Dublin International Film Festival
The Dublin International Film Festival, known for sponsorship reasons as the Virgin Media Dublin International Film Festival, is a film festival held in Dublin, Ireland, since 2003.
History
Dublin International Film Festival was established in 2003. It was revived by Michael Dwyer, international film critic and The Irish Times Chief Film Correspondent, along with David McLoughlin, film producer. The duo had started the initial Dublin film Festival in the 1980s when Mc Loughlin was still an undergraduate in Trinity College Dublin. The festival was established to present an opportunity for Dublin's cinema-going audiences to experience the best in Irish and international cinema."Dublin has remarkable film attendance per capita, among the highest in Europe, certainly the highest in the EU," Dwyer said in a 2003 interview. "It seems absurd that the city didn't have an international film festival."
The festival secured €25,000 in funding from the Arts Council of Ireland for planning purposes the first year which has since increased to over €100,000. Jameson Irish Whiskey was the title sponsor of the festival providing significant support for many years and backing the festival with a major marketing campaign; it was called the Jameson Dublin International Film Festival. The festival was also supported by a number of significant partners including The Irish Times, FM104, Conrad Hotel, Cineworld, McConnells, MSL Mercedes-Benz, Windmill Lane and Cine Electric. Other funders include The Irish Film Board, Dublin City Council, Fáilte Ireland and a number of Cultural Institutions including the Goethe-Institut.
In 2007, the festival introduced a career achievement award, the Volta Award, to celebrate individuals who have made a significant contribution to the world of film. In the same year the festival also introduced the Audience Award recipients of which include Once and the surfing documentary Waveriders.
Festival venues include the Screen Cinema, Hawkins Street; Cineworld, Parnell Street; the Savoy Cinema, O'Connell Street and the Irish Film Institute, Eustace Street. In 2008 Movies@Dundrum was used as a venue. In 2009 the Light House Cinema, Smithfield was added as a venue.
2008 saw a significant change to the festival's executive with Gráinne Humphreys replacing Michael Dwyer as Festival Director and Joanne O'Hagan assuming the role, formerly held by Rory Concannon, of chief executive officer. Michael Dwyer assumed the position of Chairman of the Dublin International Film Festival Board with David McLoughlin stepping down.
Over 38,000 admissions were recorded for the 2008 festival for ticketed events. Non ticketed events include a citywide installation Dublin on Screen to celebrate Dublin's cinematic heritage. The initiative featured films shot on location in Dublin and screened on the very spot that they were shot on.
The festival has come to be regarded as an important event for the cinema of Ireland, bringing together film-makers, actors, producers and other celebrities from Ireland and around the world. The festival continues to be committed to supporting film and in 2008 initiated a significant International Screen Writing Award, Write Here, Write Now. The winner of the award was announced at the 2009 festival which took place from 12 – 22 February 2009.
In 2016, the original sponsors, Jameson, were replaced by Audi after thirteen years of sponsorship. The festival was then called the Audi Dublin International Film Festival and the new sponsorship deal lasted three years.
In 2018, Virgin Media committed to sponsoring the festival for three years, starting in 2019.
Awards
The festival introduced the Volta Awards in 2007. The award is named after Dublin's first cinema, the Volta Picture Theatre, established by author James Joyce in 1905. Awards are given for career achievement and audience favourite. Critics' awards were first presented in 2009. The Michael Dwyer Discovery Award' was created in 2010 after his death to honour Irish people working in film.2007
- Career Achievement Awards:
- * Gabriel Byrne, actor
- * Brendan McCaul, film producer and distributor
- * Jeremy Thomas, producer
- * Consolata Boyle, costume designer
- Audience Award: Once
2008
decorated for the 2008 JDIFF
- Career Achievement Awards:
- * Brendan Gleeson, actor
- * Daniel Day-Lewis, actor
- * Leo Ward, cinema chain owner
- Audience Award: Waveriders
2009
- Career Achievement Awards:
- *Paolo Sorrentino, director
- * George Morrison, documentary maker
- * Thierry Frémaux, artistic director of the Cannes Film Festival
- Audience Award: Anvil! The Story of Anvil
- Critics' Awards:
- * Best Film: Let the Right One In
- * Best Irish Film: The Secret of Kells
- * Best Documentary: Anvil! The Story of Anvil
- * Best Director: Paolo Sorrentino
- * Best Actor: Tom Hardy
2010
Career Achievement Awards:
- Ciarán Hinds, actor
- Patricia Clarkson, actress
- Kristin Scott Thomas, actress
Dublin Film Critics Circle Awards:
- Best Film: Samson and Delilah
- Best Irish Film: The Fading Light
- Best Male Performance: Patrick O'Donnell
- Best Female Performance: Tilda Swinton
- Best Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
- Best Documentary: His & Hers
- Special Jury Prize:
- Michael Dwyer Discovery Award: Kate McCullough, cinematographer
2011
Career Achievement Awards:
- Martin Sheen, actor
- Kevin Brownlow, film historian and preservationist
- François Ozon, director
Dublin Film Critics Circle Awards:
- Best Film: The Robber
- Best Irish Film: Snap
- Best Director: Alexei Popogrebski
- Best Irish Director: Carmel Winters
- Best Cinematography: Tim Fleming
- Best Screenplay: Tudor Voican
- Best Short: Small Change
- Best International Documentary: Cave of Forgotten Dreams
- Best Irish Documentary: Men of Arlington
- Best Début: Philip Koch
- Best Actor: Jakob Cedergren
- Best Actress: Martina Gusman
- Special Jury Prize: The Four Times
- Michael Dwyer Discovery Award: Still Films
2012
- Stellan Skarsgård, actor
- Marin Karmitz, director, producer, distributor and cinema chain owner
- Al Pacino, actor
Dublin Film Critics Circle Awards:
- Best Film:
2013
Volta Career Achievement Awards:
- Danny DeVito, actor and director
- Tim Roth, actor
- Costa-Gavras, director
- Joss Whedon, screenwriter and director
- Best Film: Vanishing Waves by Kristina Buožytė
- Best Director: Mikhail Segal for Short Stories
- Best Actor: Aleksey Vertkov for White Tiger
- Best Actress: Dilan Aksüt, Night of Silence
- Best Debut: Maja Miloš for Klip
- Best Screenplay: Oriol Paulo and Lara Sendim for The Body
- Best Cinematography: Oleg Mutu for Beyond the Hills
- Best Documentary: '
- Best Irish Feature: Babygirl by Macdara Vallelly
- Best Irish Documentary: Get the Picture by Cathy Pearson
- Michael Dwyer Discovery Award: Broken Song by Claire Dix
- Audience Award:' Broken Song
- Blancanieves
- After Lucia
- The King of Pigs''
2014
Volta Career Achievement Awards:
- Terry Gilliam, actor and director
- Peter Morgan, screenwriter
- Richard Dreyfuss, actor
- Stanley Tucci, actor
- Best Film: The Reunion by Anna Odell
- Best Director: Paweł Pawlikowski for Ida
- Best Actor: Jack O'Connell for Starred Up
- Best Actress: Mira Barkhammar, Mira Grosin and Liv LeMoyne for We Are the Best!
- Best Debut Feature: The Rocket by Kim Mordaunt
- Best Screenplay: Georg Mass for Two Lives
- Best Cinematography: Daniel Landin for Under the Skin
- Best Documentary: Los Wild Ones by Elise Salomon
- Best Irish Feature: Love Eternal by Brendan Muldowney
- Best Irish Documentary: Living in a Coded Land by Pat Collins
- Michael Dwyer Discovery Award: Out of Here by Donal Foreman
- Audience Award: Los Wild Ones
- Blue Ruin
- The Golden Dream
- The Congress
2015
Volta Career Achievement Awards:
- Kenneth Branagh, actor and director
- Laurent Cantet, director and screenwriter
- Julie Andrews, actress
- Best Film: The Tribe, director Myroslav Slaboshpytskiy
- Best Director: Ruben Östlund for Force Majeure
- Best Screenplay: Yuri Bykov for The Fool
- Best Cinematography: Lyle Vincent for A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night
- Best Documentary: ', director Brett Morgen
- Best Actor: Cliff Curtis for The Dark Horse
- Best Actress: Nina Hoss for Phoenix
- Best Irish Feature: Glassland, director Gerard Barrett
- Best Irish Documentary: ', director Joe Lee
- Best Debut: Chaitanya Tamhane for Court
- Michael Dwyer Discovery Award: Piers McGrail, cinematographer on Glassland, Let Us Prey, The Canal
- Feature: The Salt of the Earth
- Short: Boogaloo and Graham
- A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence
- Eden
- You're Sleeping, Nicole
- 10,000 km
2016
Volta Career Achievement Awards:
- Angela Lansbury, actress and singer
- Claudia Cardinale, actress
- Andrew Stanton, director, screenwriter, producer and voice actor
- Best Film: Mustang, director Deniz Gamze Ergüven
- Best Director: Lucile Hadžihalilović for Evolution
- Best Screenplay: Jaco Van Dormael and Thomas Gunzig for The Brand New Testament
- Best Cinematography: Mátyás Erdély for Son of Saul
- Best Documentary: Heart of a Dog, director Laurie Anderson
- Best Actor: Alex Lawther for Departure
- Best Actress: Monica Bellucci for Ville-Marie
- Best Ensemble Cast: Green Room, director Jeremy Saulnier
- Best Irish Feature: Viva, director Paddy Breathnach
- Best Irish Documentary: Atlantic, director Risteard Ó Domhnaill
- Best Irish Short Film: Geist, director Eric Daniel Dunn
- Best International Short Film: The Bathtub, director Tim Ellrich
- George Byrne Maverick Award: Stephen Rea for Viva
- Michael Dwyer Discovery Award: Ferdia Walsh-Peelo, actor on Sing Street
- Feature: Viva
- Short: Little Bear
- Black Mountain Poets
- Victoria
- Anomalisa
- Barry Keoghan, actor on Mammal, Traders and The Break
- Jack O'Shea, director/animator on A Coat Made Dark and Eat the Danger
- Kathryn Kennedy, producer on My Name is Emily, It's Not Yet Dark and After
2017
Volta Career Achievement Awards:
- Vanessa Redgrave, actress
- Best Film – Aquarius, director Kleber Mendonça Filho
- Best Actress – Florence Pugh, Lady Macbeth
- Best Actor – Sherwan Haji, The Other Side of Hope
- Best Director – Lav Diaz, The Woman Who Left
- Best Cinematography – M. David Mullen, The Love Witch
- Best Screenplay – Kristina Grozeva, Petar Valchanov, Glory
- Best Irish Feature – Handsome Devil, director John Butler
- Best Irish Documentary – The Farthest, director Emer Reynolds
- Best Documentary – I Am Not Your Negro, director Raoul Peck
- George Byrne Maverick Award: Emer Reynolds, editor
- Kristopher Avedisian, Donald Cried
- Daouda Coulibaly, Wulu
- My Life as a Courgette
- The Transfiguration
- The Farthest, director Emer Reynolds
- John Connors, actor on The Secret Scripture and Breathe
- Niamh Algar, actor on Without Name, Pebbles and Gone
- Vincent Gallagher, writer/director on Second to None and Love is a Sting
2018
Volta Career Achievement Award:
- Paul Schrader, writer and director
- Vanessa Redgrave
- Best Film: Custody, director Xavier Legrand
- Best Director: Chloé Zhao for The Rider
- Best Irish Director: Rebecca Daly for Good Favour
- Best Screenplay: Lynne Ramsay for You Were Never Really Here
- Best Cinematography: Monika Lenczewska for Under the Tree
- Best Actor: Charlie Plummer for Lean on Pete
- Best Actress: Charlotte Rampling for Hannah
- Best Documentary: So Help Me God, director Yves Hinant
- Best Irish Film: The Lonely Battle of Thomas Reid, director Feargal Ward
- Michael Dwyer Discovery Award: Coralie Fargeat, director-writer on Revenge
- George Byrne Maverick Award: Stephen Rea, actor in Black 47
- Extraordinary Achievement: Bill Morrison, writer-director-editor of '
- Kathleen Hepburn for Never Steady, Never Still
- Warwick Thornton for Sweet Country
- Liu Jian for Have a Nice Day
- Ryan Killackey for Yasuni Man
- Mia Mullarkey, director of Mother & Baby
- Rua Meegan and Trevor Whelan, directors of '
- TJ O’Grady Peyton, director of Wave
- * Special Mention: Jessie Buckley
- Best Irish Short Film: Mother & Baby, director Mia Mullarkey
- * Special Mention: Time Traveller, director Steve Kenny
- Best International Short Film: Retouch, director Kaveh Mazaheri
- * Special Mention: Mary Mother, director Sadam Wahidi
- Feature: The Breadwinner
- Short: Time Traveller
- Feature: Room 213
- Short: Earthy Encounters
2019
Volta Awards:
- Ralph Fiennes, actor-director
- Sean Bailey, producer
- Best Irish Short Film: Five Letters to the Stranger Who Will Dissect My Brain, director Oonagh Kearney
- * Special Mention: The First was a Boy, director Shaun Dunne
- Best International Short Film: Inanimate, director Lucia Bulgheroni
- *Special Mention: Child, director Joren Molter
- Feature: Maiden, director Alex Holmes
- Short: 99 Problems, director Ross Killeen
- Alexandra McGuinness, writer-director of She's Missing
- Ian Hunt Duffy, director of Low Tide
- Oonagh Kearney, director of Five Letters to the Stranger Who Will Dissect My Brain
- Madonna Bambino, makeup artist on Low Tide
- Winner: Of Fathers and Sons, director Talal Derki
- Honourable mention: GAZA, directors Garry Keane and Andrew McConnell
- Winner: ', director Janus Metz Pedersen
- Special mention: Land Without God, directors Gerard Mannix Flynn, Maedhbh McMahon and Lotta Petronella
- Feature — Winner: Mia and the White Lion, director Gilles de Maistre
- Feature — Special Mention: Departures, director Peter Hutchings
- Short — Winner: First Disco, director Helen M. O'Reilly
- Feature — Special Mention: The Overcoat, directors Meelis Arulepp and Sean Mullen
- Winner: Rafiki, director Wanuri Kahiu
- Special Mention: Ballon, director Michael Herbig
- Best Film: Transit, director Christian Petzold
- Best Director: Rima Das for Bulbul Can Sing
- Best Cinematography: Hiroshi Okuyama for Jesus
- Best Documentary: GAZA, directors Garry Keane and Andrew McConnell
- Best Irish Film: Greta, director Neil Jordan
- Best Screenplay: Bai Xue for The Crossing
- Best Actor: Bogdan Dumitrache for Pororoca
- Best Actress: Jessie Buckley for Wild Rose
- Jury Prizes
- * Jia Zhangke, director of Ash Is Purest White
- * Alex Ross Perry, writer-director-producer of Her Smell
- * Baran Kosari, actress in Cold Sweat
- *Hu Bo, director-writer-editor of An Elephant Sitting Still
- *Bo Burnham, writer-director of Eighth Grade
- George Byrne Maverick Award: Hugh O'Conor, director of Metal Heart
- Michael Dwyer Discovery Award:' Dianne Lucille Campbell, director of El Hor''
2020
Audience Awards:
- Virgin Media Audience Award: Endless Sunshine on a Cloudy Day
- Virgin Media Audience Award, Short Film: Iarscoláire
- Fantastic Flix Audience Award: Onward
- Fantastic Flix Audience Award, Short Film: The Girl at the End of the Garden
- Paddy Slattery, writer/director of Broken Law
- Cara Holmes, director of Welcome to a Bright White Limbo
- Claire Byrne, director of Sister This
- Dónall Ó Héalaí, actor in Arracht
- Special mention: Women Make Film: A New Road Trip Through Cinema
- Winner: Confucian Dream, director Mijie Li
- Special Mention International Short Film: Adnan
- Best International Short Film: Quiet Land Good People
- Special Mention, Irish Short Film : Innocent Boy, dir. John Connors
- Best Irish Short Film: Welcome to a Bright White Limbo, dir. Cara Holmes
- Special Mention: Street Leagues, dir. Daniel F. Holmes
- Winner: Herself, dir. Phyllida Lloyd
Fantastic Flix Jury Awards, as chosen by The Ark's Children's Jury:
- Feature Film: Onward
- Short Film: Streets of Fury, dir. Aidan McAteer
- Best Film: Supernova
- Best Actor: Albano Jeronimo
- Best Actress: Barbara Sukowa
- Best Screenplay: Congcong Teng
- Best Director: Roy Andersson
- Best Cinematography: Leonardo Simões
- Best Ensemble: Rocks
- Best Irish Film: Arracht
- George Byrne Maverick Award: Pat Murphy
- Best Documentary: New York Our Time
- Michael Dwyer Discovery Award: Clare Dunne
- Jury Prizes: Moffie; Marona's Fantastic Tale; Deerskin; If You Are Happy
2021