Norwich Film Festival is an annual short film festival founded in 2009 and held in Norwich, England, which showcases films by local, national and international filmmakers, both independent and mainstream. Various films have gone on to win BAFTAs and Oscars, as well as awards at the Sundance Film Festival, Tribeca Festival and South by Southwest.[1]

Norwich Film Festival
Norwich Film Festival
Norwich Film Festival logo
StatusActive
GenreFilm festival
Date(s)11–20 November 2022
FrequencyAnnually
VenueThe Forum, Norwich
Location(s)Norwich
Country United Kingdom
Years active14
Inaugurated2009 (2009)
Websitewww.norwichfilmfestival.co.uk

The festival has received support from various celebrities, such as Olivia Colman, Stephen Fry, Tim McInnerney, Julian Jarrold and John Collee. Entries can also qualify to be shown at the BAFTAs or the British Independent Film Awards.[2]

History edit

Norwich Film Festival was founded by Kellen Playford in 2009 in order to help screen a short film locally for a friend. In 2012, the festival was relaunched. In 2015, Craig Higgins became co-director, aiming to grow the festival. In 2017, Norwich Film Festival became a registered charity.[2]

Awards ceremony edit

2009 edit

Venue: The Forum, Norwich, 12–25 September 2009

The festival began with a screening of My Imprisoned Heart at the Norwich Arts Centre, and included several other events such as a free, open air screening of the 80's film Top Gun in the gardens of Norwich Castle, the regional premiere of Creation, starring Paul Bettany,[3] and screenings of the BAFTA short film and animation nominees.

2012 edit

Venues: Hollywood Cinema, Norwich and The Forum, Norwich, 30 March-7 April 2012

Jury: Bernard Hill, Tim McInnerny, Juliet Stevenson, Steve Furst, and Jim Field Smith.[4]

2013 edit

Venue: Cinema City, Norwich, 28 April-4 May 2013

Jury: Olivia Colman,[5] Radio 1 DJ Edith Bowman, UEA lecturer Dr Sarah Godfrey, and the director of the 2012 Best Film (Sunny Boy), Jane Gull.[6]

2014 edit

Main Venue: ODEON, Norwich, 6–13 May 2014

Jury: Academy Award winning film editor Martin Walsh.[7]

2015 edit

Venue: The Forum, Norwich, 10–26 April 2015

Jury:

2016 edit

Main Venue: The Forum, Norwich, 10–13 November 2016

The 2016 festival opened with a gala screening of the film Kinky Boots and was followed by a Q&A with the film's director Julian Jarrold. The screening reflected the film by taking place in an old shoe factory. The festival also gave regional premieres to two feature films - My Feral Heart, which included a Q&A with Duncan Paveling (writer/producer) and James Rumsey (producer), and Light Years, which was followed by a Q&A with its award-winning director Esther May Campbell.[8] There were six screenings of short films submitted to the festival, and the weekend closed with a screening of the 2016 BAFTA Shorts Tour, with another Q&A afterwards.[9]

Jury:

2017 edit

9–19 November 2017
Venues: OPEN, Norwich, The Forum, Norwich, Assembly House

The 2017 Festival launched on 9 November with a screening of the 1984 film A Private Function followed by a Q&A with the star of the film, Michael Palin.[10]

Jury:

2018 edit

7–18 November 2018

Venues: OPEN, Norwich, The Forum, Norwich, Assembly House, Norwich University of the Arts, The Garage, Norwich.

The 2018 festival kicked off with a screening of cult British classic, Shallow Grave, followed by a talk with its star, Christopher Eccleston.

Jury: Alfred Molina, double British Academy of Film and Television Arts winning sound editor Eddy Joseph, and Cannes Film Festival winning shorts producer, Gavin Humphries.

2019 edit

4–17 November 2019

Venues: OPEN, Norwich, The Forum, Norwich, Assembly House, Theatre Royal, Norwich, Norwich University of the Arts, University of East Anglia, The Garage, Norwich.

The 2019 festival launched on 4 November 2019 with an 'In Conversation' event with British actor David Morrissey, hosted by film critic Peter Bradshaw. The 2019 festival consisted of 44 events, including 19 shorts screenings and a rare UK screening of Snowpiercer hosted by Mark Kermode to launch The Sir John Hurt Film Trust.[11] Guests throughout the festival also included Jessica Hynes, Michael Smiley, Joe Cornish, Miranda Raison and Anwen, Lady Hurt.

A total of 111 short films were selected to be screened at the festival from a total of 817 submissions, with female filmmakers directing 44% of the official selection.[12]

Jury: Stephen Fry, Neve Campbell, and Stephen Woolley.

2020 edit

2–29 November 2020

Venues: Online

Short film submissions opened in January 2020 with a record number of submissions being received over a six-month period, with 132 short films being selected to be screened, making it the festival's largest selection to-date.[13]

On Tuesday 1 September, the festival announced that the 2020 edition would take place in an alternative format due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, with each of the 132 shorts films within the Official Selection being available to watch online for the first time in the festival's history. This would also mark the first time that the festival was able to be accessed by those outside of the UK, with around half of the Official Selection being available internationally.

In total, 151 films were screened online during the festival, including several guest strands from other institutions, and the two winners of the EAFA Mashup Filmmaking competition.

Jury: Dexter Fletcher, Stephen Woolley, James Marsh, Arianne Sutner, Jill Culton, Julie Lockhart, Lisa Cortés, Stuart Dryburgh, Will Becher, Todd Banhazl, Kate Phillips, Antonio Aakeel & Tim Downie.

2021 edit

12–21 November 2021

Over 140 short films were screened in-person and online during the festival's hybrid event for 2021.[14] Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the festival took place in a hybrid format, with screenings taking place in-person before becoming available to watch online afterwards and until the end of November.[15] The in-person events consisted of a downscaled programme of shorts screenings, features and talks. The festival also produced a podcast in which filmmakers from the selection were interviewed about their films.[16]

Venues: The Forum, Norwich, The Garage, Norwich, Norwich University of the Arts, National Centre for Writing & Online.

Jury: Michael Sheen, Edith Bowman and Jessica Hynes.

2022 edit

12–20 November 2022

Venues: The Forum, Norwich, University of East Anglia, Norwich University of the Arts

Jury: Nat Luurtsema, Greg Sorvig, Dionne Farrell, Jinko Gotoh, Ida Melum, Crispin Buxton, Chris Rankin, Victoria Emslie, Christine Lalla.

Patrons and judges edit

The festival has a number of patrons who support and promote the festival throughout the year. In January 2017, the festival added Julian Jarrold and Stephen Fry as new patrons.[17] The current list includes:

Previous patrons include the actor Bernard Hill.

There are a number of industry professionals who act as judges for the festival, and the list for 2017 included:

Previous judges include broadcaster Emma Freud and director Roger Michell.

Award categories edit

The festival currently features six award categories. Winning filmmakers get a prestigious trophy, a certificate, a £1000 cash prize and software prizes. In 2020, the traditional 'Best Short Film' category was sub-divided into the new 'Best British Short Film' and 'Best International Short Film' categories.

As of 2020, the award categories are:

  • Best British Short Film
  • Best International Short Film
  • Best Animated Film
  • Best Student Film
  • Best Documentary Film
  • Best East Anglian Film
Year British Short Film International Short Film Short Film Animated Film Student Film Documentary Film East Anglian Film Short Screenplay Feature Film Audience Award
2009 - - Ana's Playground O Pintor de Ceos Heartstrings Running to the Limits - - Zig Zag Love -
2012 - - Sunny Boy This Is Not Real Love After Sunrise Dilli - - - -
2013 - - 82 I Am Tom Moody Callum - - - - -
2014 - - The Hummingbird The Gravedigger's Tale Ultramarine - - Edit Facility - -
2015 - - One-Minute Time Machine The Bigger Picture Rise - - The Disappeared - Mr Plastimime
2016 - - A Six and Two Threes The Present Mary No More The Journey of a Stateless Man - Fetch - Above The Fold
2017 - - Edith To Build A Fire Sweet Maddie Stone Flight The Knackerman - - -
2018 - - The Silent Child Two Balloons The Gurney Gereza Sylvia - - -
2019 - - 3 Sleeps Daughter Solar Plexus Kamali Stalker - - -
2020 My Brother Is A Mermaid All Inclusive - Something Borrowed To The Dusty Sea The Beekeeper Patina - - -
2021 Enjoy The Exit Plan - Night of the Living Dread One For The Road Clown Absolution - - -
2022 An Irish Goodbye Sideral - Luce and the Rock Caterpillar Superheroes Wear Hoodies Big Ears - - -

References edit

  1. ^ "About Us". Norwich Film Festival.
  2. ^ a b "Our Festival". Norwich Film Festival.
  3. ^ "BBC - Norfolk - Norwich gets new film festival". 17 September 2009.
  4. ^ "NFF2012: Interview with Bernard Hill - TAKE ONE - TakeOneCFF.com -". 30 March 2012.
  5. ^ FREEZER, DAVID (May 2013). "TV star revisits Norfolk roots for Norwich Film Festival".
  6. ^ Freezer, David (2 August 2012). "Radio One DJ and UEA lecturer to judge Norwich Film Festival in 2013".
  7. ^ Russell, Sam (6 May 2014). "Norwich Film Festival 2014 counts V For Vendetta editor among its judging panel".
  8. ^ "Light Years from BAFTA winner Esther May Campbell gets limited UK cinema screenings - Film News - Crash Landed".
  9. ^ Parkin, Simon (11 November 2016). "Norwich Film Festival flickers into life".
  10. ^ "Monty Python star Michael Palin to launch Norwich Film Festival at OPEN Norwich". 11 July 2017.
  11. ^ Mantell, Rowan (9 November 2019). "Sir John Hurt continues to inspire great cinema in Norfolk". Eastern Daily Press. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  12. ^ "NFF2019 SHORTS: THIS YEAR'S OFFICIAL SELECTION". Norwich Film Festival. 18 August 2019. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  13. ^ "Introducing the #NFF2020 Official Selection". 21 August 2020.
  14. ^ "Introducing the #NFF2021 Official Selection". 25 August 2021.
  15. ^ "2021 Events at".
  16. ^ "The Norwich Film Festival Podcast • A podcast on Anchor".
  17. ^ "Stephen Fry becomes patron of Norwich Film Festival". 30 January 2017.

External links edit