09/14/2019 Arts 0

The American Film Festival in Deauville, France, awarded its top prize to Annie Silverstein’s Bull, jury president Catherine Deneuve announced Saturday. 
 
Silverstein’s first full-length feature, which was also selected for the Un Certain Regard section of the Cannes film festival in May, was awarded Deauville’s Grand Prize, as well as the festival’s Critics Award and the Louis Roederer Foundation Revelation Prize. 
 
The film “paints an extremely fair and disturbing picture of Donald Trump’s America, America abandoned by its policies whether in school or in health,” said actress Anna Mouglalis, head of the Revelation jury. 
 Bull tells the story of 14-year-old Kris from Houston, Texas, who after trashing her neighbor’s house in a fit of youthful defiance seems destined to follow in her mother’s footsteps to the state penitentiary. 
 
To make amends, Kris is forced to help Abe Turner, an ex-bull rider scraping by on the Texas rodeo circuit, with errands at home and at his work. While traveling with Abe, she discovers a passion for bull riding. Yet, bad influences back home lure her back into delinquent ways. 
 
Gerard Lefort, head of the Critics Award jury, described the film as a “captivating story with a staggeringly mature performance by actress Amber Havard, despite her young age.” 
 
In the 45th edition of the Deauville festival, a total of 14 films were in competition, including nine first films and six directed by women, Deneuve said. 
 
Two other films — Michael Angelo Covino’s The Climb and Robert Eggers’ The Lighthouse — were also awarded jury prizes.