Febiofest

The Prague International Film Festival (Czech: Mezinárodní filmový festival Praha), also known as Febiofest, is one of the largest film festivals in the Czech Republic and the second most prestigious festival in the country (after Karlovy Vary). The festival presents a wide spectrum of contemporary and retrospective examples of high-quality film including alternative, film-school and amateur works to a diverse viewing public.[2][3][4][5][6]

Prague International Film Festival (Febiofest)
LocationPrague, Czech Republic
Founded1993
No. of films190 (2013)[1]
Websitewww.febiofest.cz/en

History

The festival was founded in December 1993 in Prague by movie and television company Febiofest. The main personalities of the foundation were Fero Fenič and Pavel Melounek. Originally taking place in one city (Prague) in two small theaters, the event gradually grew (in just ten years) into more than 140,000 viewers in two countries, 12 cities and nearly 43 theaters. In 2005 the festival presented 336 films from 65 countries.[7] The main part of festival is still held in Prague but when the festival in Prague ends, some films are located to other cities.[8]

2020 edition

It was announced on 10 March 2020 that the 2020 edition would be cancelled because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.[9]

Guests

In 20 years, Febiofest has hosted directors and actors such as Nanni Moretti, Claude Lelouch, Geraldine Chaplin, Gaspar Noé, Peter Weir, Olivier Assayas, Roman Polanski, Volker Schloendorff, Isztvan Szabo, Tsai Ming-Liang, Tom Tykwer, Hal Hartley, Andrey Konchalovski, Armin Mueller Stahl, Nikita Mikhalkov, Carlos Saura or Claudia Cardinale.

Award

Grand Prix of the festival is dedicated to debuting European filmmakers in New Europe section. Award started in 2008. The 33-member jury awarding the Grand Prix consists of applicants from 15 to 100 years old, to people of all education, social background, professions, and interests plus honorary chairman such as D.O.P. Miroslav Ondricek, Neo-Futurist architect Jan Kaplický, artist David Cerny, conductor Libor Pesek, and former First Lady Dagmar Havlova.[10]

Awarded Films:

Grand Prix
YearFilm titleDirectorCountry of origin
2008MagnusKadri KõusaarEstonia, United Kingdom
2009SnowAida BegićBosnia and Herzegovina, Germany, France, Iran
2010The Children of DiyarbakirMiraz BezarTurkey
2011The ChristeningMarcin WronaPoland
2012The Good SonZaida BergothFinland
2013BrokenRufus NorrisUnited Kingdom
2014HomeMaximilian HultSweden, Iceland
2015Life in a FishbowlBaldvin ZophoníassonIceland
2016SparrowsRúnar RúnarssonIceland, Denmark, Croatia
2017HeartstoneGuðmundur Arnar GuðmundssonIceland
2018CustodyXavier LegrandFrance

Kristián Award for Contribution to the World Cinema was formerly given to personalities such as Roman Polanski, Helmut Berger, Richard Lester, Claudia Cardinale, Charles Aznavour, Carlos Saura, Daniel Olbrychski, Otar Ioseliani, Wim Wenders and Mike Leigh.

The annual award 1995-2011 was the Kristián (Czech critic's prizes). It focused attention not only on Czech feature films, but on animated and documentary works. The prize was made by famous sculptor Olbram Zoubek.

Venue

References

External links