PUTUPARRI AND THE RAINMAKERS directed and produced by Nicole Ma, and produced by John Moore, has been named the winner of the 2015 CinéfestOZ $100,000 Film Prize.Ma and Moore were presented with the film prize tonight as part of CinéfestOZ’s Gala Night celebrations in Busselton, in the south west of Western Australia.
Starring Tom Lawford and Sylvestor Rangie and set against the backdrop of Australia’s tangled colonial and Indigenous history, documentary PUTUPARRI AND THE RAINMAKERS – a MIFF@ CinéfestOZ film – explores one man’s struggle to fulfill his destiny. The film beat fellow finalists NOW ADD HONEY, BACKTRACK, PAWNO and THE DAUGHTER to the title.
On accepting the Film Prize – Moore said: “Thanks to CinéfestOZ and its sponsors for running such a fabulous festival. It’s an honour for a small film like ours to win against such heavy weight competition. It’s a great boost for the people of Fitzroy Crossing who appear in the film and I hope it will encourage all Australians to value and better understand the culture of our first peoples.”
The prize is awarded each year to an Australian feature film or feature-length documentary. In 2014 it was awarded to Paper Planes, which went on to critical and box office success. Tourism Minister Kim Hames said the CinéfestOZ Film Prize was the richest in Australia. “It is a great coup for WA to be home of Australia’s biggest film prize and we hope it will help the event grow to become one of the most prominent film festivals in Australia and, at the same time, promote the State and the South West region to the world,” Dr Hames said.
CinéfestOZ received more than 30 submissions for the prize, with the winner decided by a jury of five esteemed members of the film industry. Jury Chair, Australian actor David Wenham, was joined by Sarah Snook, Wayne Blair, Liz Kearney and Annie Murtagh Monks.
The jury watched each of the finalists with an audience at CinéfestOZ before coming together to deliberate and vote on the winner. Wenham said he and his colleagues on the jury were enormously impressed by the quality and calibre of the Film Prize finalists, all five of them being extremely strong contenders for the prize. “PUTUPARRI AND THE RAINMAKERS had a story and characters that were so compelling and emotionally engaging” said Wenham “This story was told in such a way that it reinforced the power of cinema to entertain, touch us deeply and stay with us forever.”