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Missing Cuban actor, “War Witch” win Tribeca awards

(Reuters) – “War Witch,” a sensitive drama about a 12-year-old girl abducted by vicious armed rebels in

sub-Saharan Africa, and a nonfiction film that examines the plight of women in modern India, won the top awards at the

Tribeca Film Festival on Thursday.

Congolese

actress Rachel Mwanza reacts after she has been awarded with the Silver Bear as best actress in the movie War Witch (Rebelle)

at the 62nd Berlinale International Film Festival in Berlin February 18, 2012. REUTERS/Markus Schreiber/Pool

“War Witch” picked up the jury prize for best narrative feature and best

actress for Rachel Mwanza who plays the girl forced to become a child soldier, while “The World Before Her” that parallels

women in the Miss India beauty pageant and a fundamentalist Hindu girls camp won best documentary.

But in a continuing

strange saga of life imitating art at Tribeca, a Cuban actor starring in a film about defecting to the United States, who

went missing in real life while en route to the festival, shared the top acting award.

Actor Javier Nunez Florian, who

was last seen at Miami’s airport during a stopover to the festival and disappeared along with his female costar Anailin de

la Rua de la Torre from the film “Una Noche”, did not show up to split his $2,500 award.

He shared the top acting

honor with his male costar Dariel Arrechada, who turned up toward the end of the awards and was the only actor present at the

film’s premiere a week ago. Representatives for the film said this week no one from the film has had any contact with the

missing Cubans.

“Una Noche,” (One Night), which follows the journey of three Cuban teenagers trying to escape the

poverty of their homeland to start a new life in Miami, also picked up the best cinematography award and best new narrative

director for New York University film school graduate Lucy Mulloy.

“I’m sad for them because they are my friends,”

Arrechada told Reuters in broken English and Spanish after his win, referring to his missing fellow actors.

“I wish

they were here, but . . . you could be happy for them, for Javier and for Anailin and for everyone. It’s weird. I miss

him.”

Mulloy, a London-born 32-year-old who shot the low-budget film in Havana and was inspired by a tale she heard on

a trip to the island nation 10 years ago, told Reuters she wished the missing actors could have been there.

“It would

have been a great experience for them,” she said. “I haven’t heard from them. I just hope they are well and they are

healthy.”

Argentinian film “All In”, a romantic comedy written and directed by Daniel Burman about a professional

poker player, won best narrative screenplay, while best editing went to unusual Holocaust documentary “The Flat” from

Israel.

The award for best new documentary director went to Dutch filmmaker Jeroen van Velzen for “Wavumba,” a film

set in Kenya that explores fishermen lore, while “The Revisionaries,” which spotlights the politicizing of children’s

textbooks in Texas won a special mention from the Tribeca jury.

The majority of winning films reflected Tribeca’s

greater emphasis this year on showing films set in foreign lands. More than half of the films in the narrative feature

category were international productions.

But the strange tale of “Una Noche” provided the biggest drama of the

festival that began as a way to revive downtown Manhattan after the September 11 attacks.

Havana-based producer Sandy

Perez Aguila told the Los Angeles Times earlier this week that upon reaching New York he opened the pair’s suitcases and

they were empty.

Arrechada said he hoped one day he would see his fellow actors again. And asked whether the winning

prize money might lure her missing actors to New York after all, Mulloy said, “possibly, we’ll see, I hope so”.

She

added: “Honestly, it’s all happened so quickly … it’s a shock.”

(Additional reporting by Tara Cleary, editing by

Bob Tourtellotte and Elaine

Lies)