Endless Corridor named “Best Documentary” at Tenerife International Film Festival

Endless Corridor, film about Khojaly directed by Lithuanian Aleksandras Brokas is getting more recognition on the international festival circuit.
Following its Best of Show Award in the US-based Accolade Global Film Competition, the film has picked up two more prestigious awards.
The Tenerife International Film Festival held in Madrid on July 10, declared Endless Corridor to be the "Best Documentary", and Aleksandras Brokas the "Best Director of a Documentary."
Commenting the success of the film Brokas said: “Such huge international attention to Endless Corridor shows that the story of this documentary is very important for people all over the world. The painful lessons of history should finally be learned and the tragedy of Khojaly never repeated. But reality is different.”
“It’s difficult to say how the film’s success could affect the lives of its heroes, but we believe the fact that you are not alone in this world with your pain, can sometimes give hope. All the awards we receive at the Madrid & Tenerife International Film Festival as well as the Accolade Global Film Competition - The Best of Show Award - we dedicate to the heroes of our film and the people who died in the Khojaly tragedy,” he said.
The Accolade award is very important in the film industry. Judges from this competition are well-known Hollywood filmmakers, who also take part in voting for Emmys and Oscars (Academy Awards). Getting this award means that Endless Corridor has become one of the best documentaries of 2015. And after this award the film has a real possibility of aiming for next year’s Emmys.
Endless Corridor has been submitted for more than 60 film festivals throughout the world. Most have already included it in their official programmes. The next one is the prestigious Cape Town Film Festival in South Africa. Also next month the Toronto IFF and AFI FEST (American Film Institute) will announce their official selections.
The documentary includes memorable video materials from the meetings of Lithuanian journalist Richard Lapaitis, an eyewitness of the Khojaly tragedy and another survivor of the massacre who some 20 years later to return to Azerbaijan.
They journey to find the survivors they had first met in the aftermath of the Armenian attack. The accounts of victims tell a dramatic story of the humanity and inhumanity of events in western Azerbaijan on February 26, 1992.
The Khojaly genocide was committed by the Armenian armed forces. Some 613 civilians mostly women and children were killed in the massacre, and a total of 1,000 people were disabled. Eight families were exterminated, 25 children lost both parents, and 130 children lost one parent.
Narrated by Oscar-winning British actor Jeremy Irons and executive produced by Emmy-winning American producer Gerald Rafshoon, the film was presented in Istanbul, Ankara, Rome, Vilnius, London, Paris, Dublin, Berlin, Bern and Luxembourg in February as part of the Justice for Khojaly campaign organised by Leyla Aliyeva, Vice-President of the Heydar Aliyev Foundation.
With further festivals to come, Endless Corridor is also attracting international attention from leading TV channels.
AzerTac state news agency reported
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