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British director Stephen Daldry Image Credit: REUTERS

British director Stephen Daldry, of Billy Elliot and The Reader fame, won the Rome Film Festival’s top prize on Saturday with his adventure thriller Trash set in Brazilian slums.

The film about children who forage in landfills for a living until they come across a wallet and key sought after by a corrupt police officer edged out 17 other contenders at the ninth edition of the festival, with prizes decided for the first time by the viewing public.

Starring a trio of youngsters with no previous acting experience, the film sees the boys race to try and solve the riddle before the police can, helped along by an American priest and an aid worker, played by Martin Sheen and Rooney Mara. The film was also screened at the ongoing Abu Dhabi Film Festival.

Richard Curtis, the man behind Four Weddings and a Funeral and Notting Hill, wrote the script, based on Andy Mulligan’s novel of the same name.

Chinese director Xu Ang scooped the People’s Choice Award for Cinema Today with his latest film 12 Citizens, inspired by the 1957 Hollywood classic Twelve Angry Men.

The Genre Award went to Haider, a 2014 Hindi drama directed by Vishal Bhardwaj, who completes his Shakespearean trilogy with this flick, a modern-day adaptation of Hamlet, set against the Kashmir conflicts of 1995.

The annual festival this year hosted 51 feature-length films from 21 countries, 24 of them making their international premieres.

Festival-goers were asked to vote for the top awards for the first time this year in a bid to cut down the cash-strapped festival’s expenses.