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Turkish drama ‘Winter Sleep’ wins top prize at Cannes

CANNES, France — The richly ruminative Chekhovian drama ‘‘Winter Sleep’’ was awarded the Palme d’Or on Saturday, bestowing the Cannes Film Festival’s top honor on a wintery epic set on Turkey’s Anatolian steppe.

Director Nuri Bilge Ceylan accepted the award, handed out by Quentin Tarantino and Uma Thurman at the French Riviera festival. In his speech, Ceylan alluded to anti-government protests in Istanbul that began a year ago and have raged following a recent mining disaster that killed hundreds.

‘‘I want to dedicate the prize to the young people in Turkey and those who lost their lives during the last year,’’ said Ceylan.

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For the second year in a row, Cannes awarded its top honor to a film running more than three hours. The French lesbian coming-of-age tale ‘‘Blue Is the Warmest Color’’ won the Palme in 2013; this year, the jury, headed by Jane Campion, opted for Ceylan’s meditative character study about a retired actor running a hotel and lording over his village tenants.

Accepting the award, Ceylan, who has twice won Cannes’ second-highest honor, the Grand Prix, noted it was the 100th anniversary of Turkish cinema.

‘‘It’s a beautiful coincidence,’’ he said. ‘‘Winter Sleep’’ is the second film by a Turkish director to win the Palme d’Or following Yilmaz Guney and Serif Goren’s ‘‘The Way’’ in 1982.

Julianne Moore won best actress for her performance in David Cronenberg’s dark Hollywood satire ‘‘Maps to the Stars.’’ Screenwriter Bruce Wagner accepted the award for Moore and cheered the town he savagely parodies in the film: ‘‘Vive Los Angeles. Vive David Cronenberg. Vive Julianne Moore. And vive la France,’’ he said.

Best actor went to Timothy Spall, who stars as British painter J.M.W. Turner in Mike Leigh’s biopic ‘‘Mr. Turner.’’ He spoke emotionally about a long, humble career that has often gone without such notice.

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‘‘I’ve spent a lot of time being a bridesmaid,’’ said the veteran character actor. ‘‘This is the first time I’ve ever been a bride.’’

Bennett Miller (”Capote,’’ ‘’Moneyball”) won best director for his wresting drama ‘‘Foxcatcher,’’ the American film that made the biggest impact at Cannes. Miller dedicated his award to his stars Channing Tatum, Steve Carell, and Mark Ruffalo, as well as producer Megan Ellison.

The jury prize was shared by the oddest of couples: Quebec filmmaker Xavier Dolan’s ‘‘Mommy’’ and Jean-Luc Godard’s ‘‘Goodbye to Language.’’ The two were the oldest (Godard is 83) and youngest (Dolan is 25) directors at the festival.

‘‘Goodbye to Language’’ is a 3-D art-house sensation from the ever-experimental French master. ‘‘Mommy’’ is a French-language mother-son drama shot in an Instagram-like 1:1 aspect ratio (a square).

Alice Rohrwatcher’s ‘‘The Wonders,’’ an Italian drama about a family of beekeepers, was the surprise winner of the Grand Prix.

‘‘Leviathan,’’ a tragic satire about small-town corruption in Russia by Andrey Zvyagintsev, took best screenplay.

The Camera d’Or, an award for first-time filmmakers, went to ‘‘Party Girl,’’ a portrait of a 60-year-old nightclub hostess by a trio of directors: Marie Amachoukeli, Claire Burger, and Samuel Theis.