Leeds International Film Festival

Leeds International Film Festival
Location Leeds, England
Founded 1987
Awards Audience award for feature films, jury awards for short films
Language International
Website http://www.leedsfilm.com

The Leeds International Film Festival (LIFF) is the largest film festival in England outside London. Founded in 1987, it is held in November at various venues throughout Leeds, West Yorkshire. In 2015, the festival welcomed over 40,000 visitors and showed over 300 films from around the world, shorts and features, commercial and independent.

The 30 anniversary edition of Leeds International Film Festival will take place 3–17 November 2016.

LIFF features five programme sections: Official Selection, Retrospective, Cinema Versa, Fanomenon and Short Film City. LIFF is a qualifying film festival for the Academy Awards and the winning films in Short Film City’s Louis Le Prince International Short Film Competition and World Animation Award may thus be eligible for the Academy’s Short Film Awards. The festival’s British Short Film Competition is BAFTA qualifying.

The festival is supported by Leeds City Council and the festival office is based in Leeds Town Hall, together with Leeds Young Film Festival (LYFF) (formerly Leeds Children & Young People's Film Festival (LCYPFF)).

LIFF Programme Sections and Awards

Leeds International Film Festival's programme has five categories: Official Selection, Retrospective, Cinema Versa, Fanomenon and Short Film City. Fanomenon and Short Film City host various short film competitions, some of which qualify their winners for major film awards such as the Academy Awards. Moreover, the festival audience votes for their favourite feature film from all screenings. These votes determine the winner of the festival's Audience Award, as well as the extra screenings of Film Festival Favourites towards the end of the festival.

Official Selection

The Official Selection hosts special previews and screenings of some of the most anticipated and acclaimed films of the year, as well as showcasing new discoveries from international independent filmmaking. Many of these have celebrated prizewinning successes at other major festivals such as Cannes or the Berlin International Film Festival.

Retrospective

Every year, LIFF shows a broad array of retrospective programmes, giving audiences the opportunity to watch forgotten gems as well as celebrated classics on the big screen.

Cinema Versa

Cinema Versa is dedicated to the documentary and inspired by the underground festival aesthetic, showcasing low budget, independent features. The programme’s Music on Film section shows a range of old and new musical and film styles. Underground Voices, another Cinema Versa section, provides a platform for Human rights and activist films. Cinema Versa’s Forum presents a series of special events.

Fanomenon

Fanomenon is the home of cult and fantasy cinema at LIFF. It presents new genre films, cult-subject documentaries, animated features, rarely-screened classics and movie marathons. Each year, beginning in 2001, the festival has played host to the Night of the Dead, an all-night horror-thon. The most recent festival introduced a single day of back to back anime films at Leeds Town Hall, to be repeated in 2015. Fanomenon also hosts the Dead Short Competition for horror shorts.

Short Film City

Short Film City hosts the festival’s short film competitions and panoramas, as well as special events and exhibitions. The Louis le Prince International Short Film Competition is named after Louis le Prince, a French born film pioneer living in Leeds who made the first ever moving pictures in 1888. The Louis le Prince Competition, as well as the World Animation award are qualifying competitions for the Academy Awards. The festival’s British Short Film Competition is BAFTA qualifying. Additionally, Short Film City hosts the Yorkshire Short Film Competition and added three new competitions in 2014: The Leeds Screendance Competition, the Leeds International Music Video Awards and the Leeds Short Film Audience Award.

Festivals by Year

The 2010s

The 29th Leeds International Film Festival took place 5-19 November 2015 and attracted more than 40'000 visitors. It opened with John Crowley's period drama feature film Brooklyn, which for the first time in the history of LIFF was joined by an opening short film, Sanjay's Super Team. The Audience Award for Best Feature Film was won by the Hungarian black comedy Liza, the Fox-Fairy.

The 28th Leeds International Film Festival took place 5–20 November. The festival opened with the world premiere of James Kent's Testament of Youth. The mockumentary What We Do in the Shadows won the festival's Audience Award for Best Film.

The 27th festival took place 6–21 November 2013.[1] The Opening Gala was a 3D screening of Alfonso Cuarón's new film Gravity, two days ahead of its official release. The Rocket won the Audience Award for Best Film.

The 26th Leeds International Film Festival took place from 1 – 18 November 2012, with a screening of Argo for the Opening Gala.[2] The Retrospective category was added to the festival's programme. Moreover, LIFF's Louis le Prince International Short Film Competition and the World Animation Award have been Academy Awards-qualifying since 2012. The festival's Audience Award for Best Film was won by The Hunt.

The 25th edition of the Leeds International Film Festival took place from 3 – 20 November 2011, with a screening of Andrea Arnold's Wuthering Heights for the Opening Gala. In 2011, the Audience Awards for best feature films were given to each programme category individually. The Artist won the Official Selection Audience Award, Sound It Out won the Cinema Versa Audience Award and Juan of the Dead won the Fanomenon Audience Award.[3] Koen Mortier won the Golden Owl Award for best independent filmmaking for his thriller film 22nd of May.[3]

The 24th Leeds International Film Festival took place from 4 – 21 November 2010, with some tickets on sale from April. The festival opened with a screening of Tom Hooper's The King's Speech, which also won the Audience Award for best Feature Film. Petter Næss's Elling won the Audience Award for best Archive Film. The overall Audience Award went to Piers Sanderson for his film High on Hope.[4] The Golden Owl Award for best independent filmmaking was won by Radu Muntean for Tuesday, After Christmas.[5]

The 2000s

The 23rd Leeds International Film Festival took place from 4 – 22 November 2009, showing a range of films from all over the world, including the opening film The Men Who Stare at Goats, directed by Grant Heslov. Miyazaki's latest anime, Ponyo, won the Audience Award. The jury awarded the Golden Owl Award to La Pivellina, directed by Tizza Covi and Rainer Frimmel. They were moved by the honesty, humanity and detail of the film. At Section "Paras International Documentary Short" Documentary film "The Wooden Carpet" was won.

The 22nd Leeds International Film Festival was held from 4–16 November 2008. It opened with a screening of Dominique Abel's and Fiona Gordon's comedy film Rumba. Short Film City was introduced as a distinct programme category in 2008.

The 21st Leeds International Film Festival, held 7 – 18 November 2007, had five sections: Official Selection, Fanomenon, Cinema Versa, Nexus and a Kazuo Hara Retrospective. Persepolis, directed by Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi was shown at the Opening Gala.

The 20th edition of the Leeds International Film Festival was held 2–12 November 2006 and opened with a screening of the comedy-drama film Venus, directed by Roger Michell.

The 19th Leeds International Film Festival took place 3–13 November 2005. At its Opening Gala, it showed Merry Christmas by Christian Carion.

The 18th Leeds International Film Festival was held 28 October to 7 November 2004 and opened with a screening of Finding Neverland, directed by Marc Forster. Several new competitions were launched in 2004. The Golden Owls Award for feature films was launched to support under-represented independent filmmaking. Additionally, animated short films could now enter their own World Animation Competition and all short films were eligible for the FilmFour Short Film Audience Award.

The 17th Leeds International Film Festival was held 2–12 October 2003 and opened with Stephen Fry's Bright Young Things.

The 16th Leeds International Film Festival took place 3–13 October 2002. The three opening films of the festival were Sweet Sixteen, directed by Ken Loach (Ken Loach), Lilo & Stitch by Dean DeBlois and Possession, a romantic mystery drama directed by Neil LaBute.

The 15th Leeds International Film Festival was held 27 September to 12 October 2001 and opened with a screening of Crush, directed by John McKay.

The 14th Leeds International Film festival took place 5–19 October 2000. Purely Belter, a British comedy drama film directed by Mark Herman was shown at the Opening Ceremony. In 2000, Fanomenon was introduced as an official programme category at LIFF.

The 1990s

The 13th Leeds International Film Festival took place 7 to 23 October 1999 and opened with a screening of Fanny & Elvis by Kay Mellor. This year, the festival was taken over by a festival director, Chris Fell, who is the director of the festival to this day. Moreover, the Louis le Prince Short Film Competition was introduced, as well as ‘Evolution’, a new programme strand for films between film, tv and the interactive (gaming) entertainment industry.

The 12th Leeds International Film Festival took place 2 - 17 October 1998. A Perfect Murder, directed by Andrew Davis, was screened at the Opening Gala.

The 11th Leeds International Film Festival was held 16 - 31 October 1997. The festival's theme was Science Fiction and the film screened at the Opening Gala was Tim Hurran's Girl’s Night.

The 10th anniversary edition of the Leeds International Film Festival was held 3 - 18 October 1996 and opened with a screening of Brassed Off, directed by Mark Herman. The festival had Conflicts of Interest as its central theme.

The 9th Leeds International Film Festival took place 12 - 27 October 1995. It opened with a screening of Tony Scott's Crimson Tide. Liz Rymer became the new director of the festival, which had two major strands: the Western and Animation.

The 8th edition of the Leeds International Film Festival was held 13 - 28 October 1994. At its Opening Gala, War of the Buttons, directed by John Rogers, was shown. Also, the festival was taken over by a new director, Kath Baker, and the new short film audience award was introduced.

The 7th Leeds International Film Festival took place 14 - 29 October 1993 and opened with a screening of The Secret Garden, directed by Agnieszka Holland. The festival's main theme was The City in Cinema. A documentary strand was added to the programme and short films shown before nearly every feature.

The 6th Leeds International Film Festival took place 16 - 31 October 1992. Peter Kosminski's film adaptation Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights was the Opening Gala film. The festival's central themes were Music and Spain.

The 5th edition of the Leeds International Film Festival was held 11 - 26 October 1991 and had BODY and MIND, as well as ‘MAN’ and MACHINE as its central themes. The film shown at the Opening Gala was Point Break, directed by Kathryn Bigelow.

The 4th Leeds International Film Festival took place 12 - 27 October 1990. It opened with a screening of John Badham's action comedy film Bird on a Wire. Following the political upheavals of the recent months, Freedom and censorship were the central themes of the festival.

The 1980s

The 3rd Leeds International Film Festival was held 13 - 28 October 1989 and was also a celebration of the 75th anniversary of the Hyde Park Picture House, Leeds. The festival opened with a screening of Lewis Gilbert's Shirley Valentine.

Following the great success of the first Leeds International Film Festival, the festival's second edition was held 13 - 29 October 1988. The second Leeds International Film festival was much bigger than the first and coincided with the centenary of Louis le Prince's first moving picture taking in 1888. The opening film of the festival was La Bohème, directed by Luigi Comencini.

the first ever Leeds International Film Festival took place 7 - 19 March 1987, to great success. The British horror film Gothic, directed by Ken Russell was shown at the Opening Gala. Director and co-founder of the festival was Janice Campbell.

Leeds Young Film Festival

Leeds Young Film Festival takes place every Easter and welcomes young people and their families to the largest film event of its kind in the North of England. Now in its 16th year, the festival features a programme of new and unseen cinema for young people from around the world, as well as classic screenings, moving-image related workshops and masterclasses. The festival also hosts two young filmmaking competitions: The Leeds Young Filmmakers’ Golden Owl Awards celebrates the best of young people’s filmmaking across the city. The INDIs (Independent Directions) Young Filmmaker Award, a national competition to showcase the work of young filmmakers working without professional support or funding. The organisation works closely with a group of young consultants aged 14–19 called MediaFish, who help programme, design and deliver the festival, make films and shape the strategy of Leeds Young Film.

References

  1. "27th Leeds International Film Festival". Leeds International Film Festival. Retrieved 6 April 2013.
  2. Robinson, Paul (5 October 2012). "Opening titles ready to roll on 2012 Leeds International Film Festival". Yorkshire Evening Post. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  3. 1 2 "LIFF25 Award Winners". Leeds International Film Festival. 21 November 2011. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  4. "High on Hope Wins Audience Award". Leeds International Film Festival. 22 November 2010. Retrieved 12 January 2011.
  5. "Winner of the Golden Owl Award 2010 Announced". Leeds International Film Festival. 15 November 2010. Retrieved 12 January 2011.
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