Cinema Mundi International Film Festival

The Cinema Mundi International Film Festival was a film festival, inaugurated in 2010, and held annually at the end of February, beginning of March in Brno, Czech Republic. Festival was discontinued in 2016.[1]

Cinema Mundi International Film Festival
LocationBrno, Czech Republic
Founded2010
Disestablished2016

History

The first Cinema Mundi International Film Festival took place in late February, early March 2010 in Brno, Czech Republic. The inspiration for the festival came from the tradition of Brno Exhibition Centre, which was established in 1928 and since then has been attracting international exhibitors to Brno. Josef Čadík, a film fan who has been operating mobile open-air cinemas in the Czech Republic and Central Europe since 1991, established the festival in the desire to create in Brno a similar platform for the world of film. He is the current director of the festival. The main partner of the festival is the South Moravian Region whose administrative body is seated in Brno.

Program

In addition to screening the most recent selection of films made in Europe and the US, the festival aims at screening films representing the contemporary national cinemas of the countries of Central and South America, Africa and Asia. When selecting films from these countries in particular, the festival commission pays their special attention to the films that have been submitted to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in the United States (Oscars) for consideration in the category of Best Foreign Language Film. These films then often become a part of the main competitive section of the Cinema Mundi International Film Festival program. Additional sections of the festival include the latest Czech-language feature films and feature films that represent contemporary film art from three selected countries or a particular region.

Festival jury and winners

Since the second year of the festival in 2011, the Student Jury selects the best films. The Jury is formed by students of Masaryk University, the second largest university in the Czech Republic, whose students participate in the realization and organization of the festival to a great extent. Four Best Films have been chosen and six Special Awards have been bestowed by the Student Jury in the past four years:

Best Film
Year Film title Director Country of origin
2014Halima's PathArsen Anton OstojićCroatia
2013Blood of My BloodJoão CanijoPortugal
2012As If I'm Not ThereJuanita WilsonIreland
2011Of Gods and MenXavier BeauvoisFrance
Special Award
Year Film title Director Country of origin
2014Missing PictureRithy PanhCambodia
2013LoreCate ShortlandAustralia
2012Punk's Not DeadVladimir BlazevskiMacedonia
Elite Squad: The Enemy WithinJosé PadilhaBrazil
2011Life, Above All (2010)Oliver SchmitzSouth Africa
East, West, East: The Final SprintGjergj XhuvaniAlbania

Festival guests

Since its inauguration in 2010, the Cinema Mundi International Film Festival has welcomed several accomplished guests from the world of film, including Goran Marković, director, Serbia; Srđan Karanović, director, Serbia; Lordan Zafranović, director, Croatia; İsmail Güneş, director, Turkey; Yesim Ceren Bozoglu, actress, Turkey; Iveta Grófová, director, Slovakia; João Canijo, director, Portugal; Vladimír Blazevski, director, Macedonia; Juanita Wilson, director, Ireland; Sulev Keedus, director, Estonia; Karel Roden, actor, Czech Republic; Martin Šulík, director, Slovakia; Jiří Menzel, director, Czech Republic; Hilda Hidalgo, director, Costa Rica; Jaroslav Vojtek, director, Slovakia; Anjorka Strechel, actress, Germany; Jaroslav Dušek, actor, Czech Republic; Paresh Mokashi, director, India; Miguel Littin, director, Chile; Justin Molotnikov, director, Scotland; Stephen McCole, actor, Scotland and others.

gollark: Technically, yes.
gollark: ++apioform
gollark: ++apioform ++apioform ++apioform ++apioform
gollark: ++apioform ++apioform ++apioform ++apioform
gollark: ++apioform ++apioform ++apioform ++apioform

References

  1. "Filmový festival Cinema Mundi v Brně končí. Po pěti letech". Deník.cz (in Czech). 2 March 2016. Retrieved 9 October 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.