Sydney Film Festival

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The Sydney Film Festival is a non-competitive film festival that began in 1954. The festival runs for two weeks each year in June and showcases Australian, international and alternative films.

The original committee to organise the film festival in Sydney comprised Alan Stout, Professor of Philosophy at Sydney University, as chair, John Heyer, John Kingsford Smith and Sydney University Film Group President David Donaldson.[1] The first festival opened on June 11, 1954 and screened in four halls at Sydney University over four days. Attendance was at full capacity with 1,200 tickets sold at one guinea each.

The festival remained at Sydney University until 1968, at which time it moved to the Wintergarden in Rose Bay. In 1974 it moved to its current main venue, the historic State Theatre in the centre of Sydney, with some films also shown at the Dendy Opera Quays, and two screens at the GU George Street Cinema Complex. In 2007 the festival introduced a series of live gigs, shows and cabaret-style screening at the nearby Metro Theatre, to expand the festival beyond the traditional cinema experience, and allow a platform for emerging technological innovations in the world of film.

Members of the audience can purchase a subscription to the State Theatre for the full two weeks but the number of single session tickets, as well as FlexiPasses of ten, twenty and fifty tickets, has been increasing since introduced in 2001. In 2007 a new FlexiPass, the FlexiDiscovery, was introduced for people aged 18-24, to encourage young people to discover the film festival.

Strict guidelines in relation to previous screenings of films means that audiences see films that haven't had general release. Six audience awards are awarded at the end of the festival and the Dendy short film award nominees screen on the last Saturday of the festival, with the winners announced at the Closing Night Gala of the SFF.

The 2007 Sydney Film Festival received much controversy for its inclusion of the controversial documentary "Zoo", which focusses on the life and death of Kenneth Pinyan, a Seattle area man who died unusually through a fatal accident while engaging in sex with a horse. This controversy was then later satirized in the Festival's official video podcast. The video podcasts were a humorous, "tongue-in-cheek" parody upon the standard red-carpet gala interview format.

Contents

[edit] Festival Directors

  • Valwyn Edwards (dir. 1958)[2]
  • L. Hunter (dir. 1960)
  • Patricia Moore (dir. 1961)
  • Ian Klava (dir. 1962–1965)[3]
  • David Stratton (dir. 1966–1983)
  • Rod Webb (dir. 1984-1988)
  • Paul Byrnes (dir. 1989-1998)
  • Gayle Lake (dir. 1999-2004)
  • Lynden Barber (dir. 2005-2006)
  • Clare Stewart (dir. 2007-)

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Kaufman (2003)
  2. ^ David Donaldson was Film and Program Advisor.
  3. ^ Ian Klava was the first full time director for the Sydney Film Festival. Prior to this, the role had been shared around somewhat amongst members of the committee.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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