France’s highest film awards were handed out at the 42nd annual ceremony in Paris on Friday [24].

Elle

Isabelle Huppert clinched best actress for her performance in Paul Verhoeven’s Elle at France’s annual César awards at Salle Pleyel in Paris on Friday evening (24), in a 42nd edition marked by strong female stories, newcomers and outsiders. 

SCROLL DOWN FOR FULL LIST OF WINNERS

Verhoeven’s tale of a tough female company boss who plays a cat-and-mouse psychological game with a rapist also won best film with Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodovar presenting the award to the Dutch director and the film’s producers Saïd Ben Saïd and Michel Merkt.

The director noted Huppert had taken the film to a higher level.

“You added something that I didn’t have in mind when I started the project, it came through the collaboration you. Thank you, Isabelle, I adore you.”

Huppert was also on hand to accept her award ahead of jetting off to Los Angeles to attend Sunday night’s Academy Awards as one of the front-runners in the best actress category alongside Emma Stone and Natalie Portman.

It was her second César for best actress after 16 nominations and a previous win for her performance in Claude Chabrol’s crime drama La Cérémonie.

“I sometimes think about the relationship between the interpreter that I am and the role that I play, and I believe that in the case of Ellethe role prevailed over the interpreter,” commented Huppert on the way in which this role in particular has put her in spotlight at home and abroad. 

Other victors

Another big victor at Friday night’s ceremony was the Cannes Caméra d’Or-winning Divines which won three Césars including best first feature for director Houda Benyamina.

Cast members Oulaya Amamra and Déborah Lukumuena won best female newcomer and best actress in a supporting role respectively for their performances as two high-spirited friends eager to move on and out of their tough outer Paris neighbourhood.

Xavier Dolan’s It’s Only The End Of World also did well, winning best director and editing for Dolan and best actor for Gaspard Ulliel for his performance as dying man who returns home to spend time with his estranged family. 

Clooney, political notes

Other highlights included an honorary César for George Clooney who attended the ceremony with wife Amal.  

French Oscar winner Jean Dujardin, a friend of Clooney’s since appearing in The Monument’s Men, presented the US actor and director with the award.

The pair entered into comedy number in which Dujardin mistranslated Clooney’s speech into French to deliver a serious message against the hate-mongering tactics of US president Donald Trump. 

Ken Loach’s acceptance speech for the César for best foreign film for I, Daniel Blake also took on a political tone.

He was absent from the ceremony but in a written note read by his long-time French producer Pascal Caucheteux, the filmmaker called on the French to keep the far-right out of power in upcoming presidential elections in which Marine Le Pen’s National Front party is being touted as a potential winner.

“The extreme right succeeds when people feel desperate; we have to restore hope. Hope is lodged in the spirit of resistance, in the sense of social justice as well as in solidarity,” he said.

“It’s currently up to the French to make a choice, we who have been your friends for so many years hope that in the election to come you will be able to reject the bitterness of the right and support the space offered by the left.”

The most political intervention of the night, however, was by director François Ruffin on receiving the award for best documentary for his satire Merci Patron, denouncing the delocalisation of jobs out of France. 

The filmmaker announced he was going to run as an independent candidate in Amiens in northern France in general elections in June and also sounded the alarm about the imminent delocalisation of a tumble-dryer factory in the town to Poland and called on outgoing socialist president François Hollande to “move his ass” on the matter in his final days in power. 

Full list of winners:

BEST FILM

Elle

BEST ACTRESS

Isabelle Huppert, Elle

BEST ACTOR

Gaspard Ulliel, It’s Only The End of The World

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Déborah Lukumuena, Divines

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

James Thierrée, Chocolat

BEST DIRECTOR

Xavier Dolan, It’s Only The End of The World

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

Solveig Anspach, Jean-Luc Gaget, The Aquatic Effect

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

Céline Sciamma, My Life As A Courgette

BEST EDITING

Xavier Dolan, It’s Only The End Of The World

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

Pascal Marti, Frantz

BEST FOREIGN FEATURE

I, Daniel Blake, Ken Loach

BEST DOCUMENTARY

Merci Patron!, Francois Ruffin

BEST ANIMATION

He Who Has Two Souls, Fabrice Luang-Vija (short film)

My Life As A Courgette, Claude Barras

BEST FIRST FEATURE

Divines, Houda Benyamina

BEST FEMALE NEWCOMER

Oulaya Amamra, Divines

BEST MALE NEWCOMER

Niels Schneider, Diamant Noir

BEST ORIGINAL MUSIC

Ibrahim Maalouf, In The Forests Of Siberia

BEST SOUND

Marc Engels, Fred Demolder, Sylvain Rety, Jean-Paul Hurier, L’Odyssee

BEST COSTUME

Anais Romand, La Danseuse

BEST SET DESIGN

Jérémie D Lignol, Chocolat

BEST SHORT FILM

Maman(s), Maimouna Doucouré
Vers La Tendresse, Alice Diop

HONORARY CESAR

George Clooney