<p>You no longer need millions of dollars and a distribution deal to win prizes at the Cannes Film Festival -- just a mobile phone and a bit of ingenuity will do.</p>.<p>Turning 75 this year, the world's leading film gathering knew it needed a shot of youth and made TikTok an official sponsor.</p>.<p>That has brought some of the video platform's biggest stars to the French Riviera -- including Italian-Senegalese sensation Khaby Lame and his 139 million followers -- inevitably breaking the festival's usual taboo against selfies on the red carpet.</p>.<p>TikTok has also sponsored a short film competition, with prizes awarded by a jury of film professionals, as well as Lame.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/at-cannes-filmmakers-urge-france-to-confront-colonial-past-1111165.html" target="_blank">At Cannes, filmmakers urge France to confront colonial past</a></strong></p>.<p>"You might think that three minutes is short, but we really tried to judge them just as we would a film of 120 minutes," jury member and French director Camille Ducellier told an audience gathered for the prize-giving on Friday.</p>.<p>The top prize was shared by Japan's Mabuta Motoki, with a simple but touching short about traditional wood carving, and Slovenian Matej Rimanic with a mini-ode to black-and-white silent comedies.</p>.<p>However Cannes' youngest competition did not go entirely smoothly.</p>.<p>The head of the jury, French-Cambodian director Rithy Panh briefly resigned the day before the award gathering, accusing TikTok of trying to influence the selections.</p>.<p>"TikTok reversed course and gave us back our sovereignty," Panh told <em>AFP</em>, saying they had eventually been given the freedom to award "the films that we chose."</p>.<p>The TikTok representatives seemed in a panic at the awards show, cutting off <em>AFP </em>from talking to the jury and preventing interviews with the winners.</p>.<p>But Panh was in positive mood as he introduced the prizes, telling the audience it was "amazing to feel the energy" from the films they had watched.</p>.<p>"There were beautiful, poetic films that were just one minute, that told everything from the difficulties in life, to traditions, humour, pain, love -- it's not easy to do in one shot and one minute," he said.</p>.<p>Ducellier said she welcomed the vertical style of filming for TikTok, despite her usual work in traditional cinema.</p>.<p>"It allows you to free yourself from the weight of all these decades of a horizontal screen, and to create a whole new visual style," she said.</p>.<p>One exception to the ban on interviews was Claudia Cochet, a French TikToker with 250,000 followers, who won the prize for best script.</p>.<p>The 34-year-old discovered TikTok during the pandemic, when her day job in a theatre was shut down.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/thakur-unveils-sops-for-shooting-foreign-films-in-india-1110431.html" target="_blank">Thakur unveils sops for shooting foreign films in India</a></strong></p>.<p>"TikTok offers me freedom to create an audience and it gives me confidence to do things on my own," she told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Her winning film was a world away from the usual fun and silliness of TikTok, alluding to violence against women.</p>.<p>"When we're a victim of conjugal violence, we don't dare to speak about it, but we can show it," she said.</p>.<p>Some 70,000 videos were entered for #TikTokShortFilm from 44 countries, the organisers said.</p>.<p>Eric Garandeau, head of TikTok France, said it could inject new life into filmmaking.</p>.<p>"Today, cinema is sometimes a bit 'obese' and TikTok offers a shorter alternative and a more intense experience," he said.</p>.<p>He chose not to comment about the reasons for the jury president's temporary resignation.</p>
<p>You no longer need millions of dollars and a distribution deal to win prizes at the Cannes Film Festival -- just a mobile phone and a bit of ingenuity will do.</p>.<p>Turning 75 this year, the world's leading film gathering knew it needed a shot of youth and made TikTok an official sponsor.</p>.<p>That has brought some of the video platform's biggest stars to the French Riviera -- including Italian-Senegalese sensation Khaby Lame and his 139 million followers -- inevitably breaking the festival's usual taboo against selfies on the red carpet.</p>.<p>TikTok has also sponsored a short film competition, with prizes awarded by a jury of film professionals, as well as Lame.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/at-cannes-filmmakers-urge-france-to-confront-colonial-past-1111165.html" target="_blank">At Cannes, filmmakers urge France to confront colonial past</a></strong></p>.<p>"You might think that three minutes is short, but we really tried to judge them just as we would a film of 120 minutes," jury member and French director Camille Ducellier told an audience gathered for the prize-giving on Friday.</p>.<p>The top prize was shared by Japan's Mabuta Motoki, with a simple but touching short about traditional wood carving, and Slovenian Matej Rimanic with a mini-ode to black-and-white silent comedies.</p>.<p>However Cannes' youngest competition did not go entirely smoothly.</p>.<p>The head of the jury, French-Cambodian director Rithy Panh briefly resigned the day before the award gathering, accusing TikTok of trying to influence the selections.</p>.<p>"TikTok reversed course and gave us back our sovereignty," Panh told <em>AFP</em>, saying they had eventually been given the freedom to award "the films that we chose."</p>.<p>The TikTok representatives seemed in a panic at the awards show, cutting off <em>AFP </em>from talking to the jury and preventing interviews with the winners.</p>.<p>But Panh was in positive mood as he introduced the prizes, telling the audience it was "amazing to feel the energy" from the films they had watched.</p>.<p>"There were beautiful, poetic films that were just one minute, that told everything from the difficulties in life, to traditions, humour, pain, love -- it's not easy to do in one shot and one minute," he said.</p>.<p>Ducellier said she welcomed the vertical style of filming for TikTok, despite her usual work in traditional cinema.</p>.<p>"It allows you to free yourself from the weight of all these decades of a horizontal screen, and to create a whole new visual style," she said.</p>.<p>One exception to the ban on interviews was Claudia Cochet, a French TikToker with 250,000 followers, who won the prize for best script.</p>.<p>The 34-year-old discovered TikTok during the pandemic, when her day job in a theatre was shut down.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/thakur-unveils-sops-for-shooting-foreign-films-in-india-1110431.html" target="_blank">Thakur unveils sops for shooting foreign films in India</a></strong></p>.<p>"TikTok offers me freedom to create an audience and it gives me confidence to do things on my own," she told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Her winning film was a world away from the usual fun and silliness of TikTok, alluding to violence against women.</p>.<p>"When we're a victim of conjugal violence, we don't dare to speak about it, but we can show it," she said.</p>.<p>Some 70,000 videos were entered for #TikTokShortFilm from 44 countries, the organisers said.</p>.<p>Eric Garandeau, head of TikTok France, said it could inject new life into filmmaking.</p>.<p>"Today, cinema is sometimes a bit 'obese' and TikTok offers a shorter alternative and a more intense experience," he said.</p>.<p>He chose not to comment about the reasons for the jury president's temporary resignation.</p>