The International Film Festival Rotterdam offers a quality selection of worldwide independent, innovative and experimental cinema and visual arts. Devoted to offering a platform to and actively supporting independent filmmaking from around the globe, The International Film Festival Rotterdam is the essential hub for discovering film talent and for catching the early buzz on many world and international premieres.
During twelve festival days, hundreds of filmmakers and other artists present their work to a large and devoted audience in 24 screening venues located within central Rotterdam. Up to 3,000 press and film industry representatives visit the festival to report on its buzz or to take part in CineMart, the largest co-production market for film projects.
Every year the festival presents a diverse array of both competitive and non-competitive sections, installations, performances, special presentations, debates and talk shows. The festival is proud to place an emphasis on work of high cultural and artistic value, presenting a rich program to an appreciative audience.
CineMart was the first platform of its kind to offer filmmakers the opportunity to launch their ideas to the international film industry and to find the right connections to get their projects financed. Launching 40 - 45 new projects that are looking for additional financing, CineMart also signals an important start to the 'film year'. Every year, the CineMart invites a select number of directors/producers to present their film projects to potential co-producers, bankers, funds, sales agents, distributors, TV stations and other potential financiers and information sources. It offers highly productive opportunities to network and discuss projects. In order to maintain the effective but informal atmosphere which is one of the main trademarks of CineMart, the selection of projects is kept to approximately 45 and the invitation process is selective.
The Hubert Bals Fund is designed to bring remarkable or urgent feature films and feature-length creative documentaries by innovative and talented filmmakers from developing countries closer to completion. The HBF provides grants that often turn out to play a crucial role in enabling these filmmakers to realize their projects. Since the Fund started in 1988, close to 600 projects from independent filmmakers in Asia, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, Africa and Latin America have received support. Approximately 80% of these projects have been realised or are currently in production. Every year, the IFFR screens completed films supported by the Fund.
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south of Thailand recovering from the Tsunami; "Flower in the Pocket", Malaysian director Liew Seng Tat’s touching teen drama; and "Go with Peace Jamil," Omar Shargawi’s urban revenge drama set among Copenhagen’s young Muslim community.
The award includes a cash prize of €15,000, up €5,000 on last year. In a statement released by the five-person jury chaired by Iranian director Jafar Panahi, the jurors praised the winning films.
FIPRESCI Award
Also announced last night, the FIPRESCI Award went to "El cielo, la tierra y la lluvia" (The Sky, the Earth and the Rain), Chilean director Jose Luis Torres Leiva’s debut fiction feature. Chosen from entries for the VPRO Tiger Awards competition, the film is an atmospheric rural drama revolving around three lonely women in southern Chile.
Dioraphte Award
Awarded to the twenty-two Hubert Bals-supported films playing at IFFR, the Dioraphte Award went to "Mutum," Sandra Kogut’s Brazilian drama revolving around a sensitive child protagonist on a remote farm.
NETPAC Award
Established to promote Asian cinema, the NETPAC Award, open to all Asian titles at IFFR, went to "What On Earth Have I Done Wrong?!," Taiwanese director Niu Chen-zer’s mockumentary self-portrait.
Explaining their decision, the three-member jury said: ‘It is a début film that has deftly crafted a humorous drama that mocks filmmaking with great sensitivity and arrives at a profound insight into the human condition.’
They also made a Special Mention of "Crude Oil," Wang Bing’s documentary about oil refining in the Gobi Desert. ‘Its dispassionate expose of the hardship of human labour which is the basis of economic progress.’
KNF Award
"Cargo 200," Alexei Balabanov’s grueling thriller, won the KNF Award, the Association of Dutch Film Critics’ prize for best film in the official selection that hasn’t yet been acquired for Dutch distribution.
The IFFR is paying homage to Kobayashi Masahiro. As Film Maker in Focus, his 10 films will be screened, including his The Rebirth (Golden Leopard in Locarno) in which he played one of the two leading roles himself. Kobayashi Masahiro (Tokyo, 1954) started his career as a folk singer and later went on to write film scripts. He made his debut in 1996 as a film maker with Closing Time. The three films he went on to make were all successful in Cannes: Bootleg Film (1999) and Man Walking on Snow (2001) in Un Certain Regard and Koroshi (2000) in the Quinzaine des Réalisateurs. His film Bashing (2005), which was controversial in Japan but very well received internationally, was selected for the competition at Cannes.
Alongside Kobayashi Masahiro, Robert Breer (USA) and Svetlana Proskurina (Russia) will also be Film Makers in Focus at the 37th festival edition; Cameron Jamie (USA) is Artist in Focus.
Short: As Long As It Takes, the programme with short films running from 24 to 28 January in Theater Lantaren/Venster, in the Short Profiles section is focusing special attention on the oeuvre of Jani Ruscica (Finland), Rania Stephan (France) and Makino Takashi (Japan).
The Finnish artist Jani Ruscica provides images for the invisible and language-less aspect of music; for instance he links the sonar of bats with the sounds of human beat boxes.
Rania Stephan worked as camera and sound woman, editor and producer for film makers including Simone Bitton and Elia Suleiman. In the meantime she has also worked on documentary projects homing in on the contemporary history of Lebanon. Her most important work years Lebanon/War.
With No Is E, the experimental film maker Makino Takashi this year won the Shuji Terayama Award at the Image Forum Festival (Japan). This work was realised in close cooperation with Jim O’Rourke. In the meantime, this cooperation has led to a new work: Elements of Nothing. Alongside both these recent films, there is also attention for the early work of Makino.
The Exploding Cinema programme includes the following exhibitions:
1 TENT. Visual Arts Centre presents from 24 January to 2 March 2008 the show ‘3RADICALS’ put together by festival programmer Edwin Carels. Paul Sharits, Robert Breer and Cameron Jamie illustrate in three linked solo presentations in TENT. how idiosyncratic pioneers of experimental film have again become relevant for the youngest generation of audiovisual iconoclasts. Three wayward and energetic artists from different generations demonstrate the importance of radically pursued originality. The films and installations of Paul Sharits have an enormous physical and even aggressive impact. Film Maker in Focus Robert Breer makes short, diary-like collage and animation films. His cheerful anarchistic work also comprises visual work that includes objects that can be manipulated or slowly move around on the gallery floor. The drawings and the graphic work by Artist in Focus Cameron Jamie can be regarded as visual scores for his dark, macabre evocations of America’s morbid psyche.
2 The former building occupied by the Photography Museum on Witte de Withstraat, Rotterdam houses the exhibition New Dragon Inns, compiled by festival programmer Gertjan Zuilhof. This title refers to the film Goodbye Dragon Inn by Tsai Ming-liang about the demise of a once-grand cinema that bore the name Dragon Inn. The exhibition shows new ways of screening films. It creates new ‘Dragon Inns’. The exhibition focuses on film makers and artists from three Asian countries: China, Taiwan and Thailand. Countries where at present a lot is happening in the field of trampling the boundaries between the arts and film. Three film makers from Asian countries form the heart of the exhibition: Wang Bing (China), Tsai Ming-liang (Taiwan) and Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Thailand). In addition, new names from the same countries will be introduced. With a contribution from the Hubert Bals Fund, Wang Bing is making The Journal of Crude Oil, a 70-hour documentary about drilling for oil in China, a film being screened as a video installation. Tsai Ming-liang is showing his installation ‘Is it a dream?’ that was also in the Taiwanese pavilion at the recent Biennial in Venice. The other works will be made specially for this exhibition.
In the Cinema Regained section, the festival is showing the theme programme Rediscovering the Fourth Generation, compiled by Shelly Kraicer (programmer of the Vancouver Film Festival and expert in the field of Chinese cinema) in collaboration with Rotterdam festival programmer Gerwin Tamsma. The film makers of the Fourth Generation left film academy in the 1960s but saw their careers thwarted by the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976), in which film production came to a virtual halt. Then the reins were loosened and film makers such as Xie Fei, Wenji Teng and Zhang Nuanxin - all in their 20s in the 1960s - were given an opportunity to develop. No heirs to the Third Generation (1949-1966) that had given Chinese cinema a socialist face, they were completely eclipsed by the Fifth Generation which acquired international fame with features by directors such as Chen Kaige and Zhang Yimou. Virtually all the Fourth Generation films from the period 1978-1989 are an implicit commentary on the moral and cultural void of the Cultural Revolution in which the Chinese were subjected to the laws of the permanent socialists revolution. These films of the Fourth Generation are unique in their combination of artistic experimentation and their focus on human values.
Within the Time & Tide section, the festival presents a series of recent ‘Hinglish’-films from India. Alongside the commercial Bollywood film production and the independent ‘Parallel’-cinema focusing on social issues, a new generation of filmmakers has come forth. Situated within modern-day urban settings among the ambitious, young and well educated professionals, their films break with traditions and address controversial themes.
The series is expected to include, among others, films by Dev Benegal, Ram Madhavani and Parto Sen Gupta.
To make the VPRO Tiger Awards Competition more attractive, the IFFR has asked the main sponsor VPRO to raise the prize money. Only first or second films can be selected for the Competition, started in 1995. Since then, many international film festivals have followed the example of the IFFR and focussed on screening work by young film talent. It is important for the IFFR to strengthen its position by offering more money. The international competition jury chooses the winners of the three equal Tiger Awards. Each winner gets €15,000.
“Love Conquers All”
Directed by: Tan Chui Mui (Malaysia, 2006)
“..a disturbing romance from Malaysia, is one of the two HBF-supported films. ‘Classical in style and structure, it is a film which speaks to the heart,’ said the five-person jury in a joint statement.”
“The Unpolished”
Directed by: Pia Marais (Malaysia, 2006)
“..for its nuanced portrayal of a young girl trying to find meaning in a society that has lost all sense of direction.”
“Bog of Beasts”
Directed by: Claudio Assis (Brazil, 2006)
“…praised for its ‘crudeness, energy and visual strength’”
“AFR”
Directed by: Morten Hartz Kapler (Denmark, 2006)
“…impressed because it was a ‘well-crafted polemical film which utilizes a conceptual approach that comments on the blurring of reality and fiction.’”
Each VPRO Tiger Award comes with a prize of €10,000 and guaranteed broadcast by Dutch public television network VPRO. BOG OF BEASTS and AFR will split the €10,000 award between them.
NETPAC (Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema) Award: “Fourteen”
Directed by: Hirosue Hiroyama (Japan, 2006)
For its “insight into psychology and generational barriers, and its bold analysis of a complex culture.”
The FIPRESCI Award: “Yo”
Directed by: Rafa Cortes (Spain, 2007)
“…quoting its intense depiction of one man’s struggle to acquire an identity”
The KNF Award (the jury of Dutch film critics): “Operation Filmmaker”
Directed by: Nina Davenport (USA, 2007)
“… a documentary film which follows an aspiring film director in Baghdad. ‘The director is constantly challenging herself and the viewer to reconsider Western opinions on cultural differences,’ states the KNF jury.”
The award enables the winning film to be subtitled in Dutch to help it achieve distribution in the Netherlands.
KPN Audience Award: “The Life of the Others” (Das Leben der Anderen)
Directed by: Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck (Germany, 2006)
Prize: 7,500 Euro
Tiger Awards for Short Films:
“Video Game”
Directed by: Vipin Vijay (India, 2006)
“Hinterland”
Directed by: Geoffrey Boulangé (France, 2007)
“The Flag” (Bayrak)
Directed by: Köken Ergun (Turkey, 2007)