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‘12 Years A Slave’ wins top prize At Toronto

Entertainment Desk |
Update: 2013-09-16 03:29:52
‘12 Years A Slave’ wins top prize At Toronto

DHAKA: Steve McQueen’s ‘12 Years a Slave’ won the top prize at the 2013 Toronto Film Festival. The film, based on a memoir of a free black man sold into slavery from 1853, won the Blackberry People’s Choice award.

The drama that stars British actors Benedict Cumberbatch and Chiwetel Ejiofor won the audience over in Toronto and is a hot favourite for a successful night at the prestigious Academy Awards as past recipients of the People’s Choice award such as ‘The King’s Speech’ in 2010) and ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ in 2008 have gone onto win an Oscar for Best Picture.

The true nature of slavery in the 1800’s isn’t sugar-coated in this feature as the British director didn`t shy away in illustrating the brutality African American slaves suffered from their barbaric white owners in the American south.

The drama portraying a dark and plagued history has been unanimously praised by critics globally. So what have they said?

Peter Howell of the Toronto Star says, ‘Believe the Oscar buzz. Britain’s Steve McQueen (Hunger, Shame) nails the horror of America’s slavery shame but also finds humanity in one man’s determination to free himself and return to his family’, reports contactmusic.com.

Richard Corliss of Time Magazine echoes the praise by stating ‘in the epic form of 12 Years a Slave, his most approachable, emotional film, McQueen escalates the tension’.

BDST: 1323 HRS, SEPT 16, 2013
RoR/BSK

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