstanding achievement in cinema, at the 77th Locarno Film Festival.

The festival will feature screenings of two of her celebrated titles selected by the director herself: An Angel at My Table (1990) and The Piano (1993), the latter presented in a new 4K restoration that will make its debut on the Piazza Grande on the night she receives her Pardo d’Onore.. The audience will also have an opportunity to meet Campion on Saturday, August 17 in a panel conversation at Forum @ Spazio Cinema.

Jane Campion’s biography is a succession of remarkable firsts. The first woman to win the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival – for The Piano (1993); the first woman to be nominated twice for Best Director at the Academy Awards – winning once for The Power of the Dog (2021); the first filmmaker from New Zealand to compete at the Venice Film Festival and then the first woman to win the festival’s Silver Lion for Best Director. Yet her distinctiveness and refusal to be artistically pigeonholed has not waned even as she has reached these heights of acclaim and recognition. With each subsequent work, Campion has proved a tireless innovator, whether in adapting Henry James (The Portrait of a Lady, 1996), directing a Meg Ryan-starring thriller based on a bestseller (In the Cut, 2003), or reimagining and revitalizing the western (The Power of the Dog). Over the course of nine feature films, half a dozen shorts, and two seasons of the television miniseries Top of the Lake (2013-17), Campion has established herself as one of the key architects of the contemporary cinematic imagination.

Giona A. Nazzaro, Artistic Director of the Locarno Film Festival commented, “With her directorial debut, Sweetie (1989), Jane Campion asserted herself from the start as a distinctive and unmistakable voice. More than thirty years later, the values and extraordinary qualities of her filmmaking remain undiminished. Campion has sustained genuine complexity in her artistic practice, free to weave a dialogue with audiences and with the film industry in which she works without ever compromising on her vision and her artistic ambitions. Her work, peopled with tortured, fascinating characters and marked by an astonishing skill in grappling with the more disturbing side of the human condition, represents one of the undisputed pinnacles of contemporary filmmaking. Jane Campion’s artistic freedom and willingness to take risks to find new and deeper insights into the richness and complexities of human experience make her an unparalleled point of reference for anybody who thinks of film as an instrument of expression and emancipation. To offer the Pardo d’Onore to Jane Campion means – today – to welcome cinema in all its infinite possibilities and to look to the future without fear.”

The Locarno Film Festival’s Pardo d’Onore Manor has been awarded to filmmakers such as Manoel de Oliveira, Bernardo Bertolucci, Ken Loach, Jean-Luc Godard, Werner Herzog, Agnès Varda, Michael Cimino, Marco Bellocchio, John Waters, Kelly Reichardt and, in 2023, Harmony Korine.

The 77th Locarno Film Festival will take place from August 7 to 17, 2024.

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