Russell Crowe was shocked at the Golden Bee Awards for the Mediterranean Film Competition on Sunday night and returned to his “Gladiator” for the past two decades.
“If you want to know what I really like about Malta, that’s a lot,” said Crow, who won the Malta Film Legend Award. He said: “I have been a man in Malta in a humorous way in the last 26 years, no matter I finished the film back then, nothing, nothing, majesty, ambition and price range, and ended up getting the Gladiator. It's not the integrity of the character I've ever enjoyed, I need a day trip.
Crowe directed a narrative where several young men asked him to tour the last week in Italy. I shook his hand and he started crying. His Pars later instructed me to be a spire lifeguard on the local coast, and he got his muscle tissue on his muscles…so they would never see him like that. I finally hugged him. When he was with himself collectively, he once claimed that he was once a person sitting on me, I had been sitting for 8 years, and my mother was my mother. “Gladiator” and instruct me, 'If you ever questioned what kind of man your mom wanted you to be, it's a man. “Respect, integrity, religion–the man made in Malta.”
Earlier in the evening, “Euphoria” star Barbie Ferreira received the Rising Star Award honor and said she has been exploring the country’s archipelago “in various ways”.
“I've done a lot of analysis than here, which is richer in the past,” she said. Ferreira's upcoming mission includes Mile Finish, which premiered on TIFF, and she or he said she likes to enjoy a music journalist who is “an unbearable woman, which is the most effective half.”
Jeremy Thomas, the producer of “The Last Emperor”, received a Lifetime Achievement Award, while Pierre Agius and Joseph Formosa Randon received a Professional Achievement Award for their in-depth work in films made in Malta.
The movie's premium feature film, the High Golden Bee Award, won the Tunisia “Where the Wind Comes” and the movie's star Eya Bellaga succeeded in getting the best efficiency. Julio Medem won the best screenwriter for his film 8, which also won a jury selection award. The mare nostrum award won the “Miyazaki: Spirit of Nature”.
“Where the Wind Comes” won the Best Features and Best Efficiency Award in Mediterrane Film Competition.
Specific visitors arrived at Fort Manoel in the 18th century, near the capital of Valletta, and took a boat to attend the evening’s luxurious awards ceremony, which included dance numbers, many singers, no less than three fireworks performances and a compilation of films shot in films that have been filmed in the last 100 years. Malta has been working tremendously as it is a very popular photo spot, as well as “Enola Holmes 3” and “Jurassic World: Rebirth”, using the island's historic background and beneficiary rebounds.
“It's been a century,” said film commissioner Johann Grech. “Malta may also be a small country, but Malta is a powerful country.”
In addition, during the awards ceremony, there were also outside of Chris Perfetti, Karen Pittman, Jared Harris, Edmund Donovan, Joaquim de Almeida, Bailey Bass and Kerry Ingram, as well as “Thunderbolts” director Jake Schreier.
Competing juries include director Catherine Hardwickke, who previewed her upcoming film “Highway” in the competition Masters, manufacturing designer Rick Carter, whose masterclass paints it professionally in the film, reminiscent of “Jurassic Park,” “Lincoln” and “Avatar.”
Although the competition welcomed many commercial visitors, it showed off their latest work and viewed the famous film areas on land, with boats, locals and business members shooting exterior screenings of many films in Malta, from “Popeye” and “Troy” and “Troy” and “Troy” and “Gladiator II” to “Titans II”, “Titans of Tittans” and “Basic” Malta Malta's stories.
The whole week was long, and the small country showed that it had high hopes for competing and maximizing the region’s shooting capabilities over the years it returned.