Bon Voyage (2016 film) explained

Bon Voyage
Director:Marc Raymond Wilkins
Producer:Joël Louis Jent
Music:Balz Bachmann
Cinematography:Burak Turan
Editing:Jann Anderegg
Studio:Dschoint Ventschr Filmproduction
Distributors:-->
Runtime:21 minutes
Country:Switzerland
Turkey
Language:German
English
Arabic

Bon Voyage is a Swiss-German short film written and directed by Marc Raymond Wilkins.

Bon Voyage was shortlisted with ten other short-film from 137 entries submitted to the 89th Academy Awards in Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film category. The final five nominations are scheduled to be announced on January 24, 2016.[1]

Plot

Jonas and Silvia are enjoying a wonderful sailing holiday in the Mediterranean sea. But while sailing through the night far away from land, they discover an overloaded refugee boat which is close to sinking. They are shocked but too afraid to help. They call the coast guards but lose the boat out of sight into the darkness of the night. In the early morning, they find themselves drifting through an ocean of dead bodies. The refugee boat has sunk. Jonas and Silvia manage to pull a few Syrian survivors out of the cold water. This rescue marks the beginning of a dramatic conflict between the hopes and dreams of the refugees, and the fears and ideals of the holiday sailors.

Cast

Awards and nominations

AwardCategoryRecipients Result
Best Live Action Short over 15 minutesMarc Raymond Wilkins and Dschoint Ventschr Filmproduktion AG
San Diego Film FestivalBest Short FilmMarc Raymond Wilkins
Best Narrative ShortMarc Raymond Wilkins, Joël Louis Jent, Jay Abdo and Dschoint Ventschr Filmproduktion AG
89th Academy AwardsAcademy Award for Best Live Action Short FilmMarc Raymond Wilkins
Joël Louis Jent

Notes and References

  1. News: 10 Live action Short Advance in 2016 Oscar Race. November 23, 2016. January 15, 2017. Oscars.org.