LA Film Festival | |
Logo Alt: | Logo |
Location: | Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Founded: | 1995 |
Date: | Discontinued |
Host: | Film Independent |
Language: | English |
The LA Film Festival was an annual film festival that was held in Los Angeles, California, and usually took place in June. It showcased independent, international, feature, documentary and short films, as well as web series, music videos, episodic television and panel conversations.
The LA Film Festival was a qualifying festival in all categories for Film Independent's Spirit Awards. It was also a qualifying festival for the short films categories of the Academy Awards.[1]
Since 2001, it had been run by the nonprofit Film Independent, which since 1985 has also produced the annual Independent Spirit Awards in Santa Monica. The festival began as the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival in 1995. The LAIFF ran for six years until it was absorbed into Film Independent in 2018.[2] The first LAIFF took place over the course of five days in a single location: the historic Raleigh Studios in Hollywood. In 1996, the LAIFF expanded to include the Directors Guild of America Building in Hollywood. In 2001, the festival became part of the organization Film Independent (formerly IFP/West). In 2006, the Los Angeles Times became the festival's main media sponsor.
In 2010, the festival moved to the Regal Cinemas at the L.A. Live complex in downtown Los Angeles, with additional screenings at several other downtown venues including the Downtown Independent, the Orpheum Theatre, and the REDCAT Theatre. The Festival also has a long tradition of screenings at the open-air John Anson Ford Amphitheatre in Hollywood. Free screenings were scheduled at California Plaza, in conjunction with Grand Performances and FIGat7th.
In 2016, the LA Film Festival moved to ArcLight Cinemas in Culver City and Hollywood, California. In 2017, it expanded to ArcLight Cinemas in Santa Monica. In 2018, the LA Film Festival further expanded and added the WGA Theater as a venue. It also partnered with the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts to screen films there.
Over the course of nine days, the festival screened nearly 200 features, shorts, and episodes. The event also included world premieres of films, a variety of panels, seminars, and free screenings.
It also screened short films created by high school students as a part of the Future Filmmakers program. Films submitted to the Festival were reviewed by Film Independent's programming department, which evaluated each film.
Ang Lee | ||
2002 | Alfonso Cuaron | |
2003 | Chen Kaige | |
2004 | Mira Nair | |
2005 | Sydney Pollack | |
2006 | George Lucas | |
2007 | Curtis Hanson | |
2008 | Melvin Van Peebles | |
2010 | Kathryn Bigelow | |
2011 | Guillermo del Toro | |
2012 | William Friedkin | |
2013 | David O. Russell | |
2014 | Lisa Cholodenko | |
2015 | Rodrigo Garcia | |
2016 | Ryan Coogler | |
2017 | Miguel Arteta |
Kasi Lemmons | ||
2004 | Neil Young | |
2005 | RZA | |
2007 | Pharrell Williams | |
2009 | Thom Mayne | |
2009 | Khaled Hosseini | |
2010 | Quincy Jones | |
2010 | Jonathan Gold | |
2010 | Paul Reubens | |
2012 | Danny Elfman | |
2012 | Michael Voltaggio | |
2012 | Raphael Saadiq |
George Clooney | ||
2006 | Charlize Theron | |
2007 | Clint Eastwood | |
2008 | Don Cheadle | |
2013 | David O. Russell | |
2014 | Michael Barker | |
2014 | Tom Bernard | |
2015 | Lily Tomlin | |
2016 | Ava DuVernay | |
2017 | Miguel Arteta |
Awards are given out in the following categories at the conclusion of the festival: