Chicago International Film Festival

The Chicago International Film Festival is an annual film festival held every fall. Founded in 1964 by Michael Kutza, it is the longest-running competitive film festival in North America. Its logo is a stark, black and white close up of the composite eyes of early film actresses Theda Bara, Pola Negri and Mae Murray, set as repeated frames in a strip of film.[1]

Chicago International Film Festival
Location212 W Van Buren St., Suite 400, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Founded1964
Hosted byCinema/Chicago
LanguageInternational
Websitehttp://www.chicagofilmfestival.com

In 2010, the 46th Chicago International Film Festival presented 150 films from more than 50 countries. The Festival's program is composed of many different sections, including the International Competition, New Directors Competition, Docufest, Black Perspectives, Cinema of the Americas, and Reel Women.

Its main venue is the AMC River East 21 Theatre in the Streeterville neighborhood of Chicago, although it has dropped that venue during the most recent festival as of 2023 (59th), instead using the AMC Newcity 14.

International Connections Program

The International Connections Program was created in 2003 in order to raise awareness of the international film culture and diversity of Chicago, and to make the festival more appealing to audience and staff of various ethnicities. Foreign films are screened for free throughout the city weekly from July through September.

Awards

Winners are awarded Hugo Awards in eight different competition categories.[2]

  • International Feature Film Competition
    • Gold Hugo
    • Silver Hugo: Jury Prize
    • Silver Hugo: Best Director
    • Silver Hugo: Best Actor (until 2019)
    • Silver Hugo: Best Actress (until 2019)
    • Silver Hugo: Best Performance (from 2020)
    • Silver Hugo: Best Ensemble Performance
    • Silver Hugo: Best Cinematography
    • Silver Hugo: Best Screenplay
    • Silver Hugo: Best Sound
    • Silver Hugo: Best Art Direction
  • New Directors Competition
  • Gold Hugo
  • Silver Hugo
  • Roger Ebert Award
  • International Documentary Competition
    • Gold Hugo
    • Silver Hugo
  • Out-Look Competition
    • Gold Q-Hugo
    • Silver Hugo
  • City & State Competition
    • Chicago Award
  • Live Action Short Film Competition
    • Gold Hugo
    • Silver Hugo
  • Documentary Short Film Competition
    • Gold Hugo
    • Silver Hugo
  • Animated Short Film Competition
    • Gold Hugo
    • Silver Hugo

    Gold Hugo

    YearWinning filmDirector(s)CountrySource
    1965The Lollipop CoverEverett Chambers  United States[3]
    1966Bushido (Bushidō zankoku monogatari)Tadashi Imai  Japan[4]
    1967Here's Your Life (Här har du ditt liv)Jan Troell  Sweden[5]
    1968Innocence Unprotected (Nevinost bez zastite)Dušan Makavejev  Yugoslavia[6]
    1969Eeny Meeny Miny Moe (Ole dole doff)Jan Troell  Sweden[7]
    1970The Green Wall (La muralla verde)Armando Robles Godoy  Peru[6]
    1971Mon oncle AntoineClaude Jutra  Canada[6]
    1972Bleak MomentsMike Leigh  United Kingdom[6]
    1973Mirage (Espejismo)Armando Robles Godoy  Peru[8]
    MorgianaJuraj Herz  Czechoslovakia[9]
    1974PirosmaniGeorgy Shengalaya  Soviet Union[6]
    1975Land of Promise (Ziemia obiecana)Andrzej Wajda  Poland[6]
    1976Kings of the Road (Im Lauf der Zeit)Wim Wenders  West Germany[6]
    1977The Huntsmen (Oi kynigoi)Theo Angelopoulos  Greece[10]
    1978To an Unknown God (A un dios desconocido)Jaime Chávarri  Spain[11]
    1979Angi VeraPál Gábor  Hungary[6]
    1980Camera Buff (Amator)Krzysztof Kieślowski  Poland[6]
    1981The German Sisters (Die bleierne Zeit)Margarethe von Trotta  West Germany[6]
    1982Come Back to the 5 & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy DeanRobert Altman  United States[6]
    1983The South (El Sur)Victor Erice  Spain
     France
    [6]
    1984Khandhar (The Ruins)Mrinal Sen  India[6]
    1985The Official Story (La historia oficial)Luis Puenzo  Argentina[12]
    1986Welcome in Vienna (Wohin und zurück)Axel Corti  Austria
     West Germany
      Switzerland
    [13]
    1987Whooping Cough (Szamárköhögés)Péter Gárdos [hu]  Hungary[6]
    1988Little Vera (Malenkaya Vera)Vasili Pichul  Soviet Union[14]
    1989Zerograd (Gorod Zero)Karen Chakhnazarov  Soviet Union[6]
    1990Ju DouZhang Yimou  China
     Japan
    [6]
    1991DelicatessenJean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro  France[6]
    1992Dream of Light (El sol del membrillo)Victor Erice  Spain[15]
    1993Twinkle (Kira kira hikaru)Joji Matsuoka  Japan[16]
    199471 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance (71 Fragmente einer Chronologie des Zufalls)Michael Haneke  Austria
     Germany
    [17]
    1995Maborosi (Maboroshi no Hikari)Hirokazu Koreeda  Japan[18]
    1996RidiculePatrice Leconte  France[19]
    1997The Winter GuestAlan Rickman  United Kingdom[20]
    1998The Hole (Dong)Tsai Ming-liang  Taiwan[21]
    1999Sachs' Disease (La maladie de Sachs)Michel Deville  France[22]
    2000Amores perrosAlejandro González Iñárritu  Mexico[23]
    2001Fat Girl (À ma soeur!)Catherine Breillat  France[24]
    2002Madame SatãKarim Aïnouz  Brazil[25]
    2003Crimson Gold (Talaye Sorkh)Jafar Panahi  Iran[26]
    2004KontrollNimród Antal  Hungary[27]
    2005My Nikifor (Mój Nikifor)Krzysztof Krauze  Poland[28]
    2006Fireworks Wednesday (Chaharshanbe Suri)Asghar Farhadi  Iran[29]
    2007Silent Light (Stellet Lijcht)Carlos Reygadas  Mexico[30]
    2008HungerSteve McQueen  Ireland[31]
    2009Mississippi DamnedTina Mabry  United States[32]
    2010How I Ended This Summer (Kak ya provyol etim letom)Alexei Popogrebski  Russia[33]
    2011Le HavreAki Kaurismäki  Finland[34]
    2012Holy MotorsLeos Carax  France
    2013My Sweet Pepper LandHuner Saleem  Iraq
    2014The PresidentMohsen Makhmalbaf  Georgia
     France
     United Kingdom
     Germany
    [35]
    2015A ChildhoodPhilippe Claudel  France[36]
    2016SieranevadaCristi Puiu  Romania[37]
    2017A Sort of FamilyDiego Lerman  Argentina[38]
    2018Happy as LazzaroAlice Rohrwacher  Italy
      Switzerland
     Germany
     France
    [39]
    2019Portrait of a Lady on FireCéline Sciamma  France[40]
    2020SweatMagnus von Horn  Sweden[2]
    2021MemoriaApichatpong Weerasethakul  Thailand
     Colombia
     Germany
     France
     Mexico
     China
    2022GodlandHlynur Pálmason  Iceland
     Denmark
     France
     Sweden
    [41]
    2023Explanation for EverythingGábor Reisz  Hungary
     Slovakia
    [42]

    Silver Hugo

    Jury Award

    Best Director

    Best Actor

    Best Actress

    Best Performance

    Best Cinematography

    Best Screenplay

    Best Art Direction

    • 2022 – Marcela Gómez and Daniel Rincon (Colombia) for The Kings of the World
    • 2021 – Sergey Fevralev (Russia) for Captain Volkonogov Escaped
    • 2020 – Jagna Dobesz (Poland) for Sweat

    Best New Director

    Lifetime Achievement Awards

    Winners of the festival's Lifetime Achievement Award include Steven Spielberg, Helen Hunt, Dustin Hoffman, Martin Landau, Shirley MacLaine, Lord Richard Attenborough, François Truffaut, Jodie Foster, Sigourney Weaver, Robin Williams, Manoel de Oliveira, and Clint Eastwood.[citation needed]

    Career Achievement Awards

    Television awards

    The Television Awards started with the idea of honoring television commercials in a special event of the film festival, but over time evolved and grew into a bigger event, comprising not only commercials but also television productions, series, and online television. In 2003 a separate ceremony was launched for the TV awards, and in 2017, the event became a separate event, named the Chicago International Television Festival. Winners and runners-up for the various categories, which include Gold and Silver Hugos, are listed on the film festival website.[46][47]

    See also

    References

    External links