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    Haneke`s "White Ribbon" sweeps European Blur Awards

    Posted By Post Buster On 3:20 AM | Under
    BOCHUM, Germany (Reuters) – Austrian administrator Michael Haneke's "The White Ribbon," a air-conditioned analysis of the roots of Nazi terror, bedeviled the European Blur Awards on Saturday, acceptable three prizes including best film.

    In the black-and-white film, a adverse alternation of crimes rocks a apple in arctic Germany on the eve of World War One, and appears affiliated to a accumulation of accouchement brutalized and aching by their parents.

    "The White Ribbon" additionally won the celebrated Palme d'Or at the Cannes blur commemoration beforehand this year.

    The 2,000-member European Blur Academy awarded Haneke the best film, best administrator and best biographer prizes at the 22nd commemoration ceremony in Bochum, in the automated Ruhr breadth of western Germany.

    British actress Kate Winslet scooped up another award for her portrayal of a German woman with a secret Nazi past in the romantic drama "The Reader," winning best actress.

    "Titanic" star Winslet has also won an Oscar, a British BAFTA and German Bambi for her depiction of Hanna Schmitz, a former Nazi prison guard who embarks on an affair with a teenage boy.

    Newcomer Tahar Rahim won best actor for portraying a homeless and illiterate 19-year-old at the mercy of a Corsican gang that controls the jail where he is imprisoned, in Jacques Audiard's French film "A Prophet."

    The Oscar-garlanded "Slumdog Millionaire," an against-all-odds love story set in the teeming slums of Mumbai, scooped up the "People's Choice" award, decided by cinema-goers throughout Europe who vote online or at cinemas.

    The European Film Academy was founded in 1989 to promote European film, with Swedish director Ingmar Bergman as its first president. The European Film Awards have yet to gain the prestige of high-profile European film festivals in Cannes, Venice and Berlin but are widely respected in the film industry.

    The awards are traditionally held in Berlin every other year, but exceptionally took place in Bochum this year, in the Century Hall -- a former gas power station of the steel mills.

    Last year's awards were held in Copenhagen, where the Italian mafia drama "Gomorra" won five prizes including best film, best director and best actor.