Animafest Zagreb
Logo of the 2010 edition | |
Location | Zagreb, Croatia |
---|---|
Founded | 1972 |
Language | International |
Website | http://www.animafest.hr/ |
World Festival of Animated Film Zagreb (Croatian: Svjetski festival animiranog filma), also known as Animafest Zagreb, is a film festival entirely dedicated to animated film held annually in Zagreb, Croatia. Initiated by the International Animated Film Association (ASIFA), the event was established in 1972. Animafest is the second oldest animation festival in the World, after the Annecy International Animated Film Festival, (established in 1960).[1]
The idea to create the event came about because of the worldwide acclaim of animated shorts produced by authors belonging to the Zagreb School of Animated Films in the 1950s and 1960s. Zagreb’s candidacy for holding a permanent animated film festival was accepted at the 1969 ASIFA meeting in London.
Festival awards include prizes given in the Short film Competition, Feature film Competition, Student Film Competition, Children Films, Site-specific competition and Croatian competition. Its Prize for "Best First Production Apart from Educational Institutions" is named in honour of Zlatko Grgić. The Lifetime Achievement Award, which is unique for animation film festivals, was established in 1986. An award for outstanding contribution to the theory of animation was added in 2002.[1]
Grand Prize winners
From 1972 to 2004 Animafest was a biennial event focused on animated short films, held every even year with the exception of 1976. Between 2005 and 2015 a feature film festival edition was introduced and held every odd year in between the short film editions. In 2015 the shorts and feature selections were merged into one event, scheduled to be held every year.
Short films
Year | English title | Director(s) | Country |
---|---|---|---|
1972 | The Battle of Kerzhenets | Ivan Ivanov-Vano and Yuriy Norshteyn | Soviet Union |
1974 | The Diary | Nedeljko Dragić | Yugoslavia |
1976 | | ||
1978 | Satiemania | Zdenko Gašparović | Yugoslavia |
1980 | Tale of Tales | Yuriy Norshteyn | Soviet Union |
1982 | | ||
1984 | Jumping | Osamu Tezuka | Japan |
1986 | | ||
1988 | Breakfast on the Grass | Priit Pärn | Soviet Union |
1990 | The Brooch Pin And The Sinful Clasp | JoWonder | United Kingdom |
1992 | Franz Kafka | Piotr Dumała | Poland |
1994 | The Wrong Trousers | Nick Park | United Kingdom |
1996 | 1895 | Priit Pärn and Janno Põldma | Estonia |
1998 | Rusalka | Aleksandr Petrov | Russia |
2000 | When the Day Breaks | Wendy Tilby and Amanda Forbis | Canada |
2002 | Father and Daughter | Michaël Dudok de Wit | Netherlands |
2004 | Mount Head | Kōji Yamamura | Japan |
2006 | Dreams and Desires - Family Ties | Joanna Quinn | United Kingdom |
2008 | The Pearce Sisters | Luis Cook | United Kingdom |
2010 | Divers in the Rain | Olga Pärn and Priit Pärn | Estonia |
2012 | Oh Willy... | Emma De Swaef and Marc James Roels | Belgium |
2014 | Love Games | Yumi Joung | South Korea |
2015 | We Can't Live Without Cosmos | Konstantin Bronzit | Russia |
Feature films
Year | English title | Director(s) | Country |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | Terkel in Trouble | Kresten Vestbjerg Andersen, Thorbjørn Christoffersen and Stefan Fjeldmark | Denmark |
2007 | Azur & Asmar: The Princes' Quest | Michel Ocelot | France |
2009 | Waltz with Bashir | Ari Folman | Israel |
2011 | My Dog Tulip | Paul Fierlinger and Sandra Fierlinger | United States |
2013 | Approved for Adoption | Laurent Boileau and Jung | Belgium / France |
2015 | The Boy and the World | Alê Abreu | Brazil |
Footnotes
- A. ^ In 1976 the festival was cancelled because of the earlier agreement that the three main ASIFA-sponsored festivals (at Annecy, Zagreb and Mamaia, Romania) would be held in three-year cycles, with Mamaia scheduled to take place in 1976. However, Romanian organizers cancelled the event at the very last minute. In 1977 the regular festival at Annecy was held and the usual biennial cycle resumed, with Zagreb and Annecy taking turns.[2]
Lifetime Achievement Award laureates
Year | Director | Country |
---|---|---|
1986 | Norman McLaren | Canada |
1988 | Chuck Jones | U.S.A. |
1990 | John Halas | Great Britain |
1992 | Bob Godfrey | Great Britain |
1994 | Dušan Vukotić | Croatia |
1996 | Caroline Leaf | Canada |
1998 | Bruno Bozzetto | Italy |
2000 | Jan Švankmajer | Czech Republic |
2002 | Paul Driessen | Netherlands/Canada |
2004 | Hayao Miyazaki | Japan |
2006 | Fyodor Khitruk | Russia |
2008 | Priit Pärn | Estonia |
2010 | Frederic Back | Canada |
2012 | Yoji Kuri | Japan |
2014 | Yuri Norstein | Russia |
2015 | Michel Ocelot | France |
2016 | Raoul Servais | Belgium |
Award for outstanding contribution to animation studies laureates
2002 | Giannalberto Bendazzi | Italy |
2004 | Donald Crafton | U.S.A. |
2006 | John Canemaker | U.S.A. |
2008 | Clare Kitson | Great Britain |
2010 | Midhat Ajanović ("Ajan") | Sweden/B.I.H. |
2012 | Olivier Cotte | France |
2014 | Marcel Jean | Canada |
2016 | Marcin Gizycki | Poland |
See also
Other ASIFA-sponsored animated film festivals:
- Annecy International Animated Film Festival (est. 1960)
- Ottawa International Animation Festival (est. 1976)
- Hiroshima International Animation Festival (est. 1985)
References
- 1 2 The Zagreb World Festival of Animated Films @ filmfestivalworld.com Archived September 6, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ "1976 / Archive / Animafest - Svjetski festival animiranog filma" (in Croatian). Animafest. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
- ↑ "1982 / Archive / Animafest - Svjetski festival animiranog filma" (in Croatian). Animafest. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
- ↑ "1986 / Archive / Animafest - Svjetski festival animiranog filma" (in Croatian). Animafest. Retrieved 4 February 2011.