The Paris Feminist and Lesbian Film Festival (French: Festival International du Film Lesbien et Féministe de Paris) is a women-only film festival founded in Paris, France, in 1989. The festival is organized by Cineffable, an association dedicated to promoting lesbian cinema, and encouraging lesbian creativity.
Location | Paris |
---|---|
Established | 1989 |
Awards | Audience Awards |
Hosted by | Cineffable |
Language | French and English |
Website | Cineffable |
History
editThe Paris Feminist and Lesbian Film Festival grew out of dissatisfaction with the treatment of Lesbians in the Créteil International Women's Film Festival. Many lesbian women felt that in spite of the fact that lesbian films frequently won the Viewers Choice awards (prix du public), lesbian films, filmmakers and attendees were not given sufficient space or attention at the festival, and so they decided to create their own event,[1] which would not only provide lesbians with screening opportunities, but would also be a shared community for knowledge sharing, a way to increase lesbian visibility and combat lesbophobia, and a social outlet.[2]
The first event was held in 1989, as a "cinéclub",[3] with subsequent festivals in 1992 and 1993, all held at the La Clef Cultural Center in Paris. As the festival grew, it moved venues, first to the André Malraux Cultural Center (Le Kremlin-Bicêtre) until 2000, when the number of attendees grew to between 2000 and 3000,[4] and then to the Le Trianon theater.[5] Since 2010, the festival screens at l'Espace Reuilly.[6]
Organization
editThe festival is organized and produced by the Cineffable association. The association includes several thousand members, making it one of the more significant lesbian organizations in France. It is run according to feminist principles – it is non-hierarchical, based on knowledge sharing and transfer for continuity, and defines its mission statement as "we have to assume responsibility, to take control of our images, to become actresses in our own productions in order to break definitively with the oppressive system of representation that shuts us in, that shuts us up".[7]
The festival is open to anyone who identifies as a woman, and is based on membership attendance; that is – attendance is free for members, and thus anyone desiring to attend the festival purchases a membership card, which provides access or discounts to other Cineffable events as well. The festival is self-funded, except for an annual grant from the city of Paris, as part of an official program for gender equality,[8] and works on the principle of "no one left outside" through discounts for marginalized communities and a ticket sharing program, enabling access for all to screenings.[9]
The festival includes several competition tracks, debates, an art exhibition, workshops and a gala or concert event.[10][11] Audience awards are granted at the festival in the following categories:[12]
- Feature film
- Feature-length documentary
- Short fiction film
- Short documentary
- Experimental film
- Animation
In previous years, there were also awards for best screenplay and best film poster.
The festival has grown steadily since its inception.[13] It screens more than 50 films each year.[14]
Best Feature Film awards
editYear | Film | Director | Country |
---|---|---|---|
2018 | Extra Terrestres | Carla Cavina | Puerto Rico / Venezuela |
2017 | Signature Move | Jennifer Reeder | United States |
2016 | Io e Lei (Me, Myself, and Her) | Maria Sole Tognazzi | Italy |
2015 | Girltrash: All Night Long | Alexandra Kondracke | United States |
2014 | Moonlight People | Ekaterina Polyanskaya | Russia |
2013 | Facing Mirrors | Negar Azarbayjani | Iran / Germany |
2012 | Lengua materna | Liliana Paolinelli | Argentina |
2011 | En secret (Circumstance) | Maryam Keshavarz | USA / Iran / Lebanon |
2010 | no audience awards | ||
2009 | Rain | Maria Govan | UK / Bahamas |
2008 | The World Unseen | Shamim Sarif | UK / South Africa |
2007 | Nina's Heavenly Delights | Pratibha Parmar | UK |
2006
(tie) |
Sévigné (Julia Berkowitz) | Marta Balletbò-Coll | Spain |
Fremde Haut | Angelina Maccarone | Germany | |
2005 | Hu Die (Butterfly) | Yan Yan Mak | Hong Kong |
2004 | Goldfish Memory | Liz Gill | Ireland |
2003 | Do I Love You? | Lisa Gornick | UK |
2002 | By Hook or by Crook | Harry Dodge (as Harriet Dodge) and Silas Howard | USA |
2001 | Chutney Popcorn | Nisha Ganatra | USA |
2000 | If These Walls Could Talk 2 | Jane Anderson, Martha Coolidge and Anne Heche | USA |
1999 | Revoir Julie | Jeanne Crépeau | Canada |
1998 | Alles Wird Gut | Angelina Maccarone | Germany |
1997 | Fire | Deepa Mehta | USA |
1996 | Costa Brava | Marta Balletbò-Coll | Spain |
1995 | Life is a Woman | Shanna Serikbajewa | Kazakhstan |
1994 | Go Fish | Rose Troche | USA |
1993 | The Company of Strangers | Cynthia Scott | Canada |
1992 | Anne Trister | Léa Pool | Canada |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Why Cineffable? Why the Paris Feminist and Lesbian Film Festival?". Cineffable. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "Paris International Lesbian & Feminist Film Festival". The Lesbian Agenda. Archived from the original on 5 May 2019. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "Cineffable : quand les lesbiennes se font du cinéma !". le Cabinet de Curiosité Féminine (in French). 26 October 2016. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "CINEFFABLE – Festival International du film lesbien et féministe: des femmes, rien que des femmes…". le Cabinet de Curiosité Féminine (in French). 26 October 2015. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ Sullivan, Moira. "Special Report: 18th Paris Cineffable Feminist and Lesbian Film Festival, 2006". Movie Magazine. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "Venue". Cineffable - Useful Information. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ Catalog of the 8th Festival, 1996
- ^ Sullivan, Moira. "Special Report: 18th Paris Cineffable Feminist and Lesbian Film Festival, 2006". Movie Magazine. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "Ticketing". Cineffable. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "Paris International Lesbian and Feminist Film Festival". Accor Hotels. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "Concert". Cineffable. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ "CINEFFABLE (Paris) 2018: Submissions are now open". African Women in Cinema (in French). 4 April 2018. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
- ^ Tarr, Carrie; Rollet, Brigitte (6 Oct 2016). Cinema and the Second Sex: Women's Filmmaking in France in the 1980s and 1990s. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781474290784.
- ^ "10 Feminist Film Festivals To Follow". Raindance. Retrieved 5 May 2019.