From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from El sonriure amagat)
El somriure amagat
US poster
Directed byVentura Durall
Screenplay byMiguel Llansó Ventura Durall
Produced byNanouk Films
CinematographyMauro Herce
Edited byVentura Durall Martí Roca
Release date
  • 2010 (2010)
Running time
13'
Country Spain

El somriure amagat is a 2010 short film.

Synopsis

Daniel, a 10-year-old Ethiopian boy, roams the streets of Addis Ababa alone by night. He is one of the 170,000 children without family who live in the city. He has just escaped from his home in the countryside where he lived with his stepmother. His biological parents are dead: he never knew his father; his mother died in front of his eyes when she was run over by a car. During his nocturnal rambling, Daniel meets a group of street children who live in an old abandoned taxi. He asks them if he can sleep there. [1]

Awards and nominations

  • Medina del Campo 2010
  • Festival Madridimagen 2012 (best cinematography, winner Mauro Herce)
  • 4th Gaudí Awards, best short film (nominated)
  • 2012 Abu Dhabi Film Festival (winner Best Documentary)
  • 2012 Ibn Arabi Film Festival (Best documentary, nominated) [2]

References

  1. ^ "EL SONRIURE AMAGAT – Fondo Fílmico del FCAT – Festival de Cine Africano de Tarifa" (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  2. ^ "El somriure amagat". Catálogo de Cine Español. 15 February 2024.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from El sonriure amagat)
El somriure amagat
US poster
Directed byVentura Durall
Screenplay byMiguel Llansó Ventura Durall
Produced byNanouk Films
CinematographyMauro Herce
Edited byVentura Durall Martí Roca
Release date
  • 2010 (2010)
Running time
13'
Country Spain

El somriure amagat is a 2010 short film.

Synopsis

Daniel, a 10-year-old Ethiopian boy, roams the streets of Addis Ababa alone by night. He is one of the 170,000 children without family who live in the city. He has just escaped from his home in the countryside where he lived with his stepmother. His biological parents are dead: he never knew his father; his mother died in front of his eyes when she was run over by a car. During his nocturnal rambling, Daniel meets a group of street children who live in an old abandoned taxi. He asks them if he can sleep there. [1]

Awards and nominations

  • Medina del Campo 2010
  • Festival Madridimagen 2012 (best cinematography, winner Mauro Herce)
  • 4th Gaudí Awards, best short film (nominated)
  • 2012 Abu Dhabi Film Festival (winner Best Documentary)
  • 2012 Ibn Arabi Film Festival (Best documentary, nominated) [2]

References

  1. ^ "EL SONRIURE AMAGAT – Fondo Fílmico del FCAT – Festival de Cine Africano de Tarifa" (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2024-02-15.
  2. ^ "El somriure amagat". Catálogo de Cine Español. 15 February 2024.



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