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Film Festivals
We only recieve shortfilms that have been selected (and/or awarded) in previous film festivals. Director of Best dhort film will recieve a $2500 cash price and the beautifull "Director´s Chair Award", plus a contract for latin american distribution.
The international best short films awarded
Enter now!
Enter at: www.BestShorts.net
Best Shorts is an awards competition that recognizes the achievements of short filmmakers worldwide. While it is not your typical film festival that screens films, Best Film Shorts strives to give talented directors, producers, videographers, actors, and actresses the positive exposure they need by promoting our awardwinners through press releases, media outlets, blog entries, etc.
Our competition gives awards not just for short films, but for other short television, videography, and new media pieces such as: television pilots, public service announcements, commercials, music videos, mobile advertising, podcasts, webcasts, webinars, and so much more! As long as your clip is 57 minutes or less, it is eligible for entry.
Please visit the Best Shorts website, www.BestShorts.net for more information. You may also email us at info@bestshorts.net for any of your questions or concerns.
See www.BestFestAmerica for year-round events!
Award-winning college and high school student films, in 9 categories and from around the globe, will be screened during the 2-day festival with awards and seminars. Submit your film, come and enjoy!
We invite international filmmakers to submit shorts of up to 10min on the theme “Control”. Shortlisted films are screened simultaneously in 10 countries in Europe and beyond. European & regional jury awards
Deadline is 1 July 2009!
What better environment to display the best shorts than in Beverly Hills, home to some of the film worlds most influential people. Check out the Beverly Hills Shorts Festival!
This June we will launch our first annual film festival, celebrating the many facets of the art of storytelling through cinema. Featuring screenplay and short film competitions that are far beyond ordinary, this four-day festival takes place right here in downtown Cary, NC.
We’re attracting filmmakers from across the country who’ve submitted their screenplays and short films (>30 minutes) embodying some unusual incarnations of this year’s “Hometown Stories” theme. Join us for a weekend of fun and an enjoyable cinematic experience open to the community.
WHY BEYOND?
The roots of our slogan “Beyond Ordinary” originate from the Town’s moniker from the late 1700s as Bradford’s Ordinary. It represents our mission of providing a unique setting to experience affordable art house cinema. As we launch our inaugural festival this year, we invite you to participate in what we expect to be a unique cultural arts experience here in the Town of Cary.
WHAT TO EXPECT AT THE FILM FESTIVAL
Attendees will enjoy the best short films we can find from filmmakers far and wide, including a selection of invited feature-length films, and short film and screenplay submissions. The festival will offer a stimulating sneak-peek into the minds of filmmakers and showcase the bedrock of cinema: the screenplay. Join us for social events and other fun activities to make the festival one you won’t want to miss!
FOR FILMMAKERS AND SCREEN WRITERS
Competition Short Films must have been completed after January 1, 2016 and should not exceed 30 minutes in length, including credits. All non-English language films must have English subtitles. Films must embody this year’s theme of “Hometown Stories,” but are not limited to genre.
Screenplays must have been completed after January 1, 2016. Submissions should represent short films and should not exceed 40 pages in length, written in English. Screenplays must embody this year’s theme of “Hometown Stories,” but are not limited to genre.
The BFI London Film Festival in partnership with American Express® today confirmed the dates for the Festival’s 63rd edition which will take place from 2-13 October, led by Festival Director Tricia Tuttle in her second year leading the team after serving as Artistic Director in 2018.
“We had a cracking 2018 edition,” says Tuttle, “Our highest ever occupancies were a testament to our adventurous audiences who eagerly savour a wide range of global cinema. It made for a fabulous experience for filmmakers and a great place to launch a film. We can’t wait to build on that in 2019.”
Submissions for the 2019 BFI London Film Festival are now open. Feature and short films can be submitted through the BFI London Film Festival website at www.bfi.org.uk/lff. The final deadline for features and short films is Friday 14 June at 5pm GMT.
Films entered through open submissions are eligible for Official Competition, Documentary Competition, First Feature Competition and Short Film Competition, provided they meet the other criteria for these sections and with priority given to European and World Premieres.
The 62nd edition of the festival, which took place in October last year, celebrated a record-breaking number of female filmmakers, with 38% of the films directed by women and 50% female directors in 3 of the 4 competitive categories. The programme was also widely applauded for its diversity and inclusion, showing films from 77 countries around the world and welcoming 900 international and British filmmakers to present their work. The festival featured a varied selection of 229 feature films and 159 short films from both established and emerging talent. Of those films, the festival hosted 21 World Premieres, 9 International Premieres and 29 European Premieres, with Steve McQueen’s Widows opening the festival, closing with the World Premiere of Jon S Baird’s Stan & Ollie and featuring Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Favourite as its American Express Gala.
Last year’s festival proved to be hugely popular with overall per screen attendance rising by 12%, reaching an audience of 205,630 across London and the UK. Audiences throughout the UK were able to engage with the BFI London Festival through satellite screenings of the World Premiere of Peter Jackson’s They Shall Not Grow Old, attended by HRH The Duke of Cambridge, Matteo Garrone’s Dogman and Mike Leigh’s Peterloo. The BFI LFF Special Presentation of Peterloo also made history as the first festival premiere to be hosted outside of London at HOME Manchester.
In 2018 the BFI London Film Festival welcomed leading lights from across the international film industry. Acting talent supporting films at the festival included: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Alice Lowe, Amandla Stenberg, Andrea Riseborough, Bill Heck, Bill Nighy, Billy Howle, Chris Pine, Dakota Johnson, Daniel Kaluuya, Denise Gough, Dominic West, Emma Stone, Jamie Dornan, Jessica Hynes, Jessie Buckley, John C. Reilly, Julian Barratt, Keira Knightley, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Melissa McCarthy, Mia Goth, Michaela Coel, Michelle Rodriguez, Nicholas Hoult, Nicole Kidman, Olivia Colman, Olivia Cooke, Patricia Clarkson, Richard E. Grant, Rosamund Pike, Sam Riley, Stanley Tucci, Steve Carell, Steve Coogan, Tilda Swinton, Tim Blake Nelson, Timothée Chalamet, Viggo Mortensen, Viola Davis and Zoe Kazan.
Directors presenting their work included: Alfonso Cuarón, Barry Jenkins, Ben Wheatley, Boots Riley, Carol Morley, David Mackenzie, Ethan Coen, Ethan Hawke, Felix van Groeningen, George Tillman Jr, Jason Reitman, Joel Coen, Jon S. Baird, Luca Guadagnino, Michael Moore, Mike Leigh, Nadine Labaki, Paul Dano, Peter Jackson, Peter Strickland, Steve McQueen, Terry Gilliam, Tinge Krishnan, Wanuri Kahiu, Wash Westmoreland and Yorgos Lanthimos.
In a festival first, the LFF’s Competition winners were announced on stage in front of packed public audiences, with the Official Competition (Best Film Award) presented to Sudabeh Mortezai’s Joy and the First Feature Competition (Sutherland Award) presented to Lukas Dhont for Girl. Robert Minervini’s What You Gonna Do When the World’s on Fire? won the Documentary Competition (Grierson Award) and Charlie Lyne’s Lasting Marks took home the Short Film Competition (Short Film Award).
The bfm International Film Festival is a high quality media event in the heart of London`s west end which aims to highlight black-themed films from around the world and across the Diaspora, creating new opportunities for distribution and exhibition.
Archived festival (terminated)
11th bfm International Film Festival, 6th – 10th November 2009
The bfm International Film festival, - the leading and longest running platform for Black World Cinema in the UK - takes place 6th – 10th November 2009 at the BFI Southbank, Institute of Contemporary Arts, Rich Mix and Shortwave Cinema. The festival will feature narratives, documentaries and short films from the UK, Africa, the Caribbean, the US, Canada and Europe, and open open with the European premiere of Chris Rock’s film Good Hair and close with the much anticipated Shorts Awards.
Filmmakers featured as part of the festival programme include Nelson George, Menelik Shabazz, Frances Anne Solomon, Tunde Kulani, Djibril Diop Mambety.
For the first time, the bfm International Film Festival, in association with the Legacy Media Institute will offer a US based scholarship to a UK filmmaker.
In addition to film screenings there will be seminars hosted by the UK Film Council, Skillset and Channel Four. In the run up to the festival, a special FREE Black History Month showcase will also take place every Tuesday throughout October. This will feature the Great Africans series with Wole Soyinka, Nelson Mandela and Wanguri Mathai.
To find out more information about the festival and view trailer clips of some of the films featured, please visit the official website at www.bfmmedia.com/festival
Archived festival (terminated)
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