Sandra Hüller won best actress, Justine Triet took best director and shared the best screenplay honor with Arthur Harari for the highly acclaimed French marital and courtroom drama.

Justine Triet’s acclaimed French courtroom drama Anatomy of a Fall has won best film at the 2023 European Film Awards, held Saturday evening, Dec. 9 in Berlin.
Sandra Hüller, a double nominee in the best actress category, won for her barnstorming turn in Anatomy of a Fall as a writer who may have killed her husband.
Accepting her prize, Hüller, speaking to the various conflicts raging in and around Europe at the moment, called for a moment of silence from the audience to “silently, strongly, vividly, imagine peace.”
Justine Triet took the best directing honor for Anatomy and shared the best screenplay honor with Arthur Harari for their joint script to the twisty murder mystery. A couple in real life, Triet and Harari said writing the script, which is a piercing dissection of a marriage in crisis, “put our relationship to the test but thankfully we survived.”
Danish star Mads Mikkelsen took the best actor honor for his lead performance in Nikolaj Arcel’s Western epic The Promised Land.
Molly Manning Walker won the European Discovery prize, for best debut feature, for her sleeper hit How to Have Sex, which premiered to critical acclaim in Cannes’ Un Certain Regard section this year.
Pablo Berger’s dog-and-robot buddy movie Robot Dreams took the EFA for best-animated feature. Accepting his prize, Berger chanted “Animation is not a genre!”
Politics could not be avoided at this year’s awards. Ahead of the live award broadcast, Agnieszka Holland, President of the European Film Academy, addressed the audience, referencing the challenging political landscape for the EFA, with “the war in Ukraine still raging, the conflict between Armenian and Azerbaijan and the terrible events of Oct.7,” referencing the Hamas attacks on Israel and the ongoing war in Gaza.
“These past weeks have angered, disappointed and shocked,” added European Film Academy Chair Mike Downey, noting that the Academy has “members on all sides” of these conflicts.
“We have Russian members, we have Ukrainian members, we have Israeli members we have Palestinian members.”
Given current events, Holland said, it was not easy “to feel proud or to feel hopeful” and she asked, rhetorically, “Who dares to speak out? Who dares to defend our Jewish friends in Europe? Who dares to show solidarity with millions of suffering Palestinians? Do we act instead of speaking?”
European Film Academy CEO Matthijs Wouter Knol called the academy “an institution that builds a community” in Europe that strives to create a space for all EFA members, on whatever side of the political or national divides they land, “to talk, to listen and to understand each other.”
Oscar-winning British actress Vanessa Redgrave (Julia, Howards End) received the European Lifetime Achievement honor.
Béla Tarr
Hungarian filmmaker Béla Tarr (The Turin Horse, Werckmeister Harmonies) received an enthusiastic standing ovation from the EFA crowd when Mike Downey presented him with the Honorary Award of the Academy President and Board.
“I am shocked. Swear to god, I really don’t know what to say. Maybe you overestimated my capacity,” said Tarr. “I was speaking to young people, this morning, and they asked for my advice. I don’t have advice. Just that they have to find their own language, they have to be brave and they have to fuck off the film industry. If they don’t have money, don’t worry. They have a phone, they can shoot movies on your phone, they can edit on your computer and distribute over the internet. The most important thing, they have to be free. All of us have to be free.”
The Euroimages European Co-Production Award, honoring excellence in cross-border film production, went to Lithuanian-based producer Uljana Kim.
Through her company, Studio Uljana Kim, she has produced some 34 features and documentaries, almost all co-productions, including The Gambler (2013), Teesklejad (2016) and The Year Before the War (2021).
Full list of winners for the 2023 European Film Awards
European Film
Anatomy of a Fall, dir. Justine Triet
European Documentary
Smoke Sauna Sisterhood, dir. Anna Hints
European Director
Justine Triet for Anatomy of a Fall
European Actress
Sandra Hüller in Anatomy of a Fall
European Actor
Mads Mikkelsen in The Promised Land
European Screenwriter
Justine Triet and Arthur Harari for Anatomy of a Fall
European Discovery – Prix FIPRESCI
How To Have Sex, dir. Molly Manning Walker
European Animated Feature Film
Robot Dreams, dir. Pablo Berger
European Short Film
Hardly Working, dir. Susanna Flock, Robin Klengel, Leonhard Müllner, Michael Stumpf
European Cinematography
Rasmus Videbaek for The Promised Land
European Editing
Laurent Sénéchal for Anatomy of a Fall
European Score
Markus Binder for Club Zero
European Production Design
Emita Frigato for La Chimera
European Costume Design
Kicki Ilander for The Promised Land
European Visual Effects
Félix Bergés and Laura Pedrobest for Society of the Snow
European Hair and Make-Up
Ana López-Puigcerver, Belén López-Puigcerver, David Martí and Montse Ribé for Society of the Snow
European Sound Design







