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Festival du nouveau cinéma

Coordinates: 45°30′23″N 73°34′4″W / 45.50639°N 73.56778°W / 45.50639; -73.56778
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Festival du nouveau cinéma de Montréal
LocationMontreal, Quebec
Canada
Founded1971
Most recent2023
Festival dateOctober 6–17, 2021
Websitenouveaucinema.ca

The Festival du nouveau cinéma or FNC (English: Festival of New Cinema) is an annual independent film festival held in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, featuring independent films from around the world.[1] Over 160,000 people attend each year. One of the oldest film festivals in Canada, it is an Academy Award-qualifying festival for short films.[2]

Although the festival screens a variety of films by both new and established filmmakers, including many of the same high-profile films screening at other film festivals in the same year, its core programs are the national and international competitions, which present a variety of awards for both feature and short films by emerging Canadian and international directors.[3]

History

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Founded in 1971 as the Festival international du cinéma en 16mm de Montréal, the festival welcomes Québécois, Canadian, and international filmmakers, and encourages exchanges between industry professionals and the general public. It was a small underground film festival until the 1990s, when it began to gain prominence as an alternative to the Montreal World Film Festival due to increased public dissatisfaction with the management of the larger event.[4]

It is now the primary general interest film festival in Montreal,[5] with the more genre-oriented Fantasia International Film Festival serving as the city's other major annual film event, although the two festivals have undertaken various efforts to collaborate, rather than treating each other as competition, due to their distinct programming mandates.[6] The press have, however, sometimes continued to lament the fact that the Festival du nouveau cinéma does not have the same level of international prominence that Montreal World had in its heyday or that the Toronto International Film Festival still enjoys, asserting that some of the city's smaller specialist film festivals, including Cinemania for francophone films and the Rendez-vous Québec Cinéma for Quebec films, still draw away from some of the potential of FNC and Fantasia to expand their profiles.[7]

Over its history, it has introduced audiences to filmmakers such as François Girard, Atom Egoyan, Denis Villeneuve, Guy Maddin, Léa Pool, Jim Jarmusch, Abbas Kiarostami, Spike Lee, Wim Wenders, Raymond Depardon, Jane Campion, Pedro Almodóvar, Wong Kar-wai, Peter Greenaway, Chantal Akerman and Marguerite Duras.

Sections

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  • Compétition internationale highlighting the unique perspectives of the filmmakers who will shape tomorrow's cinema
  • Compétition nationale, homegrown Canadian cinema
  • Temps Ø, the wild bunch or bold cinematic rebels and adventurous films
  • Incontournables, the greatest names in cinema
  • Les Nouveaux alchimistes, a selection of films pushing the limits, breaking the rules and exploring the boundless creative potential that the medium offers
  • Panorama international, international feature films
  • Histoire(s) du cinéma, look-backs on the works that have left their mark
  • Présentations spéciales, an eclectic section presenting unusual works
  • FNC Explore, immersive, interactive and virtual reality programmes that are free and open for all
  • FNC Forum, an industry network incubator
  • P'tits loups, new cinema for children young and old
  • Les Rencontres pancanadiennes du cinéma étudiant or RPCE, a national competition of short student films
Notes
  • The Compétition nationale section (meaning National competition) was previously known as Focus Québec/Canada and was created in 2006
  • The Temps Ø section was created in 2004
  • The FNC Lab section was divided into two sections in 2016: Les Nouveaux alchimistes and FNC Explore
  • The FNC Forum section was previously known as FNC Pro and Open Source
  • The RCPÉ (meaning Pan-Canadian Student Meetings) was created in 2015
  • The P'tits loups section (meaning Little wolves) was created in 2008

Prizes

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  • Louve d'or
  • Daniel Langlois Innovation Award
  • Prix d’interprétation
  • Fipresci Prize
  • Focus Grand Prize
  • Loup argenté - short film
  • Grand Prix Focus Short Film
  • Temps Ø People's Choice Award
  • Nouveaux alchimistes Prize
  • Experimentation Award
  • Dada Award
  • P'tits loups Award
  • Fierté Montréal Award for best LGBTQ-themed film

Important moments

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The festival was founded in 1971 by Claude Chamberlan and Dimitri Eipidès. The festival went through several name changes.

  • 1971: Festival international du cinéma en 16mm de Montréal (Montreal International 16mm Film Festival).
  • 1980: Renamed Festival international du nouveau cinéma de Montréal (Montreal International Festival of New Cinema)
  • 1984: Renamed Festival international du nouveau cinéma et de la vidéo de Montréal (Montreal International Festival of New Cinema and Video)
  • 1995: Renamed Nouveau festival international, cinéma, vidéo et nouvelles technologies de Montréal (New Montreal International Festival of Cinema, Video and New Technologies);
  • 1997: Renamed Festival international du nouveau cinéma et des nouveaux médias de Montréal or FCMM (Montreal International Festival of New Cinema and New Media) as a result of the merger with the Festival international du court métrage de Montréal (Montreal International Short Film Festival).
  • 2001: The Festival celebrated its 30th anniversary by offering an extraordinary selection and a commemorative book summarizing the festival's 30-year history.
  • 2004: Adopted the current name Festival du nouveau cinéma (Festival of New Cinema).

FNC and FIFM

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In 2004 Daniel Langlois, director of FNC since 1999, left the organization to begin the Festival International de Films de Montréal (known in English as New Montreal FilmFest), which was initiated and created with the support of SODEC (Société de développement des entreprises culturelles) and Telefilm Canada after a dispute between these Canadian government sponsors and the Montreal World Film Festival.

Langlois initially programmed the Festival International de Films de Montréal (FIFM; New Montreal FilmFest) to coincide with the Montreal Festival of New Cinema and New Media (FCMM). According to press reports pertaining to the controversy between the Montreal World Film Festival (WFF/FFM) and the New Montreal FilmFest, Langlois planned to merge the two festivals, but failed to do so when the FCMM refused any such merger. The dates for the inaugural New Montreal FilmFest were ultimately changed to avoid conflicting with the dates of the FCMM.

In 2005, both the FNC and the New Montreal FilmFest came under new management. In early 2006, the New Montreal FilmFest folded after the failure of its inaugural festival. Both the FNC and the Montreal World Film Festival would continue to exist after the demise of the New Montreal FilmFest.

Events

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ William Sanger, Festival du nouveau cinéma (Le Polyscope, October 14, 2008)
  2. ^ "Rules & Eligibility". Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. July 28, 2014. Retrieved October 4, 2020.
  3. ^ Bill Brownstein, "FNC is screening 105 films, and Zoé Protat has seen them all". Montreal Gazette, October 4, 2023.
  4. ^ John Griffin, "Is this Montreal's real film festival? 20-year-old New Cinema event now rivals Losique's big show". Montreal Gazette, October 12, 1991.
  5. ^ Laura Osborne, "The Montreal Festival du nouveau cinéma is back with almost 300 movie screenings". Time Out, September 26, 2022.
  6. ^ Marc-André Lussier, "Le FNC et Fantasia collaborent". La Presse, July 27, 2016.
  7. ^ Vincent Brousseau-Pouliot, "On fait quoi avec les quatre successeurs du FFM ?". La Presse, October 10, 2022.
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45°30′23″N 73°34′4″W / 45.50639°N 73.56778°W / 45.50639; -73.56778