برچسب: edition

  • Inside the inaugural edition of the Collective Film Festival London

    Inside the inaugural edition of the Collective Film Festival London


    Glass awards with golden emblems on table, blurred crowd in tiered seating under warm lighting in background.

    A dispatch from a passionate grassroots project over in Finsbury Park.

    ‘Diversity’ and ‘inclusion’ have become corporate buzzwords, vibe-free boxes to be ticked on BFI funding application forms, so it is an experience to be reminded that these words represent an ideal that does exist. Collective Film Festival London – the inaugural one-day fiesta which took place on 18 July at Collective Acting Studio in Finsbury Park – was an antidote to business-driven festivals. A collective passion for using filmmaking to tell marginalised stories dominated over glassy-eyed careerism. The welcoming atmosphere was not contingent on proving oneself professionally useful. 

    Full disclosure, I went as a punter – unaware that I was going to be reviewing! – so this is a very chaotic account. Full disclosure part II: Little White Lies is a media partner of the Collective Film Festival and my heart swelled as copies of our Sinners issue were handed over alongside a glass award at the evening ceremony.

    First stop and – my big draw of the day – was a masterclass titled Bridging Sound and Story in Screenwriting. Hosted by School of Bop, it was a conversation between the composer Robert Kigozi (alias: R-Kay) and directors Cristina Conde Tkatchenko and Kabelo Murray. Focus was divided between explaining how their creative collaboration worked by deconstructing the making of a Japanese-cinema influenced horror short they made together and, secondly, an explanation of the ethos of the collective Thunder City Films (more on this in a bit).

    The euphoria of this session had more to do with the way that information was communicated rather than what was communicated. While there was curiosity value in the privileged access we were given to Google docs full of influences (from Kurosawa to Spielberg) and in watching scenes from The Light with and without the score, it was most liberating to hear Murray nonchalantly talk about how the heroine of The Light shares some of his ADHD traits. Indeed her environmental sensitivity – and how it is dismissed by her friends – forms the basis of the horror. 

    Audience seated in tiered rows of a small theatre or performance space with exposed ceiling beams and warm lighting.

    This vibe – self-accepting and accepting of others – was explicated as fundamental to the ethos of Thunder City Films, a production company started by Tkatchenko and Murray after they became fed up with the gate-keepery nature of the British film industry. TFC professes to welcome contact from anyone interested in furthering their filmmaking journey. Those who share their values are encouraged to reach out for anything from advice on deciphering funding applications to opportunities to shadow their chosen department on a film shoot.

    For his part, R-Kay was good, giving and game, a versatile talent whose work on The Light blurred the lines between score and sound design, elevating it to a disturbing realm (high compliment).

    There were so many questions after the session that I was tragically late to my next appointment, a short film programme composed of My Jerome by Adajani Salmon, Fractured Frame by Natalie Lauren Woodward, The First Time That I Never Met You by Eric Kole and See You in the Dark by Asena Nour. (My Jerome and See You in the Dark went on to win awards at the ceremony later.) Still, the overall flavour was of distinctive voices and perspectives that creatively explored a facet of contemporary London life. Q&As focused on demystifying any and every element of production for an audience of young, hungry creatives. Humour and humility set the tone as the filmmakers owned what they had learned and what mistakes had been made.

    The awards ceremony was a communal love-in! Everyone from the festival’s creator, Anthony Vander, to the volunteers were called onto stage to receive their flowers. Awards were handed for short films, as well as an honorary one for community leader, Shawdon Smith whose Ambitious Academy aims to fill the gap left by the demise of youth clubs, engaging overlooked communities to skill up through a range of creative courses.

    The mood was rapturous as I, beginning to feel like a tourist, slipped out before the post-awards karaoke.





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  • Glasgow Film Festival celebrates its 21st edition with over 33,000 attendances

    Glasgow Film Festival celebrates its 21st edition with over 33,000 attendances


    Glasgow Film Festival (GFF) wrapped the 21st edition of Scotland’s flagship film festival after an epic 12 days, featuring 114 feature films from 39 countries at Glasgow Film Theatre and nine other venues across the city, attracting over 33,000 attendances. 

    For the first time in its history, the festival opened and closed with Scottish world premieres – John Maclean’s Tornado and Make it to Munich from Martyn Robertson. The programme continued to spotlight Scottish talent with Glasgow-shot, Amazon studios drama Fear being given a big-screen premiere at GFT, and Edinburgh director Laura Carreira’s debut feature On Falling screening at 10 partnering cinemas across the UK.

    Damon Hill red carpet for Hill

    The celebration of Scottish film on screen extended beyond the film programme into the GFF industry programme that returned for its 10th edition this year. GFF continues to be the major meeting point for the Scottish filmmaking sector, welcoming almost 750 delegates to the festival. The event – at brand new venue The Social Hub Glasgow – hosted the four-day conference that offered panels, 1-2-1 meetings and networking opportunities for delegates at all stages of their screen careers. 

    GFF25 Industry Focus saw Kaljeven Lally (writer), Isabella Bassett (producer) and Jena Hunter’s (producer) Responsibility win the inaugural Funny Features Industry Audience Award. The feature follows Sanjeev who quickly becomes suspect-number-one in a bizarre murder case and the target of two opposing crime families, the police, and not to mention… his parents. Industry Focus’ newest talent lab gave participants access to one-to-one consultancy sessions, workshops and bespoke mentoring to support the development of their projects.

    This year also brought the sophomore year of the Animatic Talent Development scheme to facilitate the development of Scottish creatives’ animated features, TV series and short film ideas. This saw three award winners and a special mention at The Animatic Live Pitch. The winner for Best TV/Feature Pitch was animated Scottish folk mystery Lochs & Legends by Abi Lamb and the award for Best Short Pitch went to To Myself and the Forest of Tigers by Sammi Duong. Overlords, an animated adult comedy series from Hannah Kelso was also presented with the inaugural Animatic Industry Audience Award. Finally, a special mention was awarded to The Three Graces by Wilma Smith.

    Glasgow Film Festival 2025
    © Eoin Carey

    The festival’s free programme of events this year included its daily free morning retrospective screenings, which welcomed hundreds of movie-goers each day to enjoy classics like Gregory’s Girl, Lady Bird and Boyz n the Hood on the big screen. GFF also worked with communities around the city to co-create a Community Takeover Day at Garnethill Multicultural Centre, which featured a free screening of Ukrainian sci-fi drama U Are The Universe, plus food and activities for all ages. This event was made possible with the help of the Glasgow 850 Festival Fund, as was the Festival’s Young Ambassador programme, a GFF initiative for 18-25 year old’s to learn more about the festival and stage their own pop-up cinema event.

    Bringing cinematic gems and the talent behind them to Glasgow is what the festival does best, as was the case with the sell-out showing of the classic Australian film Muriel’s Wedding, where Toni Collette surprised the audience to join a GFF / ABBA lip sync. The Australian star said, “It really amazes me that an experience that changed my life profoundly still resonates with people and means so much to people and continues to inspire people so thank you for having her [Muriel] here tonight. I’m quite moved.”

    GFF welcomed a multitude of famous faces onto the red-carpet including Jessica Lange, James McAvoy, Tim Roth, Ed Harris, George Mackay and Martin Compston. The festival also marked its final year under GFF director Allison Gardner, who retires from Glasgow Film in October. 

    Spilt Milk Glasgow Film Festival 2025
    © Eoin Carey

    Isabel Davis, Executive Director of Screen Scotland, said: “Screen Scotland is proud to be the major backer of Glasgow Film Festival, which has outdone itself once again with a powerful programme of films and events.   Emblematic of the power of cinema to inspire and assemble people, the programme and guest speakers have drawn a fantastic response from the public.  Meanwhile, the industry programme has taken another leap forward, convening local and international industry like never before, sparking industry conversations and myriad new connections across the week.

    “This festival also marks the final edition under the leadership of Allison Gardner, whose passion, vision, and dedication have been central to shaping GFF into the world-class event it is today. We thank her for everything she has done for film in Scotland and beyond, and wish her all the very best for the future.”

    This year’s Audience Award was won by Brian Durnin’s Spilt Milk. 

    Glasgow Film Festival will return for its 22nd edition in 2026 with the full programme revealed in January. Festival dates will be announced soon. A selection of films from GFF25 will screen at the GFT throughout 2025 with On Falling, The End, and Just Another Girl on the IRT screening this month. 

    You can find all of the Moviescramble GFF25 coverage here.

    Mary Munoz
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