Ljubljana LGBT Film Festival
The Ljubljana LGBT Film Festival is an annual international LGBT film festival held in Ljubljana, Slovenia. It is the oldest film festival of its sort in Europe and also the oldest international film festival in Slovenia. It showcases films with nonheterosexual and non-cisgender topics.[1]
The festival was launched in 1984 in the capital of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia, one of the six republics forming the country of Yugoslavia.
Screenings take place around 1 December – World AIDS Day, and the festival takes about a week.
History
When Slovenia was still part of the former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Ljubljana's Student Cultural Centre (ŠKUC) founded its gay section, called Magnus. The section organized the first edition of the festival as part of a wider festival on gay culture. It took place at several locations around Ljubljana: the ŠKUC Gallery, KinoŠkuc, The Ljubljana Faculty of Arts and Disko FV.[2]
From then on, the festival has been held annually, with the exception of the year 1987. The fourth edition of the festival was, namely, banned by the state authorities due to an alleged fear of the AIDS epidemic.[3]
The festival got limited financial resources from state and city authorities for years, so not all screenings in the history of the festival were translated into the Slovenian language. In 1996 the Slovenian Ministry of Culture banned screenings without translation into the Slovenian language, so the films of the 12th edition were translated simultaneously.[4]
Since 1994, the main festival location has been either the Kinodvor (in years 2004 to 2008) or the Slovenska kinoteka (Slovenian Cinematheque). Since 2004, the Ljubljana LGBT Film Festival has had at least one screening location outside Ljubljana.
Since 2013, the best films of the festival are awarded prizes by the jury and by the audience. As dragon is the symbol of Ljubljana, the name of the Ljubljana LGBT Film Festival award is the Pink Dragon.
In 2018, the festival was supported by the Slovenian Film Centre for the first time in its history.[5]
The 2020 edition of the festival was held online due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It could not include festival guests, but in recent years the festival attracted several well-known Slovenian and foreign filmmakers, who participated in festival talks and round tables. Among them were Barbara Hammer, Maja Weiss, Ljerka Belak, Marcel Gisler, Sibylle Brunner and Fan Popo.[6][7][8]
Awards
2020[9]
- Pink Dragon Audience Award: Welcome to Chechnya (David France)
2019[10]
- Pink Dragon Jury Award: Knife + Heart (Couteau dan le coeur) (Yann Gonzalez)
- Pink Dragon Audience Award: Portrait of a Lady on Fire (Portrait de la jeune fille en feu) (Céline Sciamma)
2018[11]
- Pink Dragon Jury Award: Hard Paint (Tinta bruta) (Felipe Matzembacher, Marcio Reolon)
- Pink Dragon Audience Award: Freak Show (Trudie Styler)
2017[12]
- Pink Dragon Jury Award: BPM (Beats Per Minute) (120 battements par minute) (Robin Campillo)
- Pink Dragon Audience Award: Chavela (Catherine Gund, Daresha Kyi)
- Pink Dragon Short Slovenian Film Award: Po gladini (Blaž Slana)
2016[13]
- Pink Dragon Jury Award: Paris 05:59: Théo & Hugo (Théo et Hugo dans le même bateau) (Olivier Ducastel, Jacques Martineau)
- Pink Dragon Audience Award: Transgender Life in Slovenia (Transspolna življenja v Sloveniji) (Michelle Emson)
2015[14]
- Pink Dragon Jury Award: Margarita, With a Straw (Shonali Bose)
- Pink Dragon Audience Award: How to Win at Checkers (Every Time) (Josh Kim)
2014[15]
- Pink Dragon Jury Award: Matterhorn (Diederik Ebbinge)
- Pink Dragon Audience Award: The Way He Looks (Hoje Eu Quero Voltar Sozinho) (Daniel Ribeiro)
- Pink Dragon Short Slovenian Film Award: God's Mistake (Božja napaka) (God's Mistake) (Eva Matarranz, Anna Savchenko)
2013[16]
- Pink Dragon Jury Award: Yoshiko & Yuriko (Yuriko, dasuvidânya) (Sachi Hamano)
- Pink Dragon Audience Award: Rosie (Marcel Gisler)
References
- "LGBT Film Festival". LGBT Film Festival. Društvo ŠKUC. Archived from the original on 25 November 2018. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
- Velikonja, Nataša. "20 festivalskih let". Ljudmila.org. Društvo Škuc. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
- Velikonja, Nataša. "20 festivalskih let". Ljudmila.org. Društvo Škuc. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
- Velikonja, Nataša. "20 festivalskih let". Ljudmila.org. Društvo Škuc. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
- Ronkali, Romana. "34. Festival LGBT filma bo naslednji teden v polnem zagonu". https://narobe.si/34-festival-lgbt-filma-bo-naslednji-teden-v-polnem-zagonu/. DIC Legebitra. Retrieved 15 December 2018. External link in
|website=
(help) - Jelesijević, Nenad. "Festival LGBT filma: jutri je nova priložnost". MMC RTV SLO. RTV SLO. Retrieved 2021-01-27.
- "28. festival lezbičnega in gejevskega filma". 28. festival lezbičnega in gejevskega filma. Društvo ŠKUC. Retrieved 2021-01-27.
- A. J. "Posledice odpirajo najstarejši evropski festival LGBT-filma - ljubljanski". MMC RTV SLO. RTV SLO. Retrieved 2021-01-27.
- M. K. "Dobrodošli v Čečeniji najboljši film festivala LGBT filma". Dnevnik.si. Dnevnik.si. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
- M. K. "Rožnata zmaja filmoma Nož v srce in Portret mladenke v ognju". MMC RTV Slovenija. RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
- M. K. "Rožnata zmaja filmoma Hard Paint in Freak Show". MMC RTV Slovenija. RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
- M. K. "Rožnati zmaj filmu 120 utripov na minuto, med kratkimi najboljši Po gladini". MMC RTV Slovenija. RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
- M. K. "Rožnati zmaj francoskemu filmu Théo in Hugo v istem čolnu". MMC RTV Slovenija. RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
- Gračanin, Eva. "Zaključil se je 31. Festival LGBT filma". Narobe. DIC Legebitra. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
- M. K. "Rožnati zmaj mojstrski pripovedi o potlačenih željah in zaprti družbi". MMC RTV Slovenija. RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
- Gračanin, Eva. "Končal se je 29. FGLF – Drugi rožnati zmaj filmu Rosie". Narobe. DIC Legebitra. Retrieved 15 December 2018.