Tag: Luka and the Flower of the Sun

  • Global television triumphs at Venice TV Awards 2025

    Global television triumphs at Venice TV Awards 2025

    VENICE:  Television’s finest have been crowned at the Venice TV Awards 2025, with productions from 32 countries proving that quality programming knows no boundaries. The ceremony, backed by the Association of Commercial Television and Video on Demand Services in Europe, the International Music + Media Centre, and the European Group of Television Advertising, celebrated another bumper year for the box.

    Britain emerged as a standout performer, claiming four categories including the coveted documentary prize for The Man Who Definitely Didn’t Steal Hollywood from Wonderhood Studios and the BBC. The corporation also triumphed in comedy with Ludwig, starring David Mitchell, whilst securing wins in performing arts and children’s programming.

    Japan flexed its creative muscles with three victories, including the television film award for Driving into the Storm and animation honours for Luka and the Flower of the Sun. The country’s technical prowess shone through in the cinematography category with Deep Ocean: Kingdom of the Coelacanth.

    Canada’s Empathy from Trio Orange took the series crown, whilst South Korea’s Couple Palace dominated light entertainment. France claimed both sport and technology categories, with Canal+’s Giroud and TF1’s innovative 8 May 1945 respectively.

    The awards spanned 18 categories, from traditional documentary and news coverage to cutting-edge cross-platform content and branded entertainment. America’s CBS News won recognition for its Red Sea reporting, whilst NBCUniversal’s Peacock platform scored with its Paris Olympics coverage.

    Smaller television markets also punched above their weight. Finland’s Queen of Fucking Everything earned the direction prize, whilst Germany’s film school production If I could fly claimed the new talent award.

    The ceremony underscored television’s resilience and creativity in an increasingly fragmented media landscape. As streaming platforms continue to reshape viewing habits, traditional broadcasters and digital natives alike demonstrated that compelling storytelling remains the industry’s beating heart.

    With productions ranging from hard-hitting documentaries to frothy entertainment, the winners reflected television’s remarkable breadth and ambition in 2025.