All-Union Film Festival Explained
All-Union Film Festival |
Location: | Soviet Union |
Established: | 1958 |
First: | 1964 |
Last: | 1988 |
The All-Union Film Festival (Russian: Всесоюзный кинофестиваль; tr.:Vsesoyuznyy kinofestival, also known as ВКФ; VKF) was one of the most important film festivals of the Soviet Union. It was founded in 1958 and held regularly from 1964 to 1988. It was held annually from 1972 onwards, and bi-annually before that (before 1964, there were festivals in the years 1958, 1959 and 1960). Its time and location were determined by Goskino and the Union of Soviet Composers.[1]
There were four categories among which prizes were handed out:
- Fiction films
- Documentaries, scientific-popular films, and film-journals
- Fiction films for children and youth (from 1977)
- Animated films (from 1977)
Locations
- 1964, Leningrad
- 1966, Kiev
- 1968, Leningrad
- 1970, Minsk
- 1972, Tbilisi
- 1973, Alma-Ata
- 1974, Baku
- 1975, Kishinev
- 1976, Frunze
- 1977, Riga
- 1978, Yerevan
- 1979, Ashgabad
- 1980, Dushanbe
- 1981, Vilnius
- 1982, Tallinn
- 1983, Leningrad
- 1984, Kiev
- 1985, Minsk
- 1986, Alma-Ata
- 1987, Tbilisi
- 1988, Baku
Notes and References
- Web site: ВКФ (Всесоюзный кинофестиваль) . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110107221019/http://russiancinema.ru/template.php?dept_id=3&e_dept_id=4&e_prize_id=21 . 2011-01-07 . Russian .