LONDON: Sameena Jabeen Ahmed has been named best British newcomer for her "daring" execution in thriller Catch Me Daddy, around a young lady on the run from her family in northern England at the London Film Festival on Saturday. 


Stephen Frears was respected with a partnership of the British Film Institute (BFI), while the occasion's official recompense was given to Russian motion picture Leviathan coordinated by Andrei Zvyagintsev. The 73-year-old producer behind films, for example, Philomena, The Queen and Dangerous Liaisons clowned that the cooperation grant made him feel "geriatric". 

"It's not over yet," he told the honor function at Banqueting House in London, including that had "practically completed" his most recent work, a biopic about cyclist Lance Armstrong. 

Dramatist and screenwriter David Hare paid tribute to Frears, saying: "I can't consider any individual who's made a wealthier, more different or all the more reliably sagacious commitment to British film in my lifetime." 

The recompenses service, on the eve of the end day of the celebration, saw the top prize recompensed to Andrei Zvyagintsev's nerve racking show pouncing upon misuse of force in today's Russia. 

Leviathan had effectively won best screenplay at Cannes in May and Russia has put it forward as its designation for the best outside dialect film at the Oscars. 

"Its loftiness and topics moved every one of us in the same way," said Jeremy Thomas, president of the London rivalry jury. 

The Sutherland Award, given to the most unique and innovative first gimmick, went to Ukrainian executive Myroslav Slaboshpytskiy for The Tribe, a savage, noiseless show set in a school for hard of hearing quiet adolescents. 

The Grierson Award for best narrative went to Silvered Water, Syria Self-Portrait, Wiam Simav Bedirxan and Ossama Mohammed's film about the seige of the Syrian town of Homs.

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