Family Time named Best Film at the Jussi Awards, with Fallen Leaves snubbed
by Marta Bałaga
- While Aki Kaurismäki was overlooked at the 80th Finnish national film awards, one of his leads, Alma Pöysti, was rewarded for her turn in Four Little Adults

Nobody is a prophet in their own country, they say – particularly Aki Kaurismäki, whose latest film, Fallen Leaves [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile], was completely ignored during the 80th-anniversary edition of the local Jussi Awards.
Fallen Leaves, one of the best-reviewed movies of last year, was shortlisted for an Academy Award, awarded the Jury Prize at Cannes, and nominated for the European Film Awards, the LUX Audience Award and a Golden Globe – with one of its leads, Alma Pöysti, scoring a Golden Globe nod as well. Ironically enough, Kaurismäki’s regular actress Kati Outinen – seen in Drifting Clouds and The Other Side of Hope [+see also:
film review
trailer
Q&A: Aki Kaurismäki
film profile] – received the Concrete Jussi for Lifetime Achievement this year.
On a night of surprising results, Tia Kouvo’s directorial debut, Family Time [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Tia Kouvo
film profile], was named Best Film instead. It was produced by Aamu Film Company, the company behind Compartment No. 6 [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Juho Kuosmanen
film profile]. Pöysti still ended up winning, however, albeit for a different film: Selma Vilhunen’s Four Little Adults [+see also:
film review
interview: Selma Vilhunen
film profile], which previously earned her a trophy at Göteborg last year.
Sisu [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile] – a gleefully violent tale by Jalmari Helander about a legendary Finnish fighter forced back into action after encountering a Nazi death squad – ended up winning four Jussis. The first Audience’s Favourite Actress Jussi Award went to Linnea Leino for Toni Kurkimäki’s Lapua 1976, with the film also getting the so-called Feat of the Year gong.
Katja Gauriloff’s Je’vida [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile] and the documentary Homecoming [+see also:
trailer
film profile] by Suvi West and Anssi Kömi were also noticed, as was Jari Virman for Teemu Nikki’s Death Is a Problem for the Living, in which he plays a man who finds out he doesn’t actually have a brain. He does have a friend, though – a gambling addict who turns him into a hearse driver for hire.
The first-ever Jussi Awards were given out in Helsinki on 16 November 1944.
Here is the full list of award winners:
Best Film
Family Time [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Tia Kouvo
film profile] – Tia Kouvo (Finland/Sweden)
Best Director
Tia Kouvo – Family Time
Best Leading Role
Alma Pöysti – Four Little Adults [+see also:
film review
interview: Selma Vilhunen
film profile]
Best Supporting Role
Jari Virman – Death is a Problem for the Living (Finland/Italy)
Newcomer in Acting
Rebekka Baer – Light Light Light
Best Script
Tia Kouvo – Family Time
Best Cinematography
Kjell Lagerroos – Sisu [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile]
Best Music
Laura Naukkarinen – Je'vida [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile]
Best Sound Design
Jukka Nurmela, Timo Peltola – Je'vida
Best Editing
Juho Virolainen – Sisu
Best Set Design
Otso Linnalaakso – Sisu
Best Costume Design
Anu Pirilä – Je'vida
Best Make-up Design
Salla Yli-Luopa – Sisu
Best Documentary
Homecoming [+see also:
trailer
film profile] - Suvi West, Anssi Kömi (Finland/Norway)
Best Short Film
How to Please - Elina Talvensaari
Audience Award
Lapua 1976 - Toni Kurkimäki
Audience’s Favourite in Acting
Linnea Leino – Lapua 1976
Feat of the Year
Toni Kurkimäki, Mikko Jokipii, Pekka Pohjoispää, Tuukka Haapamäki - Lapua 1976
Honorary Lifetime Achievement Award (Concrete Jussi)
Kati Outinen
Diploma for Visual Effects
Jussi Lehtiniemi, Antti Kulmala – Sisu
Nordisk Film Foundation Award
Suvi West, Anssi Kömi - Homecoming
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