The David di Donatello 2020 prizes were announced during a ceremony hosted in primetime on Rai 1 by Carlo Conti in an empty studio with talents appearing in live web platform link-ups. The event served as a collective rebirth rite just when local coronavirus lockdown restrictions slowly begin to lift.
Marco Bellocchio’s elegant drama “The Traitor” (ita. Il Traditore) about the first high-ranking member of Cosa Nostra to break the Sicilian Mafia’s oath of silence, was the big winner at Italy’s 65th David di Donatello Awards, the country’s equivalent of the Oscars. It scored 6 statuettes including best picture, director, and actor honors. “The Traitor” which Italy’s IBC Movie and Kavac Film produced with RAI Cinema and international partners, had a nice run at the Italian box office last year and was released by Sony stateside in January. Starring Pierfrancesco Favino as Tommaso Buscetta, who in 1984 decided to start cooperating with prosecutors after a war within Cosa Nostra caused the killing of members of his family, also won nods for best screenplay, editing and supporting actor.
Italy’s President Sergio Mattarella in a message read by Conti also expressed his solidarity with the country’s film industry, which employs roughly 200,000 Italians. Mattarella said he was confident it would find a creative impetus similar to the one that “generated Neorealism after the war". During the ceremony the roughly 4,000 movie theaters across Italy lit up their billboards in a flash-mob staged to signal their presence and intention to reopen as soon as possible.
The best foreign film prize went to Korean helmer Bong Joon-ho for his multiple Oscar-winning “Parasite”; during the event another tribute to this year’s centennial of the births of late great auteur Federico Fellini and comic actor Alberto Sordi; veteran comic stage and screen actor Franca Valeri was awarded a Special David. She is known by Italians for a big career comprising many memorable roles in films by great directors such as Fellini, Mario Monicelli, and Dino Rosi, often playing with Sordi. She will celebrate her 100th birthday next July.
Complete list of the winners:
PICTURE
“The Traitor,” Marco Bellocchio
DIRECTOR
Marco Bellocchio, “The Traitor”
DEBUT DIRECTOR
Phaim Bhuiyan, “Bangla”
SCREENPLAY
Ludovica Rampoldi, Marco Bellocchio, Valia Santella Francesco Piccolo, “The Traitor”
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Maurizio Braucci, Pietro Marcello “Martin Eden”
PRODUCER
Matteo Rovere, Andrea Paris “Romolus & Remus: The First King”
ACTRESS
Jasmine Trinca “The Fortune Goddess”
ACTOR
Pierfrancesco Favino “The Traitor”
SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Valeria Golino, “5 is The Perfect Number”
SUPPORTING ACTOR
Luigi Lo Cascio “The Traitor”
CINEMATOGRAPHY
Daniele Ciprì, “Romolus & Remus: The First King”
EDITING
Francesca Calvelli, “The Traitor”
DOCUMENTARY
“Selfie,” Agostino Ferrente
SCORE
Orchestra di Piazza Vittorio, “Il Flauto Magico di Piazza Vittorio”
ORIGINAL SONG
“Che Vita Meravigliosa,” Antonio Diodato “The Fortune Goddess”
PRODUCTION DESIGN
Dimitri Capuani, “Pinocchio”
COSTUME DESIGN
Massimo Cantini Parrini, “Pinocchio”
MAKEUP ARTIST
Dalia Colli, Mark Coulier, “Pinocchio”
HAIR ARTIST
Francesco Pegoretti, “Pinocchio”
DIGITAL EFFECTS
Theo Demiris, Rodolfo Migliari, “Pinocchio”
SOUND
Angelo Bonanni, Davide D’Onofrio, Mirko Perri, Mauro Eusepi, Michele Mazzucco, “Romolus & Remus: The First King”
AUDIENCE AWARD
“Il Primo Natale,” Salvo Ficarra, Valentino Picone
BEST FOREIGN FILM
“Parasite,” Bong Joon-ho
SPECIAL DAVID
Franca Valeri