International Film Festival Rotterdam | |
Location: | Rotterdam, Netherlands |
Founded: | 1972 |
Awards: | Tiger Award |
Date: | 25 January – 4 February |
Last: | 2024 |
Founders: | Huub Bals |
Artistic Director: | Vanja Kaludjercic |
Chronology: | International Film Festival Rotterdam |
Previous: | 2023 |
Next: | 2024 |
International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) is an annual film festival held at the end of January in various locations in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, focused on independent and experimental films. The inaugural festival took place in June 1972, led by founder Huub Bals. IFFR also hosts CineMart and BoostNL, for film producers to seek funding.
The first festival, then called Film International, was organized in June 1972 under the leadership of Huub Bals. The festival profiled itself as a promoter of alternative, innovative, and non-commercial films, with an emphasis on the Far East and developing countries. Around 1983, the festival founded CineMart to serve as a "regular film market", and later modified the business model to serve instead as a "co-production market",[1] [2] [3] which helps a selected number of film producers connect with possible co-producers and funders for their film projects.[4]
After the festival founder's sudden death in 1988, a fund was initiated and named after him (Hubert Bals Fund), used for supporting filmmakers from developing countries.[5] [6]
The non-competitive character of the festival changed in 1995, when the VPRO Tiger Awards were introduced—three yearly prizes for young filmmakers making their first or second film.
In 1996 Simon Field, formerly cinema director at the London Institute of Contemporary Arts, became director of the festival. In 2004 Sandra den Hamer took over as director of the festival, and from 2007 to 2015 the director was Rutger Wolfson. Film producer Bero Beyer was the next director.
In 2020, Vanja Kaludjercic was appointed as the new director.[7]
Since its foundation in 1972, it has maintained a focus on independent and experimental filmmaking by showcasing emerging talents and established auteurs. The festival also places a focus on presenting cutting edge media art and arthouse film, with most of the participants in the short film program identified as artists or experimental filmmakers.[8] [9] IFFR also hosts CineMart and BoostNL, for film producers to seek funding.
, Vanja Kaludjercic is director of the festival.[10]
The IFFR logo is a stylized image of a tiger that is loosely based on Leo, the lion in the MGM logo.[11]
The IFFR screens films at multiple locations, including the Pathé cinema at Schouwburgplein, De Doelen, Cinerama, WORM, Oude Luxor Theater, Rotterdamse Schouwburg, KINO, and LantarenVenster.[12]
The Tiger Award has had various sponsors over the years. In the years leading up to and including 2010 it was sponsored by the VPRO. In 2011 the award was presented by the Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds and since 2012 by Hivos.[13]
Year | Film | Original title | Director | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|
1995 | Postman | Youchai | China | |
How Old Is the River? | Fuyu no kappa | Kazama Shiori | Japan | |
Thalassa, Thalassa, Ruckkehr Zum Mmer | Thalassa, Thalassa | Bogdan Dumitrescu | Germany Romania | |
1996 | Sons | Erzi | China | |
Like Grains of Sand | Nagisa no Shindobaddo | Japan | ||
Small Faces | United Kingdom | |||
1997 | Last Holiday | Posledniye kanikuly | Amir Karakulov | Kazakhstan |
The Day a Pig Fell into the Well | Daijiga umule pajinnal | |||
Robinson in Space | United Kingdom | |||
1998 | Buttoners | Knoflíkári | Czech Republic | |
Round the Moons Between Earth and Sea | Giro di lune tra terra e mare | Italy | ||
The Inheritors | Die Siebtelbauern | Austria | ||
1999 | The Iron Heel of Oligarchy | Zheleznaya pyata oligarkhii | ||
More Than Yesterday | Plus qu'hier moins que demain | France | ||
Following | United Kingdom | |||
2000 | Suzhou River | Suzhou he | China | |
Crane World | Mundo Grúa | Argentina | ||
Bye Bye Blue Bird | Denmark | |||
2001 | Bad Company | Mabudachi | Japan | |
The Days Between | In den Tag hinein | Germany | ||
25 Watts | Uruguay | |||
2002 | Sleeping Rough | Tussenland | Eugenie Jansen | Netherlands |
Everyday God Kisses Us on the Mouth | În fiecare zi Dumnezeu ne saruta pe gura | Romania | ||
Wild Bees | Divoké vcely | Czech Republic | ||
2003 | With Love. Lilya | S lyubovyu. Lilya | Larisa Sadilova | |
Strange | Extraño | Argentina | ||
Jealousy Is My Middle Name | Jiltuneun naui him | |||
2004 | The Missing | Bu jian | ||
Summer in the Golden Valley | Ljeto u zlatnoj dolini | |||
En Route | Unterwegs | Jan Krüger | Germany | |
2005 | Changing Destiny | Nemmeno il destino | Italy | |
4 | Chetyre | |||
The Sky Turns | El cielo gira | Spain | ||
2006 | Walking on the Wild Side | Lai xiao zi | Han Jie | China |
The Dog Pound | La perrera | Uruguay Argentina Canada Spain | ||
Old Joy | United States | |||
2007 | Love Conquers All | Malaysia | ||
The Unpolished | Die Unerzogenen | Germany | ||
Bog of Beasts | Baixio das Bestas | Claudio Assis | Brazil | |
AFR | Denmark | |||
2008 | Go With Peace Jamil | Gå med fred Jamil - Ma salama Jamil | Denmark | |
Wonderful Town | (เมืองเหงาซ่อนรัก) | Thailand | ||
Flower in the Pocket | Malaysia | |||
2009 | Be Calm and Count to Seven | Aram bash va ta hatf beshmar | Ramtin Lavafipour | |
Breathless | Ddongpari | |||
Wrong Rosary | Uzak ihtimal | Mahmut Fazil Coskun | Turkey | |
2010 | Cold Water of the Sea | Agua fría de mar | Paz Fábrega | Costa Rica |
Alamar | To the Sea | Pedro González-Rubio | Mexico | |
Mundane History | Jao nok krajok (เจ้านกกระจอก) | Thailand | ||
2011 | The Journals of Musan | Musanilgi | ||
Finisterrae | Sergio Caballero | Spain | ||
Eternity | Tee rak (ที่รัก) | Sivaroj Kongsakul | Thailand | |
2012 | Klip | Clip | Serbia | |
Thursday Till Sunday | De jueves a domingo | Dominga Sotomayor Castillo | Chile Netherlands | |
Egg and Stone | Jidan he shitou | Ji Huang | China | |
2013 | My Dog Killer | Môj pes Killer | Slovakia Czech Republic | |
Soldier Jane | Soldate Jeannette | Daniel Hoesl | Austria | |
Fat Shaker | Larzanandeye charbi | |||
2014 | Anatomy of a Paper Clip | Yamamori clip koujo no atari | Ikeda Akira | Japan |
Something Must Break | Nånting måste gå sönder | Sweden | ||
Han Gong-ju | Han Gong-ju | |||
2015 | The Project of the Century | La obra del siglo | Argentina Cuba Switzerland | |
Videophilia (and Other Viral Syndromes) | Peru | |||
Vanishing Point | Thailand Netherlands | |||
2016 | Radio Dreams | United States | ||
2017 | Sexy Durga | India | ||
2018 | The Widowed Witch[14] | Xiao gua fu cheng xian ji | Cai Chengjie | China |
2019 | Present.Perfect. | Wan mei jin xing shi | Shengze Zhu | Hong Kong United States |
The Cloud In Her Room | Ta fang jian li de yun | Zheng Lu Xinyuan | China Hong Kong | |
Pebbles | Koozhaangal | Vinothraj P.S. | India | |
EAMI | Paraguay | |||
Le spectre de Boko Haram[15] | Cyrielle Raingou | Cameroon | ||
Rei[16] | Tanaka Toshihiko | Japan | ||
The short films have their own competition at IFFR. What differentiates it from the Tiger Competition for feature-length films is the fact that it's not just for young and upcoming talents; all filmmakers have a chance at winning. Since 2005, The Tiger Short Competition[17] has had various sponsors over the years including Ammodo,[18] an institution in the Netherlands that supports the development of arts, architecture and science. In 2023, 24 shorts competed for three equal Tiger Short Awards, each worth €5,000.
2024 | Crazy Lotus | Naween Noppakun, | ||
Few Can See | Frank Sweeney | |||
Workers’ Wings | Ilir Hasanaj | |||
2023 | Human Nature[19] | Natureza Humana | Mónica Lima | |
Tito | Tito | Kervens Jimenez & Taylor McIntosh | ||
What the Soil Remembers | What the Soil Remembers | José Cardoso | ||
2022 | Becoming Male in the Middle Ages | Tornar-se Homem na Idade Média | Pedro Neves Marques | |
Nazarbazi | Nazarbazi | Maryam Tafakory | ||
Nosferasta: First Bite | Nosferasta: First Bite | Bayley Sweitzer & Adam Khalil | ||
2021 | Maat | Maat | Foxy Maxy | |
Sunsets, everyday | Sunsets, everyday | Basir Mahmood | ||
Terranova | Terranova | Alejandro Pérez Serrano & Alejandro Alonso Estrella | ||
2020 | Apparition | Apparition | Ismaïl Bahri | |
Communicating Vessels | Communicating Vessels | Maïder Fortuné & Annie MacDonell | ||
Sun Dog | Sun Dog | Dorian Jespers | ||
2019 | Wong Ping's Fables 1 | Wong Ping's Fables 1 | Wong Ping | |
Ultramarine | Ultramarine | Vincent Meessen | ||
Freedom of Movement | Freedom of Movement | Nina Fischer & Maroan el Sani | ||
2018 | Mountain Plain Mountain | Mountain Plain Mountain | Araki Yu & Daniel Jacoby | |
Rose Gold | Rose Gold | Sara Cwynar | ||
With History in a Room Filled with People with Funny Names 4 | With History in a Room Filled with People with Funny Names 4 | Korakrit Arunanondchai |
Year | Film | Original title | Director | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|
2021 | Pebbles | PS Vinothraj | India | |
I Comete: A Corsican Summer | Pascal Tagnati | |||
Looking for Venera | ||||
2022 | Excess Will Save Us | Morgane Dziurla-Petit | France | |
To Love Again | Gao Linyang | China | ||
2023 | Munnel | மணல் | Sri Lanka | |
New Strains | Artemis Shaw, Prashanth Kamalakanthan | United States | ||
2024 | Kiss Wagon | Midhun Murali | India | |
Flathead | Jaydon Martin | Australia | ||
Year | Film | Original title | Director | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|
2021 | Quo Vadis, Aida? | Jasmila Žbanić | ||
2022 | Freaks Out | Gabriele Mainetti | Italy | |
2023 | Love According to Dalva | Emmanuelle Nicot | France | |
2024 | Green Border | Agnieszka Holland | Poland | |