Southern Utah International Documentary Film Festival

The DOCUTAH International Documentary Film Festival is an annual film festival, held in the Fall, that strives to recognize some of the best in international documentary films.[1] Hosted by Dixie State University (DSU), the festival screens films at the Red Cliffs Theater behind the Red Cliffs Mall in St. George, Utah, with special events throughout Southern Utah. DOCUTAH, also, has an educational focus, and features “master class educational seminars.”

DOCUTAH International Documentary Film Festival
Official 2010 poster
LocationSt. George, Utah, United States
Hosted byDixie State University
LanguageInternational
Websitehttp://www.docutah.com/

History

Dixie State University founded DOCUTAH in 2010. From the beginning, this festival has aimed to provide attendees with not only a meaningful film-going experience, but also an educational one through its “master class educational seminars.”

The originator of the festival idea, Phil Tuckett, serves as the director of DSU Films. When he returned to his junior college (DSU) in 2006, after 38 years of working for NFL Films and receiving 30 Emmy Awards, he felt that the southern Utah area would serve as the perfect place to hold an international documentary film festival.[2]

After working for several months to make his vision come to fruition, Tuckett officially announced DOCUTAH on 24 September 2009.

The City of St. George, the St. George Convention and Tourism office, the City of Kanab, and Kane County’s Office of Tourism and Film Commission (along with the Center for Education, Business, and the Arts) were some of the first to support and sponsor DOCUTAH.

Structure

The festival runs for 7 days annually, in the fall.

Screenings

The festival screens films at the Red Cliffs Theater behind Red Cliffs Mall and the Eccles Performing Arts Center at Dixie State University, with various locations for special events. Special events location involves the O.C. Tanner Amphitheater in Springdale, UT.

DOCtalks

Film industry professionals are scheduled to talk about their experiences and the process of making films.

Film Categories

DOCUTAH has two separate film entry categories, one for general entrants and one for students. These both have sub-categories.[3]

General:

  • Short documentaries up to 45 minutes (including titles and credits)
  • Features more than 45 minutes

Student:

  • College/University Student Film

Awards

Six judges make up the DOCUTAH awards panel.

They confer the honors for the following categories:

  • Best Feature
  • Best Short
  • Audience Favorite- Feature
  • Audience Favorite- Short
  • Best Foreign Film
  • Emerging Artist
  • Humanitarian
  • President's Award
  • Dean's Award
  • Mayor's Award


gollark: eSIMs are *still hardware devices*. Just programmable ones. Which is... why.
gollark: What do you mean? Should you not have planned this before?
gollark: Take SIM cards. Why are they still discrete hardware devices, *running Java*?
gollark: To be honest the phone network and everything associated with it seems terribly designed.
gollark: And there probably will be, since they can hardly vet all of them thoroughly: there are probably a lot of VoIP providers.

See also

Dixie State University

References

  1. Tiffany De Masters (September 2–7, 2019). "Jennings Building Dedicated". The Spectrum. Retrieved 2009-10-03.CS1 maint: date format (link)
  2. Stephen Vincent (September 20, 2007). "Phil Tuckett Returns to Dixie State University". Dixie Weekly News. Retrieved 2009-10-09.
  3. Tyler Roberts (October 7, 2009). "DSU Film Festival On Tap For Next Year". Dixie Sun. Retrieved 2009-10-09.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.