Difference between revisions of "Ljubljana Documentary Film Festival"
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+ | In 1994 the documentary section was introduced at the [[Ljubljana International Film Festival (LIFFe)]] and it immediately | ||
+ | received a great response from the audience. It quickly became clear that the documentary film production has its audience, even a large one although the documentaries were rarely – if at all – screened in cinemas. Until 1996 when the documentary sections was included in the official programme of the Ljubljana International Film Festival (LIFFe) for the last time it became one of the most popular sections among audience. So it is not surprising that in the [[established::1998]] the International Documentary Film Festival was established. In the first few years it was a specialised non-competitive festival that was offering a general, quite unselective overview of the contemporary documentary film production while in the last few years – actually from 1997 when Simon Popek became the director and the selector of the festival – it became a specialised competitive festival focusing on contemporary documentary film production that deals with social issues and social phenomenons. The festival is taking place annually at the [[Cankarjev dom Culture and Congress Centre]] and in [[Kinodvor Cinema]] in the month of March and it lasts 8 days. | ||
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The different programme sections present the so-called problem films, socially critical works, films about myths and icons of the present and the past, intimate portraits, as well as retrospectives of prominent Slovene and foreign documentarists. In 2009 the festival has introduced a competitive section: films addressing human rights issues compete for the award presented by the festival partner, Amnesty International Slovenia. The three-member international jury was comprised by a representatives of Amnesty International Slovenia, Watch Docs from Warsaw and Slobodna Zona Festival from Belgrade). | The different programme sections present the so-called problem films, socially critical works, films about myths and icons of the present and the past, intimate portraits, as well as retrospectives of prominent Slovene and foreign documentarists. In 2009 the festival has introduced a competitive section: films addressing human rights issues compete for the award presented by the festival partner, Amnesty International Slovenia. The three-member international jury was comprised by a representatives of Amnesty International Slovenia, Watch Docs from Warsaw and Slobodna Zona Festival from Belgrade). |
Revision as of 00:24, 2 March 2010
The different programme sections present the so-called problem films, socially critical works, films about myths and icons of the present and the past, intimate portraits, as well as retrospectives of prominent Slovene and foreign documentarists. In 2009 the festival has introduced a competitive section: films addressing human rights issues compete for the award presented by the festival partner, Amnesty International Slovenia. The three-member international jury was comprised by a representatives of Amnesty International Slovenia, Watch Docs from Warsaw and Slobodna Zona Festival from Belgrade).
Some of the films premiered at the festival are later on distributed by Cankarjev dom and released in various theatres, next to Kosovel Hall usually in Kinodvor Cinema). In 2009 the two distributed films were: the Man on Wire by James Marsh, which received the Academy Award for Best Documentary, Elle s'appelle Sabine, directed by French actress Sandrine Bonnaire.
See also
- Cankarjev dom Culture and Congress Centre
- Ljubljana International Film Festival (LIFFe)
- Kinodvor Cinema