Mariano Llinas' record-breaking 14-hour-long fiction won best film and best actress awards for its four female stars.


Cult filmmaker and scriptwriter Mariano Llinas' epic 14 hour-long film La Flor (The Flower) topped the 20th edition of the Buenos Aires International Independent Film Festival, which began on April 11 and ends Sunday. The film also won the best actress award for its four leads Pilar Gamboa, Valeria Correa, Elisa Carricajo and Laura Paredes.


A record-breaking, 840-minutes film – the longest fiction feature in Argentine history – La flor consists of six different episodes, all starring the same four actresses, who form the acting company Piel de Lava ("Lava Skin"). Shot independently throughout a nine-year period across three continents, and split into three parts for theatrical exhibition purposes, the six episodes feature an array of different stories and genres, including an international espionage thriller, a horror B-movie, a musical love story and a remake of Jean Renoir's 1936 silent classic A Day in the Country.


Brazilian Tiago Melo, whose credits include production roles in Kleber Mendonca Filho's Aquarius and Gabriel Mascaro's Neon Bull, won the best director award for his feature-length debut Azogue Nazareth, which premiered in Rotterdam's official competition.


The BAFICI program featured more than 50 world premieres, including Special Jury Prize winner Violence Voyager, a gekimation (i.e., animated paper cut-outs) directed by Japanese filmmaker Ujicha (The Burning Buddha Man).


International guests of BAFICI's 20th edition included camp icon John Waters, French cinema legend Philippe Garrel (Lover for a Day), and actor Ewen Bremner (Wonder Woman), who gave an acting seminar during the festival.


The official awards are listed below:


International Competition


Best Film: La flor – Mariano Llinás
Special Jury Prize: Violence Voyager
Best Director: Tiago Melo – Azougue Nazaré
Best Actress: Pilar Gamboa, Elisa Carricajo, Valeria Correa and Laura Paredes, for Mariano Llinás' La flor
Best Actor: Anders Juul for Christian Tafdrup's A Horrible Woman
Best Original Score: Nilotpal Borah, for Rima Das' Village Rockstars
First Mention: A Tiger in Winter– Lee Kwang-Kuk
Second Mention: Good Manners – Juliana Rojas and Marco Dutra


Argentine Competition


Best Director: Lola Arias – Theatre of War
Best Film: The Daughters of Fire – Albertina Carri


Avant-Garde and Genre Competition


Special Mention: Braguino – Clémént Cogitore
Best Short Film: Watching the Detectives – Chris Kennedy
Best Feature Film: The Seen and Unseen – Kamila Andini

Grand Prize: The Image You Missed – Donal Foreman


Latin American Competition


Special Mention: La cuarta dimensión – Francisco Bouzas
Best Director: Mauricio Alfredo Ovando – Still Burn
Best Film: Averno – Marcos Loayza


Human Rights Competition


Special Mention: El silencio es un cuerpo que cae – Agustina Comedi
Best Film: Meteors – Gürcan Keltek


Best Argentine Short Films


La prima sueca – Inés Barrionuevo and Agustina San Martín
Las flores – Renzo Cozza
El liberado – Martín Farina