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Delivery is a 9-minute animated shortfilm written, directed
and produced by Till Nowak in 2005 as his graduation
work at the University of Applied Sciences in Mainz, Germany.
The surreal story about an old man and the mysterious box was
screened in more than 200 international film festivals. It won
more than 35 awards, including AFI Fest Hollywood, Annecy IAFF,
Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Kurzfilmpreis, a nomination for the
European Film Awards and many more.
DELIVERY
is distributed by the German agency KFA Hamburg. For requests
concerning sales, licensing, screenings etc. please contact
sales@shortfilm.com or give us a call at +49-40- 39 10 63 19.
AWARDS:
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Audience
Award
AFI FEST 2005, Los Angeles
AFI
FEST 2005, November
2005
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Audience
Award
Best Animation
ICON
Interntl. Film Festival
icon.org.il,
Israel, November 2007
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Best
Animation
Steps
by CETA,
Kiev, Oktober 2007
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Mediterranean
Environmental Award
by United
Nations Antalya, Sept. 2006
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Best
Short (Audience Award)
Prague Shortfilm Festival
Pragueshorts,
Prague, Nov. 2006
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Jury
Award "Golden Glibb"
Weekend of Fear
Erlangen, Germany, 2007
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Best Student Animation
goEast Festival Wiesbaden
goEast
Festival Wiesbaden, April 2005
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Best
Shortfilm
OFFF Barcelona
OFFF,
May 2005
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3rd
Prize Audience Award
exground Festival
Wiesbaden, Germany, 2005
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Jury
Award
Best Animation
ICON
Interntl. Film Festival
icon.org.il,
Israel, November 2007
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Best
Animation
Monterrey
Int.
Film festival
www.ficmty.org,
Mexico, 2006
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Juror
Choice Award
11th Annual ASU Art Museum
Short Film and Video Festival
asuartmuseum.asu.edu
USA, Mar 2007
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In
a grey, industrial and uninhabited future, an old man lovingly
waters a flower, perhaps the last flower to exist. In his home,
across from a factory spewing gas, noise and bad vibrations,
the vision of which constantly reminds him that the world isnt
what it was, the man caringly tends the flower because he knows
its his last hope. Unexpectedly, he receives a surprising
package that could change the world, at least his world, and
perhaps a little more. A surrealistic fable on the world to
come, the portrayal of a corrupt society infested by machines,
that has forgotten the human being, a future in which there
is still place for hope: flowers can grow again. (Text
by Carlos Plaza)
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