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France honours 'villain' Mads Mikkelsen and star director

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
France honours 'villain' Mads Mikkelsen and star director
Best known for playing villains, Mads Mikkelsen stepped into the hero role on Wednesday. Photo: Frit/AmbassadedeFrance/DK

France on Wednesday honoured Bond villain Mads Mikkelsen with a top civilian award, paying tribute to him as a "fascinating" actor whose "face tells it all".

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The 50-year-old Danish actor, best known for playing baddie Le Chiffre in the 2006 Bond film "Casino Royale" received the honour at a ceremony in Copenhagen alongside Danish film director Thomas Vinterberg.
 
Conferring the honour of Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters (Chevalier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres), France's ambassador to Denmark François Zimeray described Mikkelsen as "an all-round actor, whose face tells it all: the hardships and joys of life".
 
"Mads Mikkelsen takes a risk every time he embodies a new character, a fascinating actor like a man on the edge of the abyss," he said in a statement.
 
The former professional dancer won the best actor prize at Cannes in 2012 for his role in Vinterberg's psychological thriller 'The Hunt' (Jagten).
 
"My return to Cannes as member of the jury next month will be a new chapter in my love story with France," he said.
 
In addition to his Bond role, Mikkelsen also gained international fame by portraying Dr. Hannibal Lecter through three seasons of the US series 'Hannibal'. He'll also feature prominently in the upcoming 'Doctor Strange' and 'Star Wars: Rogue One' films.
 
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Mikkelsen and Vinterberg were presented the honour by French Ambassador François Zimeray
Mikkelsen and Vinterberg were presented the honour by French Ambassador François Zimeray. Photo: Frit/AmbassadedeFrance/DK
 
Conferring the same honour on Vinterberg, 46, Zimeray described him as a film-maker who "exposes the dark sides of human nature with audacity".
 
The film director co-founded the Dogme 95 movement, an avant-garde filmmaking movement, with Lars von Trier, and won the Jury Prize at Cannes in 1998 for The Celebration, the first of the Dogme movies.
 
"I am particularly proud to be awarded this distinction by France, a country which relentlessly fights to protect, encourage and respect arts and culture," he said.
 
Vinterberg found himself at the centre of controversy in February while promoting his newest film ‘The Commune’ (Kollektivet) which is based on his own experiences growing up in a Copenhagen collective in the 1970s.
 
The director told media at the Berlin Film Festival that he was ashamed to be Danish in light of the current political climate in Denmark. 
 
“I’m very shameful to be a Dane. I’m very shameful about the political life in our country and if there’s anything that can be brought from this film to inspire people to share and not humiliate other people I would be very happy,” he said to applause.

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