Paris Independent Film Festival

The Paris Independent Film Festival is an annual film festival showcasing international independent films that takes place in Paris, France. It features a competition and awards films in various categories.[1] It has a special emphasis on films that have no distribution yet,[2] but also screens other films out of competition.[3] The Culture Trip named it as one of "7 great Paris Film Events" after its inaugural edition,[4] and Shooters Hill Campus names it as a destination for trips during its film studies program along Berlin Film Festival.[5]

Paris Independent Film Festival
LocationParis, France
Founded2015
LanguageInternational
WebsiteOfficial Website

About

The festival was founded in 2015 and takes place at the Reflet Médicis theatre in Paris.[6] It showcases short and feature films of any genre,[7] from narrative to documentary.[8] An international jury selects and awards the presented films.[9] The festival showcases previews, world premieres as well as films that already screened at other festivals.[10] Many filmmakers attend the screenings of their films, and past attendants included Alexis Krasilovsky and Ira Schneider.

Notable films in competition

  • 2015: Ira Schneider premiered a new re-edit of his film A Weekend at the Beach, w. Jean-Luc Godard.
  • 2015: Art!, a short film starring Helmut Berger and Zachi Noy, had its world premiere at the festival.[11]
  • 2015: Chasing Bonnie & Clyde, a documentary that was financed partially through a crowd-funding campaign,[12] had an exclusive preview at the festival.

Reception

If you are interested in discovering new talents in the cinema industry this is the place.

Roberta Dencheva, in 'The Culture Trip'.[4]
gollark: I think the main thing is that, in the past, if some horrible virus wiped out a big chunk of human civilization, it would not spread anywhere else because they then died.
gollark: I didn't say there was one.
gollark: Who says there isn't one?
gollark: The obvious solution is mind control, but distributed in a way conspiracists are likely to take (not vaccines).
gollark: They're not THAT internally inconsistent I think. Presumably they have empathy or something and don't want other people to be mind controlled by the government or whatever (or somehow think they can convince other people to support their thing).

References

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