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  • 50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee 2025

    50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee 2025


    Almost everything in film is subjective, but with our annual list of 50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee, we try to be as objective as can be.

    It is largely about numbers: How many submissions does a festival receive? How much money, if any, does the festival pay in travel costs? How much does it offer in prizes? How many distributors, other industry representatives, and news outlets attend? 

    It’s also about specifics: Who are those distributors? Is the festival Oscar qualifying? Does it offer a screenwriting competition? Great panels? Interesting guests? Rides to the airport? Food?

    We’re especially interested in ratios: We think a moviemaker’s best ROI will be found at a high-quality festival with an inviting submission-to-acceptance ratio, where you’ll have a good chance of getting in and meeting people who can help you — not at a loud party, screaming over a VIP rope line you’re not allowed to cross, but in pleasant settings where you can enjoy real human moments. 

    So we love hidden gems, and festivals that not only look great on paper, but show heart in person.

    Each year, we prepare our list of 50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee through questionnaires submitted by festivals, fact-checking with filmmakers who attend them, and, as often as possible, our own visits. We don’t bother including the biggest festivals on this list, because if you’re savvy enough to read MovieMaker, you’re probably also familiar with Berlinale, Cannes, Sundance, SXSW, Toronto, Tribeca and Venice. 

    We’ve also skipped a number of very prestigious festivals that receive so many submissions — and accept so few — that they’re real longshots. As always, festivals that are Academy Awards qualifying in at least one category have an “A” next to their name, and those with screenwriting competitions have an “S.” And like we always say, not every festival on this list will be perfect for everyone, but we’re sure at least one will be perfect for you. 

    So with that, here’s our list of…

    50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee 2025

    50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee 2025
    Denzel Washington at the American Black Film Festival. Photo by Bobbi Broome /ABFF

    AMERICAN BLACK FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Miami Beach, Florida / June 11-15 / abff.com

    A perennial on this list, ABFF is one of the most respected festivals focused on Black artists, and has drawn a who’s who of A-list attendees including Issa Rae (the 2024 festival’s creative director), Halle Berry, Ryan Coogler, Kevin Hart, Will Packer, Anthony Anderson and many more. This year’s event will include Nia Long and Larenz Tate, who will reminisce about Love Jones, which premiered in 1997, the year founder Jeff Friday launched the festival. ABFF draws 5,000 visitors annually and has received backing from Warner Bros. Discovery, NBCUniversal, Sony, and many more. Some filmmakers’ travel costs are covered through the HBO Short Film Award Competition and the Black & Unlimited Fatherhood Project Director’s Showcase, and the latter includes a $10,000 cash prize, the largest prize offered at the festival. Many distributors have been known to attend, including from Warner Bros, HBO, TV One, Starz, Onyx Collective and Netflix. 

    AMERICAN DOCUMENTARY AND ANIMATION FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Palm Springs, California / March and/or April 2026 / amdocfilmfest.com

    AmDocs draws some heavy hitters — Sean Penn’s Ukraine documentary Superpower was among the films in 2024 — but it has an inviting submission-to-admission ratio that makes it an especially appealing option for filmmakers who can easily make the 90-minute trip from Los Angeles to Palm Springs. The fest works with filmmakers on travel, offering discounted rooms or participation in its popular Homestay Host Program. It also notes that while a significant number of industry representatives attend, they tend to prefer to keep low profiles and discretely seek out filmmakers who capture their interest. Jockeying is generally discouraged: The festival emphasizes that every film is different, and that moviemakers should support each other by turning out for one another’s films, rather than seeing them as competition. That said, there is a Film Fund Pitch Competition that has helped filmmakers with both financial support and access to industry decision makers: Past AmDocs films have gone on to get industry representation from entities including HBO, Showtime, MTV Films and PBS.

    ATLANTA FILM FESTIVAL (A, S)

    Atlanta, Georgia / April-May 2026 / atlantafilmfestival.com

    The festival, which just celebrated its 49th year, is another regular on this list thanks in large part to its Oscar qualifying status, screenwriting competition, and generous hospitality, which includes covering airfare and lodging for moviemakers with feature films in competition and a travel stipend for other films. Distributors in attendance have included Oscilloscope Laboratories, A24 and Tubi. Additional industry representation has included 3 Arts Entertainment, Big Picture Casting, Rose Locke Casting, Vanishing Angle, Seed & Spark, Buffalo 8 and more. It is known for promoting Southern talent, and especially women and people of color, as well as for adventurous programming, including the dialogue-free Finnish feature Giant’s Kettle, which played the latest edition.The festival also hosts parties galore. 

    AUSTIN FILM FESTIVAL (A, S)

    Austin, Texas / October 23-30 / austinfilmfestival.com

    Especially popular with writers, AFF manages to be packed with events and laid-back at the same time. You’ll meet people at parties, waiting in line for tacos, and walking down the street. Guests this year will include indie icon Christine Vachon, who will receive the Polly Platt Award for Producing, and Living Single creator Yvette Lee Bowser, recipient of the Outstanding Television Writer Award. The films are always top-notch, and placing high in AFF’s screenwriting competition will likely get you the attention of agents and managers. The festival has a challenging submission to acceptance ratio, but getting in means being in the presence of a bevy of distributors and sales agents, including Netflix, Magnolia Pictures, The Coven, Vertical Entertainment and Cinetic Media. The festival also offers airfare and lodging reimbursements of up to $1,000 to the winning films in each category. Adding to the hospitality, each accepted film is assigned a local filmmaker liaison who can help with transportation, screenings, panels, parties, and introducing you to local flavor. 

    BLACKSTAR FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania / July 31-August 3 / blackstarfest.org

    Blackstar describes itself as a “care-centered festival exclusively for Black, Brown, and Indigenous filmmakers globally, that is focused on liberation — not just representation.” It stands out for how many things it does right, including helping with travel costs for filmmakers and offering screening fees — $600 for features and $300 for shorts. Distributors known to attend include NEON, AmDOC/POV, Comcast/Xfinity, NBCUniversal, The New York Times and Netflix, and it is known for some of the best parties and panels around, as well a huge prize package for the BlackStar Pitch for non-fiction short films: the winner gets $75,000, and the runner-up $25,000. It also has a not-impossible ratio of submissions to accepted films.

    BUSAN INTERNATIONAL SHORT FILM FESTIVAL (A, S)

    Busan, South Korea / 2026 / bisff.org/eng

    This festival, established in 1980, just wrapped its latest edition — so you have plenty of time to apply for next year. If you can make your way to South Korea’s second-largest city — known for beautiful beaches, bustling markets and serene temples — the festival helps with three nights of lodging for invited filmmakers. It welcomes distributors from across South Korea, and past guests have included representatives of Blackmagic Design, the Korean Film Council, and more. Films come from all over the world, including Italy’s “The Birthday Party,” by Francesco Sossai, which earned Academy Award qualification last year by winning the Grand Prix in International Competition. Other 2024 highlights included a talk by Emmy-nominated director Vanessa Crocini, who also served as a jury member. With filmmakers’ permission, their films continue to be shown long after the festival ends: Following the main festival in April, BISFF organizes screenings in Busan and other South Korean cities. The 2025 edition of the festival was just starting as we went to press, and has ended by the time you read this.

    50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee 2025 Calgary
    Lining up at the Calgary International Film Festival. Photo courtesy of Calgary International Film Festival

    CALGARY INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Calgary, Alberta, Canada / September 18-28 / ciffcalgary.ca

    Calgary is one of the fastest-rising film hubs in the world — it just cracked the top five big cities on our annual list of the Best Places to Live and Work as a Moviemaker — and the festival reflects its growing importance. The programmers’ excellent taste includes programming the world premiere of the comedy Micro Budget, a story of disastrous DIY moviemaking that anyone in film will enjoy. The festival helps with travel costs for many filmmakers, and gets good press turnout, as well as industry attention from entities including the National Film Board of Canada and Raven Banner Entertainment. Its Industry Week panels have included insights into casting, approaching actors for indie films, punching up scripts, and rolling with industry ups and downs. The festival also hands out around $30,000 in prize money each year.

    50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee 2025 Chilliwack
    The Chilliwack Independent Film Festival awards ceremony. Photo courtesy of Chilliwack Independent Film Festival

    CHILLIWACK INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL 

    Chilliwack, British Columbia, Canada / November 19-23 / ciff.ca

    Chilliwack, a largely agricultural community of roughly 100,000 people that’s about a two-hour drive from Vancouver, is surrounded by stunning rivers, meditative hiking trails and snowcapped mountain peaks, which means you can start your day with nature and then get down to the business (and pleasure) of film. Last year, for example, director Lawrence Jacomelli went out to watch eagles snatch salmon from a stream in the hours before Chilliwack world-premiered his grindhouse homage Blood Star. Last year’s event also included a screening of Longlegs, shot in Vancouver, and two very substantive talks with its director, Osgood Perkins, who explained how he shot the film and The Monkey in the region. Chilliwack thrives at highlighting the adventurous work of local and Canadian filmmakers — Jerome Yoo’s Mongrels, shot near Chilliwack, won 2024’s Best Feature Film award, and Matthew Rankin’s French and Persian Universal Language, Canada’s latest Oscar submission for the Best International Feature Film Oscar, won Chilliwack’s Best of Fest award. The fest also cares deeply about the next generation of indie film: It gave the Best Fraser Valley Film award to “Rat King,” made by students at Chilliwack’s GW Graham Secondary. The festival has many intimate, unpretentious parties and panels where you can meet industry representatives. Those who attended last year included representatives from Elevation Pictures, Raven Banner Entertainment and The Coven, one of the companies behind Terrifier 3. Chilliwack is a fast-growing place and fast-growing festival with an inviting submission-to-admission ratio. 

    CINEQUEST (A, S)

    San Jose and Mountain View, California / March 2026 / cinequest.org

    This Silicon Valley festival is dedicated to using technology to boost filmmaking, distribution and exhibition, but has a very human touch: Cinequest vows to treat every filmmaker like a star, and it’s a true discovery festival that offers an inviting admission-to-submission ratio and programs roughly 90 percent of its films from submissions. Distributors in attendance, always seeking the next new thing, have included A24, IFC, HBO, Roadside Attractions, Magnolia, Netflix, Oscilloscope and more. Other industry attendees include producers, managers and sales agents, and the hospitality package offers hotel deals, food and drink, lounges, and more. The fest also offers transportation allowances on a case-by-case basis. Even the biggest skeptics of technology will benefit from learning more about it, and Cinequest obliges with panels on subjects like AI and creativity, as well as traditional talks about storytelling and producing. 

    CLEVELAND INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Cleveland, Ohio / April 9-18, 2026 / clevelandfilm.org

    Known for crowd pleasers and huge prize packages — it hands out 35 awards totaling more than $130,000 — Cleveland draws a wide array of terrific films to the sprawling and historic Playhouse Square. In addition to programming films, it pairs them with local nonprofits to encourage robust discussions about their subject matter. Representatives of Cleveland’s own Gravitas Ventures are known to attend, as are industry representatives from AMC Networks, ESPN, and more. It offers travel stipends for both features and shorts, and this year’s smart programming included Wendy Lobel’s feature documentary Anxiety Club, about comedians dealing with anxiety, and Cincinnati filmmaker Maureen McEly’s “Golden Hour,” a tightly devastating five-minute short about loss and digital exploitation. Cleveland also offers a reasonable submission-to-admission ratio, so a great film has a good chance of getting in. Its latest edition wrapped in April.

    CORONADO ISLAND FILM FESTIVAL (S)

    Coronado, California / November 5-9 / coronadofilmfest.com

    Hollywood’s love affair with Coronado Island goes back more than a century, when the Hotel del Coronado, the festival’s presenting sponsor, began establishing itself as a playground for movie stars — among the guests over the years were Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin, Clark Gable, Mae West, Katharine Hepburn and many more. Each year the festival basks in that history while looking to the future. It has a very inviting submission-to-acceptance ratio, generously puts up invited filmmakers, and provides prizes ranging from $500-5,000. Last year’s honorees included biopic masters Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski, who received the Screenwriting Award at the Leonard Maltin Industry Tribute Gala that is hosted within the festival, and Jane Seymour, who recalled her journey from chorus girl to superstar as she accepted the Legacy Award. Screenings include Oscar contenders as well as inspired and idiosyncratic docs, many of which nod to the San Diego area’s strong ties to the military and veterans. Distributors known to attend have included Searchlight Pictures, A24, Amazon Studios and Tangled Bank Studios.

    CUCALORUS FILM FESTIVAL

    Wilmington, North Carolina / November 19 -23 / cucalorus.org

    Cucalorus is not a festival where you’ll be wined and dined by distributors, handed prize money, or granted Oscar eligibility. But because all those things are off the table, you might get something more valuable: friendships that can turn into partnerships that can result in art for the sake of art. And great art — once you stop worrying about rewards — often, ironically, brings rewards. We can also promise you’ll take home priceless recipes for cheese grits and fried cornbread, a renewed sense of worth, and memories of laughing very hard while at the festival’s beloved venue, the community theater Jengo’s Playhouse. Chief instigating officer Dan Brawley will make sure everyone has fun watching weird, daring, inspiring films, paired with music and comedy and performance art pieces. And you can pay tribute to the late, great David Lynch by checking out the local locations for Blue Velvet, one of many masterful movies shot in Wilmington.

    DENVER FILM FESTIVAL

    Denver, Colorado / October 31 – November 9 / denverfilm.org

    Known for hospitality — including generous help with transportation and accommodations — Denver draws an impressive guest list which last year included The Bear co-showrunner Joanna Calo and media outlets including Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, Vanity Fair and more. Distributors in attendance included Vertical Entertainment, and the awards-season lineup included September 5, The Brutalist and Nickel Boys. The festival is also generous with cash prizes: its Music on Film-Film on Music Documentary Grant Program, for example, provides $20,000 annually in finishing funds for U.S.-based documentaries, specifically for licensing, scoring, and composition. Last year’s event included acting workshops, live podcast recordings, and private dinners for select filmmakers. The submission-to-admission ratio is fairly welcoming.

    50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee 2025 El Dorado
    “Three Sessions” filmmaker Erica Michelle Singleton (center)speaks at an El Dorado Film Festival Q&A. Photo courtesy of El Dorado Film Festival

    EL DORADO FILM FESTIVAL

    El Dorado, Arkansas / Feb 25 – March 1, 2026 / eldofilmfest.com

    El Dorado is named for a lost city of gold — perfect for a festival where hidden treasures abound. A brand-new addition to our list, El Dorado is a former oil-boom town of less than 20,000, located between Little Rock (120 miles north) and Shreveport (95 miles southwest.) You could easily overlook it. But just off the main commercial drag is the South Arkansas Arts Center, the elegant home of the El Dorado Film Festival, and just a few minutes away is a revitalized, elegant downtown filled with history. On our trip to the latest edition of the festival, we found ourselves captivated, again and again: by a 40th anniversary screening of the horror classic Fright Night, featuring a Q&A with star (and El Dorado native) William Ragsdale; by daring, thoughtful films by University of Central Arkansas filmmakers; and most of all by an entrancing walking tour by raconteur and South Arkansas Historical Preservation Society curator Darrin Riley, which featured the secret histories of Gone With the Wind and True Grit, which was based on the novel by El Dorado native Charles Portis. The tour ended with a treasure trove of Hollywood memorabilia that a local resident collected over the decades without anyone knowing. This is the kind of small, intimate festival where you see a producer on the rise pull a student filmmaker aside to talk to him for an hour. We also got inside tips on financing and distribution from Vanishing Angle vice president Ben Wiessner, and feasted on snacks from a friendly local, Delaine Gates, who later turned out to have been the drama teacher for multiple filmmakers in attendance, including festival executive director Alexander Jeffery. The movie lovers of small-town America deserve more events like this. And we haven’t even told you about the secret speakeasy hidden in a comic-book store.

    EL PASO FILM FESTIVAL

    El Paso, Texas / September 25-27 / elpasofilmfestival.org

    Three days of fun, smart, spirited films in a borderland city packed with the stories of three cultures: Texas, Mexico, and the fascinating places where they intersect. But that may be underselling it: El Paso also has a close rapport with nearby Las Cruces, New Mexico, another fast-rising film hub. This is still a smaller, intimate festival with a very favorable submission-to-admission ratio, so a great movie has a great chance of being accepted. Those who get in will find themselves quickly embraced by a film scene that emphasizes cheering everyone on and raising all boats. It assists filmmakers with airfare, lodging and local transportation, as well as very good food. Festival founder and artistic director Carlos F. Corral — himself a local filmmaker — keeps the good feelings going, sometimes surprising filmmakers onstage with awards during their Q&As. It’s also known for cut-to-the-chase workshops and panels presented by the El Paso Film & Creative Industries Commission at Visit El Paso. Recent films to screen at the fest include the festival darlings Breakup Season by H. Nelson Tracey and “Heart of Texas” by Gregory J.M. Kasunich. 

    50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee 2025 Evolution Mallorca
    Evolution Mallorca International Film Festival founder Sandra Lipski. Courtesy of EMIFF

    EVOLUTION MALLORCA INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL (S)

    Palma de Mallorca, Spain / October 21-29 / evolutionfilmfestival.com

    EMIFF draws fabulous guests, is set in one of the most beautiful locations in the world, and has an attractive submission-to-acceptance ratio. What’s not to like? Guests to this paradisiacal event on the shimmering Balearic islands capital of Palma are drawn to unforgettable vistas and event venues, and also to its theme of “bridging cultures — bridging people.” Festival founder Sandra Lipski, who has ties to Los Angeles, Spain and her native Germany, both embodies and evangelizes the idea that film can connect people to bring about important changes on a global scale. The festival fulfills that idea with in-depth talks on subjects like how to shoot films sustainably. It has welcomed distributors including Magnolia Pictures, IFC Films, Roadside Attractions and A24, and past award honorees have included Mads Mikkelsen and Ana de Armas. The festival is generous in helping toward travel costs and with prizes, handing out nearly $30,000 in in-kind grants from Mallorca’s production and equipment rental house Palma Pictures. It’s a regular on this list for reasons that go well beyond its gorgeous setting.

    Moviemakers Mike Flanagan, left, and Chris Stuckmann at Fantasia. Photo by Julie Delisle, courtesy of Fantasia.

    FANTASIA FILM FESTIVAL

    Montreal, Quebec, Canada / July 17 – August 3 / fantasiafestival.com

    Spanning two weeks, Fantasia is a testament to the power of seeing a film in a theater with an audience. Some of the most daring movies we’ve ever seen — like Alex Phillips’ All Jacked Up and Full of Worms and Scooter McCrae’s shocking Black-Eyed Susan — were in packed Fantasia screenings, where everyone buckled in and committed to bold, cathartic viewing experiences. The Fantasia audience, known for meowing when the lights go down, is one of the most sophisticated on the planet, knowingly laughing at every subverted trope or particularly audacious kill. Founded in 1996, the festival is generous with travel costs, lodging and ground transportation, and has drawn such industry movers and shakers as Arrow Films, Elevation Pictures, IFC, Mongrel Media, Music Box Films, Raven Banner Entertainment, Shudder, Universal Pictures, Vinegar Syndrome, XYZ Films, Yellow Veil and more. Artistic director Mitch Davis is one of the best in the festival world, known to elegantly extrapolate, in English and French, on the history and importance of genre filmmaking. Last year’s event included special book events for Kier-La Janisse’s Cockfight: A Fable of Failure and Heidi Honeycutt’s I Spit on Your Celluloid, as well as a retrospective on the Canadian genre classic Cube with director Vincenzo Natali in attendance, and artist talks with Mike Flanagan and Gary Pullin. The festival also hosts the international co-production market Frontières, which welcomes big, bold pitches. 

    FANTASPOA

    Porto Alegre, Brazil / April 2026 / fantaspoa.com

    Porto Alegre means “joyful harbor,” and Fantaspoa offers just that: a place for filmmakers to party and unwind at a genre-focused festival with an emphasis on audacious films. Last year’s lineup included the world premiere of Michael Pierro’s brutally efficient automation-and-alienation horror movie Self Driver. The festival helps with lodging and local transportation, as well as food and drinks. (In its application for this list, let it be known that it put an exclamation point after the latter.) Festival director Joao Fleck personally selects films for the festival’s press partner to pitch to news outlets.And while the festival makes no promises about industry attendance, distributors-in-the-know do pay attention to its lineup: See page 14 of this magazine, which explains how Ethos Releasing found Neal Dhand’s Dark My Light via Fantaspoa. The festival is also known for seeking long-term friendships, noting that it doesn’t like to program a film and never see the filmmakers again — its goal is to hang with them through long careers. It also offers a quite inviting submission-to-acceptance ratio. 

    50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee Knox
    Film Fest Knox. Courtesy of Film Fest Knox

    FILM FEST KNOX

    Knoxville, Tennessee / November 6-9 / filmfestknox.com

    This is a young festival, only in its third year, but it is making a mark with its emphasis on “showcasing and advocating for personal, ambitious regional cinema,” a pledge placed prominently on its homepage. Film Fest Knox is notably one of the very few festivals that can promise a theatrical run: The winner of the American Regional Cinema Competition plays on big screens to general audiences thanks to the fest’s partners at Regal. The fest offers $18,000 in total prize money, which includes $5,000 to the winner of its Elev8or Pitch competition and smaller prizes  for second and third place. Another welcome attribute is an appealing submission-to-admission ratio, and the fest provides generous help with travel costs. Last year’s attendees included C. Mason Wells, director of distribution for MUBI. Selected films included Tracie Laymon’s Bob Trevino Likes It and Yen Tan’s All That We Love

    FILMQUEST (S)

    Provo, Utah / October 23-November 1 / filmquestfest.com

    What if an ’80s slumber party were a film festival? That’s our best description of FilmQuest, where an almost all-filmmaker audience gathers in a wholesome, clean-living Utah mountain town to watch some of the most wonderfully depraved movies ever made. People who meet at the fest one year have been known to return the next as collaborators. But the best part of FilmQuest is watching long late-night shorts blocks, where your brain melts into the insanity of one shocking film after another. It’s a mind-bending, cult-like experience, and a total joy. Festival founder Jonathan Martin is the charisma machine who holds it all together, making everyone feel like an honored guest and instant friend. Also, we never visit Provo without eating the delicious, creative ice cream at Rockwell, down the street from Velour, the festival’s screening venue. 

    FULL FRAME DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Durham, North Carolina / April 2026 / fullframefest.org

    One of the world’s most respected documentary film festivals, Full Frame is known for excellent curation and making filmmakers feel appreciated even before they arrive. In addition to offering hotel accommodations and screening fees, it assists with travel planning so documentarians can focus entirely on the festival experience. Thanks to Full Frame’s hospitality, roughly 60% of the films at the fest have a filmmaker present for a post-screening Q&A. It also offers several awards that each include a cash prize of $5,000. Distributors in attendance have included ESPN, Netflix, HBO, Working Films and more. Oscar-nominated Nickel Boys filmmaker RaMell Ross was among recent jurors. The festival isn’t easy to get into, but those who are accepted can expect a very welcoming experience among fellow filmmakers at the top of their craft. 

    GALWAY FILM FLEADH (A, S)

    Galway, Ireland / July 8-13 / galwayfilmfleadh.com

    Located in an utterly charming city on Ireland’s West Coast, the fleadh (Gaelic for “festival,”) rejects red carpets. Instead it offers dreamy, walkable streets where you’ll bump into filmmakers from all over the globe. Besides inviting screening venues, it provides a relaxed, informal environment for buying and selling films. The Film Fair, which runs parallel to the fleadh, draws a wide range of industry representatives from Shudder, BBC Films, Fís Éireann/Screen Ireland, Lionsgate, RTÉ, Sky Cinema, Studio Canal, MUBI, Netflix, and more. Last year’s screenings included the Irish premiere of Rich Peppiatt’s unconventional music biopic Kneecap, which won three awards, including the Audience Award, and the festival presented its Galway Hooker award to Brian Cox. You can clear your head with walks along the gorgeous unspoiled coastline or the ripping River Corrib.

    Demi Moore arrives. Courtesy of the Hamptons International Film Festival

    HAMPTONS INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL (A, S)

    East Hampton, Southampton and Sag Harbor, New York / October 3-13 / hamptonsfilmfest.org

    HIFF could easily coast on its starry awards-season guest lists — its “In Conversation With…” series has included everyone from Steven Spielberg to Martin Scorsese — or on its storied East End locations. It could also rest on its prize packages, which total more than $100,000, including cash and in-kind goods and services. But as easy as it would be for the festival to kick back and bask in being an awards-season stalwart in a rich people’s playground, it also makes a serious effort to discover and promote new talent. This is a hard festival to get into, but make the cut and you’ll have the chance to gather in a casual, close-knit setting with agents, managers and producers who can help bring your next script to the screen. Distributors in attendance have included A24, Apple, Cinetic, Dark Star, Focus Features, NEON, Netflix, and many more. 

    Interior Chinatown creator Charles Yu and castmembers Ronny Chieng, Chloe Bennet, and Jimmy O. Yang at the Hawai’i International Film Festival. Photo by Sthanlee B. Mirador, courtesy of Hawai’i International Film Festival

    HAWAI’I INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Honolulu, Hawai’i / October 16-30 / hiff.org

    Located in one of the most breathtaking locales of any festival, HIFF offers a one-of-a-kind hospitality and celebration of Asian-Pacific and international film. Unsurprisingly, the festival doesn’t have a hard time attracting great guests: Last year’s included legendary cinematographer Roger Deakins, as well as Hong Kong superstar Sandra Ng and Boba Fett himself, Temuera Morrison. It’s also a big industry draw, attracting distributors like Netflix, Fox Searchlight, Amazon, Well Go USA, Sakka, and Film Movement. Recent jurors have included Chris Kekaniokalani Bright (screenwriter of Lilo & Stitch), and prizes for filmmakers total more than $20,000. HIFF is also known for presenting the NETPAC award, which promotes Asian and Pacific cinema by celebrating exceptional talents. And its submission-to-acceptance ratio is more favorable than you might expect, given the obvious appeal of the location. You’ll want to allow yourself plenty of time for hikes, bikes, kayaks, surfing and rock climbing.

    A screening at Indy Shorts. Courtesy of Heartland Film

    HEARTLAND INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 

    Indianapolis, Indiana / October 9-19 / heartlandfilm.org

    INDY SHORTS (A)

    Indianapolis, Indiana / July 22-27 / heartlandfilm.org/indyshorts 

    The nonprofit arts organization Heartland Film puts on both the feature-focused Heartland in the fall and the shorts-focused Indy Shorts in the summer, and both are among the most friendly festivals you’ll find anywhere on the planet. The organizers, starting with Heartland Film president Michael Ault, take care to welcome everyone and show off the best of Indianapolis — including the sprawling Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields, site of many screenings. The other excellent venues include the Living Room Theaters, one anchor of the thriving Bottleworks District. Heartland has a welcoming submission-to-admission ratio, and while Indy Shorts is tougher to get into, both are well worth the trip, and both festivals are generous in helping with travel. Major distributors to attend have included Netflix, National Geographic Documentary Films, Searchlight Pictures, Lionsgate, Paramount Pictures, IFC Films, NEON, Prime Video and Magnolia Pictures, and both festivals offer generous prize packages: about $60,000 for Heartland, and $35,000 for Indy Shorts. The latter is Oscar qualifying, and Heartland re-showcases the three grand prize-winning films from Indy’s Oscar-qualifying categories: Documentary, Live Action and Animation. Heartland regularly shows award-magnet films — last year’s included Emilia Perez, September 5 and A Real Pain — in addition to DIY standouts. Indy Shorts is known for a mix of crowd pleasers and very adventurous programming, like the Finnish “Bright White Light,” an animated Finnish film documenting near-death experiences. Both Heartland and Indy Shorts are among the very few festivals on not only this list but also our list of the 25 Coolest Festivals in the World.

    HOLLYSHORTS FILM FESTIVAL (A, S)

    Los Angeles, California  / Aug 7-17 / hollyshorts.com

    You want to screen your films for the HollyShorts audience: This is a very strong discovery festival that draws not only distributors — including Netflix, Lionsgate, Short of the Week, Omeleto, ESPN, and more — but also agents from Gersh, CAA and WME. Representatives from Monkeypaw, Vanishing Angle, LB Entertainment and the Easterseals Disability Film Challenge have also attended. And HollyShorts welcomes representatives from several festivals on this list, like NewFilmmakers Los Angeles and the Evolution Mallorca International Film Festival. Jurors have included Rosario Dawson, Rachel Brosnahan, Matthew Modine and David Dastmalchian. And the stunning prize package is valued at more than $175,000, including a $60,000 Panavision camera package and $10,000 in Kodak film stock. Company 3, meanwhile, gives out $80,000 in color correction work. The festival also spawned the short film streaming site BitPix and the festival offshoots HollyShorts Comedy and HollyShorts London. Last year’s films included Victoria Warmerdam’s “I’m Not a Robot,” which went on to win the Oscar for Best Live Action Short Film. The festival, which just celebrated its 20th year, is the real deal in every possible sense.

    HOT SPRINGS DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Hot Springs, Arkansas / October 10-28 / hsdfi.org

    This filmmaker-focused festival offers an intimate, rejuvenating setting near Hot Springs National Park where documentarians can celebrate each other’s work and strategize about the future of documentary filmmaking. It offers a fairly welcoming submission-to-admission ratio, generous help with travel costs, and access to a wide swath of industry representatives, including such distributors as ESPN Films, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and NatGeo Documentaries. Other industry attendees have included the Southern Documentary Fund, Kartemquin and Reel South. Last year’s films included a who’s who of celebrated docs, including No Other Land, winner of the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature. The festival’s Wellness Series invites filmmakers to fully appreciate the beauty of the locale with hiking, yoga, and meditations. 

    JULIEN DUBUQUE INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 

    Dubuque, Iowa / April 2026 / julienfilmfest.com

    Julien Dubuque promises “communication, filmmaker appreciation and respect” to all, epitomizing unpretentious Midwestern hospitality. It’s a budget-friendly, centrally located festival known for free transportation to and from the surrounding airports (including Chicago), bountiful free food, and lodging that includes the highly regarded HomeStay program, in which filmmakers can stay free in locals’ homes. The fest is designed to be walkable and offers free shuttles, and festival executive director Susan Gorrell goes out of her way to be accessible to all. Representatives from LeoMark Studios and Circus Road are among the industry professionals who have attended. The festival also hands out more than $20,000 in prize money, and its panels include daily coffee talks about filmmaking and industry insights, as well as a discussion where filmmakers can hear firsthand from jurors about how they select winning films. Finally, the admission-to-submission ratio is fairly welcoming.

    LOCARNO FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Locarno, Switzerland / August 6-16 / locarnofestival.ch

    This high-prestige festival is selective, yes, but not impossible to get into with a great, bold film — and the benefits of attending are obvious even aside from its stunning location along Lake Maggiore and the Alps. Locarno provides generous assistance with lodging and ground transportation, as well as hundreds of thousands of dollars in prizes. You’ll also be a part of history at this fest, founded in 1946, when you join the 8,000 people who gather each night to watch films on one of Europe’s largest screens on the Piazza Grande. Among the many ways Locarno incubates talent is its Locarno Academy for young people, and it champions the film experience with its Open Doors programs for regions where independent cinema faces its greatest challenges. The festival unsurprisingly has a huge industry presence: Distributors known to attend include MUBI, Bande à Part Films, RTS Radio Télévision Suisse, France 2 Cinéma, StudioCanal, Sony and more. And the press team stands out, offering five press agents covering France, Germany and Austria, Italy, Switzerland and International, for films that don’t have their own publicist. 

    LOS ANGELES ASIAN PACIFIC FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Los Angeles, California / 2026 / vcmedia.org/festival

    Established in 1983 to promote the films, videos, and digital mediaworks of Asian and Pacific Islander artists, the festival just wrapped its 41st edition. It follows core values that include serving as an agent rather than an impediment of change, and prioritizing community building over individual ego inflation. It also emphasizes “R3:NEWAL” — Regeneration, Reciprocity, and Renewal — to help filmmakers connect with and inspire each other. It is generous in assisting with travel costs, and has drawn industry representatives from NBCUniversal and Sony, among others. Recent films have included the world premiere of Nobuko Miyamoto: A Song in Movement, from the Japanese American National Museum and PBS SoCal. The festival has a very encouraging submission-to-acceptance ratio and hands out a bevy of awards, including for emerging filmmakers.

    LOUISIANA FILM PRIZE

    Shreveport, Louisiana / October 15-19 / prizefest.com/film

    Perhaps the most unique of any film festival, this short-film competition requires that all entries be made in Louisiana. They vie for a $25,000 prize that goes up to $50,000 if the film is shot in Caddo Parish, where Shreveport is located, or nearby Bossier Parish. The entrants are whittled down to 20, who attend a weekend of screenings and other events that include street parties, food tastings, live comedy and much more. Though it’s a competition, the feeling is extremely convivial and collaborative — you frequently see the director of one film pitching in to be the cinematographer or cameraperson on a friend/rival’s short. While everyone is hoping for the $50,000 (or $25,000), many smaller prizes are handed out as well. It also welcomes filmmakers at all experience levels, from people who’ve never made a film to people who’ve made many, so it’s an ideal opportunity for those looking to break in. Festival founder and executive director Gregory Kallenberg and director Chris Lyon make everyone feel welcome, even remembering details like your favorite drink. If you aren’t from Shreveport, you’ll go home wishing your town had an event that brings the community together like the Prize. 

    Mammoth Lakes Film Festival attendees. Courtesy of MLFF

    MAMMOTH LAKES FILM FESTIVAL (S)

    Mammoth Lakes, California / May 2026 / mammothlakesfilmfestival.com

    Devoted to finding unique, innovative and personal stories, MLFF packs screenings with audiences hungry for risky films, especially from previously overlooked filmmakers. Its commitment to diversity includes diversity of thought, style, and inspiration, and the festival cares more about heart than pedigree. Festival director Shira Dubrovner and her team create a warm atmosphere that includes trips to the local hot springs. Distributors in attendance have included Greenwich Entertainment and Indican Pictures, and last year’s guests included producer Tim Moore of Clint Eastwood’s Malpaso Productions and Oscar-nominated May December co-writer Alex Mechanik, who took part in a Saturday morning panel and also met with 10 screenplay competition finalists. Festivals can be gateways to other festivals, and that’s very much the case with the highly regarded Mammoth Lakes: programmers from Slamdance, Sundance, and Tribeca all attended last year. The submission-to-admission policy is selective but reasonable, and Mammoth Lakes also offers a total of more than $40,000 in cash and other prizes. The latest edition just wrapped.

    Closing night at the Miami Jewish Film Festival. Photo by Ray Rivero, courtesy of MJFF

    MIAMI JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL

    Miami, Florida / January 15-29, 2026 / miamijewishfilmfestival.org

    Welcoming more than 50,000 film lovers a year — about a third of whom are not Jewish — the festival is a platform for connection and cultural exchange through storytelling. It isn’t the easiest festival to get into, but selected filmmakers receive a standout experience that includes very generous travel packages and the opportunity to explore attractions like Miami Beach and the Wynwood Arts District. Distributors known to attend include Greenwich Films, Menemsha Films, and Briarcliff Entertainment, and the festival notes that three to five films are picked up for distribution from the festival each year. The festival also offers a large prize package totaling more than $60,000, including $18,000 each for the winner of the Grand Jury Prize and Documentary Achievement Award. (The winners should be substantially of Jewish interest and/or produced in Israel.) Another major prize, the Torchbearer Jury Prize, awards $10,000 to a film centered on the Holocaust, and the resilience and fortitude of victims and survivors. 

    MONTCLAIR FILM FESTIVAL

    Montclair, New Jersey / October 17-26 / montclairfilm.org

    Montclair, an affluent bedroom community for many who commute to Manhattan, has one of the most receptive audiences of any festival: It is filled with industry and media veterans who have seen it all and are up for challenging material — and reap the emotional and intellectual rewards of engaging with it. The festival’s reputation for stellar programming and proximity to NYC helps it draw a large industry presence, including such distributors as Netflix, A24, Focus Features, NEON, Lionsgate, and more. It also draws a large media turnout and packs its juries with journalists from the likes of EW, The Associated Press, and Rolling Stone. Attendees look forward to thoughtful filmmaker Q&As, some of which are led by Stephen Colbert, whose wife, Evelyn McGee Colbert, is president of the board of Montclair Film. The festival’s devotion to uplifting new talent includes giving the $5,000 Mark Urman Award For Fiction Filmmaking to an early-career filmmaker. 

    NASHVILLE FILM FESTIVAL (A, S)

    Nashville, Tennessee / September 18-24 / nashvillefilmfestival.org

    Nashville is now not just a music but film-and-TV industry town, which is reflected in the turnout for this highly respected, fairly selective festival: In addition to distributors like Oscilloscope and Paramount+, it has been known to draw production companies like Monarch Media and Riverside Entertainment, as well as agents from UTA and news outlets including USA Today. It helps narrative and documentary feature filmmakers with a $500 travel stipend for airfare and local transport, while covering their lodging. The fest’s Creators Conference includes a mix of locals and Hollywood visitors for panels on subjects like indie film success and film and TV music — this is Music City, after all. Another highlight is the Pitch Competition, in which 10 finalists pitch their ideas for feature films or shows to industry representatives. One recent festival success story is Tracie Laymon, whose screenplay Bob Trevino Likes It was a finalist in the 2022 Screenwriting Competition and became a film that debuted at SXSW last year, kicking off a long festival run that included Nashville before the film’s theatrical release in March. Laymon returned to Nashville last year as a Pitch Competition juror, sharing her experiences and expertise. The festival also offers cash prizes that include at least $2,000 for the winners of the Narrative, Documentary, Music Documentary and New Directors Feature categories.

    A Nevada City Film Festival screening. Courtesy of Nevada City Film Festival

    NEVADA CITY FILM FESTIVAL (S)

    Nevada City, California / June 20-22 / nevadacityfilmfestival.com

    Located in the gorgeous and bewitching Sierra Nevada foothills, this festival works tirelessly to cultivate and promote rising and mid-career filmmakers, with a special emphasis on discovering and sharing bold short films. Like many of our favorite festivals in beautiful locales, it offers the chance to simultaneously boost your work and relax and reflect in thought-clearing, restorative environs — the town offers a storybook blend of Victorian architecture, Gold Rush history, and abundant trees. The strong support for moviemakers includes screening fees, splitting online revenue, lodging, good food, and travel stipends, and the career-enhancement opportunities include workshops that have, in past editions of the festival, covered subjects from documentary ethics to horror and sci-fi filmmaking to the roles of producers, music supervisors, editors, distributors and more. Every award includes money, totaling $10,000. But the best part of the festival may just be meeting fellow artists and film lovers under the maples, elms and dogwoods. 

    NEWFILMMAKERS LOS ANGELES

    Los Angeles, California / Monthly / newfilmmakersla.com

    We can promise that filmmakers will get media coverage from this festival — because we’re among the outlets that provide it. Every month we feature interviews with NFMLA filmmakers on moviemaker.com, where they go in-depth on their inspirations and approaches to storytelling. Unlike the other festivals on this list, NFMLA holds events monthly, often focusing on a different slate of underrepresented filmmakers. Examples include the InFocus: Middle Eastern & Arab Cinema Program, InFocus: Indigenous Cinema, and Indigenous: Veteran Cinema Program. Co-founder and executive director Larry Laboe makes everyone know they’re appreciated and welcomed, and the joys of playing NFMLA include screening at a 500-seat theater, pre- and post-screening receptions, and industry meetings for those whose films are official selections. Distributors known to attend include A24, Amazon, Kino Lorber, Lionsgate, NBCUniversal, Netflix, Warner Bros. Discovery, 20th Century Studios, Max, Paramount and more. 

    NEW HAMPSHIRE FILM FESTIVAL (A, S)

    Portsmouth, New Hampshire / October 16-19 / nhfilmfestival.com

    Leave extra room in your luggage if you think you might win something: The Granite State festival hands out 20-pound-plus engraved and polished granite bricks as awards. That’s one of many distinctive traits of this festival, held during one of New England’s prettiest times of the year, when the leaves are exploding with color. The winner of the Grand Jury Narrative Award receives a private industry meeting with Oscilloscope Laboratories, one of many distributors known to attend. Others include Metrograph Pictures, Factory 25, A24, MUBI, Music Box Films, Roadside Attractions and more. As part of its commitment to growth, the festival recently merged into The Music Hall, a non-profit arts institution that has been a festival partner since 2004.It offers a reasonably inviting submission-to-admission ratio, and works with filmmakers to assist with travel when possible, including by offering luxury coach travel for some New York City-based filmmakers.

    NEW ORLEANS FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    New Orleans, Louisiana / October 23-28 / neworleansfilmfestival.org

    NOFF’s passion is to nurture Southern filmmakers and amplify their voices around the world, and it does that not just by showcasing films, but providing grants and funding. Its key initiatives include South Pitch, the Emerging Voices Directors Lab, and the Southern Producers Lab, all of which provide chances for regional filmmakers to tell their stories. The festival also welcomes key representatives in funding and grant programs, including the Catapult Film Fund, Tribeca Studios, and Sundance Institute, and evangelizes about talented filmmakers to other festivals including BlackStar, Tribeca, DOCNYC, Cleveland, Atlanta, Maryland, SFFilm, and Provincetown. (Yes, festival people talk to each other.) The festival also facilitates meetings between artists and industry representatives to create career launchpads. Distributors in attendance have represented entities including Searchlight Pictures, NBCUniversal, Black Public Media, POV/American Documentary, and MSNBC Films. Additionally, last year the festival offered more than $50,000 in prizes, including $10,000 each to winning documentary and narrative pitches. The festival also provided camera rental packages in partnership with Panavision, Light Iron, and Keslow Camera. It offers help with travel costs, keeps things as walkable as possible, and pays screening fees of $125 to $250. It’s not an easy festival to get into, but those that do can expect strong support. Last year’s films included A King Like Me, Matthew Henderson’s look at New Orleans’ Zulu Club, the nation’s oldest Black Mardi Gras krewe, and the world premiere of Zac Manuel’s Ghetto Children, a celebration Southern rap culture, as well as RaMell Ross’ Oscar-nominated Nickel Boys and Edward Berger’s Oscar-winning Conclave.

    The one and only Nicolas Cage at the Newport Beach Film Festival. Photo by Travis Garcia, courtesy of NBFF 

    NEWPORT BEACH FILM FESTIVAL 

    Newport Beach, California / October 16-23 / newportbeachfilmfest.com

    Say yes to everything if you get into this award-season festival, which celebrated its 25th anniversary last year and provides a glamorous, fashion-focused escape from the frenetic pace of nearby Los Angeles. You’ll see A-listers feted at spectacular settings like the Pelican Hill Resort, which hosted a sunset Q&A with Ewan McGregor for the festival’s latest edition, and attend unforgettable events like a yacht party or open-to-everyone retrospective between Carol Burnett and designer Bob Mackie, held at the Fashion Island shopping mecca. The long-list of celebrity honorees last year included Nicholas Cage, Colman Domingo, Margaret Qualley, Christoph Waltz, Terry Crews and Peter Saarsgard, who followed up an incisive Q&A by introducing his gripping journalism drama September 5. But in addition to seeing many stars, you’ll also find programming gems like last year’s short film “Reunion,” Zainab Jah and Timothy Naylor’s complex story of a West African immigrant meeting the former child soldier who destroyed her family. The festival has an appealing submission-to-acceptance ratio and offers very discounted hotel and transportation options. Co-founder and CEO Gregg Schwenk does a lovely job of making sure everyone feels comfortable and welcome, paying close attention to details. Screenings are packed with audiences known for thoughtful, engaged questions, and the many parties include exceptional food from local restaurants. 

    OUT ON FILM (A, S) 

    Atlanta, Georgia / September 26-October 6 / outonfilm.org

    The festival just held its first Queer Film Summit, featuring four days of panels and workshops on artistry, yes, but also on the cold realities of getting your movie made. It offered detailed discussions on fundraising, contracts, and marketing, among other crucial details. The festival also offers expansive Q&As, featuring as many representatives of a film as possible, and is generous with travel assistance. Out on Film also gives any filmmaker who can’t attend the chance to tape a Zoom Q&A that promotes their screening and stays up on the festival’s YouTube channel. Not only Oscar but also BAFTA qualifying, the festival strives to make all guests feel recognized and appreciated from the moment they arrive. It also offers an attractive submission-to-acceptance ratio. Last year’s lineup included director Andrea James’ Becoming a Man in 127 Easy Steps, based on the one-man show by Scott Turner Schofield, and Didi Paulini’s Transcendence

    Colman Domingo at the Provincetown International Film Festival. Photo by Mae Gammino, courtesy of PIFF

    PROVINCETOWN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Provincetown, Massachusetts / June 11-15 / provincetownfilm.org

    Years ago we praised PIFF for “exquisite taste in an exquisite place,” and we honestly can’t improve on that. Cape Cod’s Provincetown, aka PTown, is an LGBTQ+ and arts capital known for elegantly preserved homes, excellent food, and fascinating history — it’s where the pilgrims first landed. It’s also home to a thriving, well-curated film festival blessed with John Waters as its patron saint. He’s known for campy and magnificent fundraisers. It has attracted distributors including HBO, Warner Bros. Discovery, Magnolia Pictures, and Strand Releasing, and last year’s award recipients included Colman Domingo, Joel Kim Booster and Andrew Haigh. Attendees have included Eugene Hernandez, director of the Sundance Film Festival, and manager and producer Adam Kersh, whose clients include Sean Baker. We’ve had some of our favorite film experiences in PTown, including watching B-movies at a drive-in event hosted by Waters. The festival is particular about what films it selects, which results in a slate of challenging films without a dull one in the bunch. 

    SALUTE YOUR SHORTS

    Los Angeles, California / August 15-17 / saluteyourshortsfest.com

    If you’re wondering what Salute Your Shorts looks for in submissions, you can read a thoughtfully detailed piece from festival co-founder and artistic director Erin Brown Thomas on page 18. Many festivals embrace the idea that festivals are like going to camp, but Salute Your Shorts takes that idea further than most: Brown Thomas even invites filmmakers to bonfires at her home. (And of course the fest shares a name with an early ‘90s summer camp-focused Nickelodeon series.) The intimate-getaway feel extends to screenings: They’re held on one screen, in one building, with one courtyard, on one weekend. Attendees are offered catered food between showings to encourage them to stick around. As much fun as the festival has, it’s very serious about craft, offering talks with such indie film inspirations as Mark Duplass, the Vanishing Angel team, and Oscar-winning duo The Daniels. Refreshingly, the focus is on creativity, not how to break into the industry. Past jurors have included Tony Hale and Lego franchise producer Dan Lin, chairman of Netflix Films. Agents and managers also make low-key visits to search for new talent, and an Oscar-qualifying theatrical run is among the prizes. Notably, the fest is led entirely by filmmakers.

    50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee Santa Fe
    (L-R) Tait Fletcher, Cassidy Freeman and Yolonda Ross in a Santa Fe International Film Festival panel on acting. Photo by Sasha Ewing, courtesy of SFIFF

    SANTA FE INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Santa Fe, New Mexico / October 15-19 / santafe.film

    Located in the No. 1 smaller city on our 2025 list of the Best Places to Live and Work as a Moviemaker, SFIFF highlights both the best of its fast-rising film community and the best of cinema worldwide. Visit the festival, which earned Oscar-qualifying status last year, and you may seriously consider a move to New Mexico, drawn by the laid-back Southwestern chic of its parties and the artistic passion of the many ex-Angelenos and New Yorkers who move to the Land of Enchantment to live out DIY dreams. (They can pay the bills working for companies like Netflix, NBCU, and AMC, all of which have a substantial local presence.) It’s not surprising that the festival draws agents, managers, and distributors — last year’s Distribution Panel included representatives from Magnolia, Utopia Distribution and Oscilloscope. The prize packages are vast and include a $90,000 prize package from Panavision and Light Iron for the Best Narrative Feature winner. You’ll screen daring films in venues like the modern Violet Crown and the classically styled, George R.R. Martin-owned Jean Cocteau Cinema and Coffee House. (Martin also co-owns the Sky Railway, located near the two theaters and featured in Oppenheimer.) The festival is generous with travel assistance, and we suggest taking some side trips: You won’t have to travel far to see locations for productions like Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul, AMC’s Dark Winds and the upcoming Young Guns 3: Dead or Alive. Last year’s honorees included Breaking Bad star Bryan Cranston. Santa Fe is a town where everyone you meet seems to embrace film, all the way to the top: Highlights of last year’s SFIFF included a party at the sprawling hacienda-influenced Governor’s Mansion. 

    Amy Adams takes a moment with a fan at SCAD. Photo courtesy of SCAD

    SCAD SAVANNAH FILM FESTIVAL

    Savannah, Georgia / October 25-November 1 / filmfest.scad.edu

    This festival run by the Savannah College of Art and Design — one of our Best Film Schools in the U.S. and Canada — draws an astonishing guest list each year of A-listers who turn out to promote their awards-contender films and share practical advice with SCAD students on their way into the industry. Last year’s honorees included Amy Adams, Jerry Bruckheimer, Kevin Costner, Felicity Jones, Richard Linklater, Best Actress Oscar winner Mikey Madison, Best Supporting Actress Oscar winner Zoe Saldaña — and we’re not even halfway through the list. The festival hosts packed screenings in elegant venues like the 1,100-seat Trustees Theater, and guests shouldn’t miss the chance to tour SCAD’s massive Hollywood-style backlot. The prizes include $10,000 to the juried winner and $5,000 to the audience award winner of the LGBTQIA+ Shorts Program, presented by Amazon MGM Studios. The festival’s hospitality is unmatched from the moment you arrive in Savannah, which always ranks high on our list of the Best Places to Live and Work as a Moviemaker, thanks in no small part to the career opportunities offered by SCAD. This isn’t the easiest festival to get into, but the filmmakers who are admitted are treated quite graciously.

    50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee Sedona
    Anxiety Club documentarian Wendy Lobel on a hike to Devil’s Bridge during the Sedona International Film Festival. Photo courtesy of Wendy Lobel

    SEDONA INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL (S)

    Sedona, Arizona / February 21-March 1 2026 / sedonafilmfestival.com

    Wherever you are in your career, you’ll benefit from a trip to Sedona – for the films, great panels and exquisite parties, yes, but also for the meditative hikes through jaw-dropping scenery, up red rocks and over must-see landmarks like Devil’s Bridge. The festival is generous with travel assistance and draws big, well-informed crowds — Sedona is known for artists, retirees and spiritual seekers of all ages, which results in lively and thoughtful Q&As. One highlight of the latest edition was the world premiere of Shattered Ice, a film about a teenage hockey player’s suicide that provoked a moving panel discussion that included the film’s cast, director Alex Ranarivelo, and screenwriter-producer Jake Miskin, who wrote the film to encourage open talks about mental health after losing friends to suicide. Another standout was Wendy Lobel’s previously mentioned Anxiety Club, about standup comics’ coping with anxiety. The festival also programmed a striking number of films about resisting Nazis, and the perils of collaborating with them, including the outstanding documentary Riefenstahl. And attendees got to see a lively panel about choosing film festivals that included your friends at MovieMaker, as well as the Festival Formula’s Katie and Ian Bignell and New York Film Academy’s Crickett Rumley. Festival executive director Patrick Schweiss is an excellent ambassador for the festival and booster of other nearby attractions, inclined to point out that you might want to tack on time to see the Grand Canyon, about two hours away. Sedona is also known for vortexes believed to be centers of healing energy — or maybe it’s the sense of peace that comes from a terrific festival?

    VANCOUVER INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

    Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada / October 2-12 / viff.org

    Drawing nearly 100,000 admissions last year, this fairly selective festival is known for high-quality discussions at its Q&As, which feature films from all over the world. Besides playing Oscar fare like Anora and Conclave, it hosted world, international, North American or Canadian premieres for more than 70 feature films, and covered the full cost of airfare and hotel accommodations for 50 feature filmmakers. Other draws include its Hospitality House, which serves free food and drinks, as well as good conversations with fellow artists, along with stunning mountain and water views. Distributors known to attend include major Canadian distributors like Elevation Pictures, Mongrel Media, FilmsWeLike, Photon Films, and Game Theory. VIFF also offered discussions of subjects ranging from adapting IP to rethinking documentary marketing and redefining genre moviemaking. Guests included Longlegs and The Monkey filmmaker Osgood Perkins, who shot both films locally, and Furiosa production designer Colin Gibson. The fest expanded its global reach last year by collaborating with the Swiss and Taiwanese governments to bring representatives of their film industries to Vancouver. 

    WACO INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL (S)

    Waco, Texas / July 17-20 / wacoindie.com

    A classic example of the kind of smaller festival where you can really get to know people and make true connections. Case in point: Years ago, indie filmmakers Gregory J.M. Kasunich and Lauren Noll met at the festival and hit it off. Though neither is from Waco, they were inspired by its small-town feel, and devised a film set there. “Heart of Texas,” follows a diner waitress (Noll) whose dreams of winning a singing contest on the radio are threatened by an accident with an undocumented co-worker. It won Waco’s 2022 screenplay contest, and its $6,000 production grant to shoot locally. The film debuted at WIFF last year. It went on to play at several other festivals on this list of 50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee and to qualify for the Oscars. “Waco Independent Film Festival was the spark that made ‘The Heart of Texas’ possible,” Kasunich tells MovieMaker. “Winning their screenwriting competition and receiving their grant gave us the resources to bring our vision to life and share it with the world. Without them, our Oscar-longlisted journey never would’ve happened.” The festival has also welcomed distributors like Dark Star Pictures, Summer Hill Films and Crafty, and last year’s guests included The Walking Dead star Chandler Riggs, supporting his role in the film Breakup Season. Waco also has a very inviting submission-to-acceptance ratio. 

    Amanda Seyfried, left, and Aya Cash discuss acting at the Woodstock Film Festival. Courtesy of Woodstock Film Festival.

    WOODSTOCK FILM FESTIVAL (A)

    Woodstock, New York / October 15-19 / woodstockfilmfestival.org

    The festival proudly states that its location, the Hudson Valley, has the largest number of artists per capita in the country. Looking at its guest lists, that certainly feels true: Last year’s attendees included Walton Goggins, promoting his film The Uninvited, Amanda Seyfried and Aya Cash, who discussed the craft of acting, and Seyfried’s First Reformed director, the inestimable Paul Schrader, who received the festival’s Honorary Maverick Award. (Past attendees have included Ethan Hawke, Ang Lee, Richard Linklater, Darren Aronofsky, Mira Nair and Jennifer Connelly.) Woodstock draws distributors including Disney+, NEON and Netflix, and is generous in providing travel assistance. There’s a strong emphasis on developing relationships between the industry and the many local artists and filmmakers in the thriving and fast-rising regional film scene. Last year’s films included the Oscar winners Anora and No Other Land. If you want to preview the festival before attending, check out its lively YouTube channel, featuring panels, Q&As and livestreams.

    Liked Our List of 50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee 2025?

    Coolest Film Festivals in the World 2023
    Credit: C/O

    You may also like our list of the 25 Coolest Film Festivals in the World, our list of the Best Places to Live and Work as a MovieMaker 2025, or our list of the 30 Best Film Schools in the U.S. and Canada.

    Main image: The Miami Jewish Film Festival, one of our 50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee 2025. Photo by Ray Rivero, courtesy of MJFF



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  • Dreaming of You: The Making of The Coral – Preview

    Dreaming of You: The Making of The Coral – Preview


    Dreaming of You: The Making of The Coral follows the story of six childhood outsiders from Merseyside as they transform into one of the most influential British guitar bands of the new millennium. Their high-energy blend of psychedelic rock ‘n’ roll revitalised the doldrums of the post-Britpop music scene.

    Narrated by the band, the film is an immersive experience that creatively combines reconstruction, archive footage, and animation to capture the early 2000s era through the eyes of six northern teenagers, who together created their own strange, endlessly creative escapist universe. As the friends leave their sleepy hometown of Hoylake in pursuit of musical glory, the spotlight eventually finds them, but is it fame they’re after, or is it just being together?

    With appearances from The Lightning Seeds, The Zutons, and Tramp Attack, Dreaming of You: The Making of The Coral is a dreamscape of friendship, fame, and fuzzy guitars. The film commemorates The Coral from their working-class Merseyside roots, through their rise in Liverpool’s Bandwagon Scene, going on to become one of the UK’s most influential bands.

    For director James Slater, the creative direction for the film was as important as the story itself, speaking on this James said, “I wanted Dreaming of You to be an immersive experience—one that transports us back to Northwest England in the late ’90s and early 2000s. …The visual aesthetic of the film is further enhanced by the formats used to shoot both the GVs and reconstructions—Mini DV, Hi-8, 16mm, and 8mm—all mediums that were used to document the band at the time. This rich visual tapestry is accompanied not only by the band’s musical archive but also by a layered sound design that further immerses us in the era, embedding us deeply within the time and place.”

    On celebrating the World Premiere at Sheffield Doc Fest, director James Slater commented, “It’s an honour to be part of Sheffield DocFest, especially alongside such an incredible line-up of films. Dreaming of You is a northern coming-of-age story at heart, so it feels especially fitting for the journey to begin here…”.

    Dreaming Of You: The Making Of The Coral will premiere at the Sheffield Doc Fest on the 21st of June.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kgwK9JchqEU

    John McArthur
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  • Cucks Are Having a Moment in 2025, From Mountainhead to the Diddy Trial

    Cucks Are Having a Moment in 2025, From Mountainhead to the Diddy Trial


    Cucks are having their pop culture moment, from HBO productions like Mountainhead and The White Lotus to Apple TV+’s Your Friends and Neighbors, to the Manhattan courtroom where Sean “Diddy” Combs stands trial.

    The word cuck, short for cuckold, refers to a man whose female partner has sex with other men, often humiliating him in the process. It alludes to the cuckoo bird, because of its tendency to lay its eggs in the nests of other birds. The word dates back to medieval times: References to cuckolds are found in the works of Chaucer and William Shakespeare. Humiliated men are natural fodder for drama.

    That’s especially true today, an age when the term cuckold has been co-opted and shortened by conservatives, who demean moderate or conservative men they deem to be soft as “cucks.” Liberals (and sometimes fellow conservatives) have fired back by calling supposedly soft right-wingers as “cuckservatives.” The phrase has also come into common use to refer to anyone who is a sucker or rube.

    But cuckolding need not be humiliating: For some, it’s a turn-on. Some research indicates that as many as 20 percent of North Americans have engaged in consensual non-monogamy, or CNM. (This of course includes men who have sex with multiple women, who are not, by definition, cuckolds.)

    Hollywood’s cuck fascination may just be catching up to the general population. PornHub’s 2024 Year in Review, one annual indicator of people’s secret desires, indicated a slight uptick in the terms “cuckold wife” (up 8%,) and “wife swap” (up 6%).  

    And as modern pop culture reflects, cuckery is complicated: Sexologist Jill McDevitt has said that it can be a form of masochism or sadism. Some cuckolds enjoy “the arousal that comes from relinquishing power and being humiliated,” she told Men’s Health last year. Others, she said, enjoy watching their partner with someone else, from a sadistic perspective, because he is role-playing “getting revenge on his partner by pimping her out.”

    Nowhere is the complication more evident than in the Diddy trial, where the rap impresario is accused of hiring male escorts to have sex with his then-partner, Cassie Ventura, in “freakoffs,” or, in their shorthand, FOs. Prosecutors say the freakoffs amounted to sex trafficking, but Diddy’s lawyers have used texts between Ventura and Combs to argue that they were consensual, and that she enjoyed the freakoffs.

    Jurors will have to decide whether Diddy’s orchestration of his partner into something that has been, since Shakespeare’s time, a shorthand for humiliation was, in fact, a power move — and abuse of power.

    Hollywood is asking viewers to ask the same questions about a wide range of fictional characters. But what’s different about the cucks of today and the cucks of old is that today’s cucks are often fully aware of their partner’s sex with others, if not fully on board.

    Hollywood’s Fascination With Cucks

    In Wes Anderson’s 2021 The Royal Tenenbaums, Bill Murray’s Raleigh St. Clair cuts a pitiable figure as he realizes the extent of his wife Margot (Gwyneth Paltrow’s) cheating: “You’ve made a cuckold of me,” he laments.

    But the Hollywood cuckolds of today are likely to be well aware of their partner’s cheating, if not encouraging of it.

    Whatever the reasons, cucks and cuckery are very much in the zeitgeist, especially on prestige TV: On Season 3 of The White Lotus, the malevolent Greg Hunt (Jon Gries), who recently came into a fortune via the murder of his wife, has a fetish for watching his new partner with younger men. In the new HBO film Mountainhead, the sole likable character, Jeff (Ramy Youssef), is a multibillionaire who doesn’t want his significant other going to a sex party in Mexico, but feels powerless to tell her it’s a dealbreaker. He is open with the other powerful men in his wealthy cohort about his hopes that she won’t sleep with anyone else. 

    Jesse Armstrong, the writer-director of Mountainhead, previously examined cuckoldry on his show Succession, in which Tom Wambsgans (Matthew MacFayden) was afraid his wife Shiv Roy (Sarah Snook) would leave him if he objected to her sleeping around. 

    Perhaps the most prominent cuckold now on television is Andrew “Coop” Cooper (Jon Hamm), the protagonist of Apple TV+’s hit Your Friends and Neighbors. Coop appears, in most senses, to be an alpha male: He has a big house, a huge finance job, and a Maserati. In some ways he’s a modern Don Draper, the sturdy, traditional alpha Hamm played on Mad Man.

    But Coop becomes a cuckold against his will when his wife Mel (Amanda Peet), sleeps with one of his best friends, former NBA star Nick (Mark Tallman). Unlike many other TV cucks, Coop exits the marriage because of her infidelity. But in a shock to all the friends and neighbors of the show’s title, Coop remains friendly with both Mel and Nick, and even shocks everyone by attending a party at Nick’s house. (He gets in a fight there — but not with Nick.)

    In an interesting reversal, Coop makes a cuck of the man who cucked him when he sleeps with Mel on a visit to Princeton. Nick doesn’t take it well, punching Coop. But, soon after, they put their differences aside and bro out with a night on the town. 

    Perhaps both are heeding the words of Iago in Shakespeare’s Othello: “Beware, my lord, of jealousy/It is the green-eyed monster which doth mock/The meat it feeds on/That cuckold lives in bliss/Who, certain of his fate, loves not his wronger.”

    Main image: Ramy Youssef as Jeff in Mountainhead. HBO



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  • The 12 Coolest Movie Masks of All Time

    The 12 Coolest Movie Masks of All Time


    These movie masks are the coolest in cinematic history.

    Remember when everyone was wearing masks all the time?

    We’re glad we don’t have to do that anymore.

    The Bane Mask in The Dark Knight Rises

    Tom Hardy as Bane, Christian Bale as Batman – Credit: Warner Bros

    We’ve all replicated the “Bane mask voice” by cupping our hands around our mouths and talking with a high-pitched British accent.

    But the mask also gives Bane an aura of mystery: Does it help him breath? Does it hide scars? Bane’s mask is as enigmatic and stylish as the man who wears it.

    The Ghostface Mask in the Scream Saga

    Scream Mask
    Matthew Lillard as Ghostface – Credit: Miramax

    The Scream Ghostface-slasher mask is somehow silly, pulpy, and menacing all at once. Its innocuous simplicity hides the dreadful killer(s) underneath.

    It would be very unusual to experience a Halloween absent of this costume, built around one of the most immediately recognizable movie masks.

    The Hannibal Lecter Mask in The Silence of the Lambs

    Silence of the lambs Easter eggs Hannibal Lecter
    Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal Lecter – Credit: Orion

    Hannibal Lecter technically wears two famous movie masks in the greatest Thomas Harris adaptation, The Silence of the Lambs. The first is his terrifying muzzle, a Jason Vorhees-esque mask with bars blocking his mouth.

    The second is not nearly as stylish — it’s an actual human face.

    The former has certainly been more integrated into pop-culture more than the latter, but both are worth mentioning.

    The Jason Mask in the Friday the 13th Films

    Jason Vorhees Mask
    Derek Mears as Jason Voorhees – Credit: Paramount

    The cinematic influence of the Jason Vorhees hockey mask is incalculable. So many films reference Jason Vorhees’ crude face-covering that it is practically expected every time a bank robbery is depicted on screen.

    Fascinatingly, the mask that would become the trademark of Friday the 13th — and slasher movies in general – didn’t make it to the screen until Friday the 13th Part III, released in 1982.

    The hockey mask is a cheap yet effective symbol of dread that won’t be disappearing from the zeitgeist anytime soon.

    Tie: All the Eyes Wide Shut Masks

    Eyes Wide Shut Mask
    Tom Cruise in Eyes Wide Shut – Credit: Warner Bros

    The Venetian masks that appear in the secret party sequence of Eyes Wide Shot represent exactly the kind of extravagance and costume work we expect from a Stanley Kubrick film.

    They are ethereal and refined — a beautiful piece of ironic characterization designed to protect the identities of those about to become intimate. Among the most jarring and tragic movie masks.

    The Darth Vader Mask

    Darth Vader Mask
    David Prowse as Darth Vader, Carrie Fisher as Princess Leia – Credit: 20th Century Fox.

    The most obvious, and inevitable choice is still a correct one for this list. Darth Vader’s masked visage is still the most awe-inspiring in the history of movie villains. It made countless other filmmakers realize great movie masks are among the most cost-effective storytelling devices.

    Max’s Mask in Mad Max: Fury Road

    Mad Max mask
    Tom Hardy as Max – Credit: Warner Bros.

    Though he spends the majority of his time with the mask attempting to forcefully remove it, Max’s metal face protector is nonetheless visually compelling.

    There is a running joke in the film world that every director Tom Hardy works with makes him cover his face. He could easily have made this list more than twice.

    The Guy Fawkes Mask in V for Vendetta

    Movie Masks
    Hugo Weaving as V – Credit: Warner Bros.

    The Guy Fawkes mask that V wears in V for Vendetta was infamous long before the film was released.

    But the rhyming swashbuckler certainly provided it with a new flair, and turned it into one of the best movie masks of this century.

    The Dread Pirate Roberts Mask in The Princess Bride 

    Wesley Mask
    Cary Elwes as Wesley, aka The Dread Pirate Roberts in The Princess Bride. 20th Century Fox.

    As you wish. Wesley returns to save his Princess Buttercup disguised as the Dread Pirate Roberts, and his mask allows him to find out if he’s still her true love.

    Sporting a new mustache and elegant, black mask-scarf, he is skilled, debonair, and frightening, no longer the farm boy she once knew.

    The Princess Bride is captivating even before the Dread Pirate Roberts arrives, but then he takes the movie into the stratosphere. With a detour through the Fire Swamp, of course.

    The Mask of Zorro in The Mask of Zorro

    Zorro
    Antonio Banderas as Zorro – Credit: C/O

    See what we did there?

    Antonio Banderas’ incarnation of Zorro is overflowing with charisma. His classic combination of black mask, large gaucho hat, and flowing cape never disappoints.

    There have been many Zorros throughout cinematic history — in fact, Zorro helped inspire Batman to become a vigilante, decades ago. But Banderas’ Zorro is our favorite.

    The Vanilla Sky Mask

    Vanilla Sky mask
    Credit: Paramount

    We love the sad simplicity of Tom Cruise’s mask in Vanilla Sky, one of the most mind-blowing movies we’ve ever seen.

    When the handsome David Aames (Cruise) has his face disfigured in a car crash, he takes to wearing a blank, expressionless mask to cover his scars and deformity.

    The mask’s total absence of expression suggests that all life and joy has gone out of David, and maybe it has. But Vanilla Sky still has plenty of twists ahead.

    The Michael Myers Mask in Halloween

    Credit: C/O

    Sometimes simplest is best.

    Tasked with finding a suitable mask for Michael Myers, the monster of John Carpenter and Debra Hill’s horror masterpiece, production designer Tommy Lee Wallace went to a Hollywood Boulevard magic shop, where he found a Captain Kirk mask designed to look like Star Trek star William Shatner. He painted it white, changed the hair, and Michael Myers was born.

    Wallace later directed Halloween III: Season of the Witch — which is all about masks. Specifically, a plot to take over people’s minds through microchipped Halloween masks.

    Liked This List of the Coolest Movie Masks?

    Silence of the Lambs
    Credit: C/O

    You might also like this list of 13 Silence of the Lambs Details a Normal Person Wouldn’t Notice.

    Main image: The Silence of the Lambs. Orion.

    Editor’s Note: Corrects main image.



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  • The 12 Best Minor Simpsons Characters

    The 12 Best Minor Simpsons Characters


    The Simpsons is such a good show that even minor Simpsons characters are often better than the lead characters on lesser shows.

    Here are the best minor Simpsons characters who have passed through Springfield since the Simpsons‘ debut, 35 years ago.

    But First — What Makes a Character ‘Minor’?

    FOX – Credit: C/O

    Obviously, it’s subjective — even secondary characters, such as Krusty the Clown and Principal Skinner, have been at the forefront of several episodes. They are probably too “major” to be “minor.”

    For the purposes of defining a minor character, we are looking for the tertiary folks. They don’t appear in every episode, and they often appear in only one scene when they do.

    We still had plenty of options, though!

    Kirk Van Houten

    FOX – Credit: C/O

    Milhouse, Bart’s best friend, was established early in the run of The Simpsons. He actually debuted in an ad for Butterfingers. At first, Milhouse’s parents were just, you know, Milhouse’s parents. They were there because Milhouse needed parents, and they were thought out so little that Kirk and Luann look like one another.

    Then, “A Milhouse Divided” happened. The fantastic episode is focused, in part, on Kirk and Luann getting divorced. Kirk got a racing car bed and recorded “Can I Borrow a Feeling?”

    Suddenly, Kirk was basically the adult version of Milhouse, but with the existential bleakness of adulthood added onto the character.

    Also Read: The 5 Sexiest Movies About the Amish

    Troy McClure

    FOX – Credit: C/O

    You may remember Troy McClure from such films as Leper in the Backfield and Christmas Ape Goes to Summer Camp. And also from The Simpsons, in which Troy was the resident formerly-famous actor now relegated to infomercials and other less prestigious gigs.

    And yet, Troy maintained enthusiasm, and of course a desire to remind you of what projects he had been in.

    He was usually a one-scene character, but McClure did have one significant role, which gave us the beloved Planet of the Apes musical.

    After the murder of Phil Hartman, the brilliant actor who voiced by Troy McClure, The Simpsons, out of respect, decided to retire McClure.

    Agnes Skinner

    Credit: C/O

    We mentioned Principal Skinner, a classic secondary character, but with Seymour, you occasionally get Agnes. As Skinner developed as a character, it became canonical that he lived with his mother, Agnes. She’s, well, she’s a lot. Agnes makes Seymour’s life tough, but she makes us laugh.

    The elderly woman is mean spirited and free with her opinions, most of them negative. She’s harsh with Seymour, and a common comedic trope on The Simpsons is the Norman and Mrs. Bates vibe between the two.

    But she doesn’t save her criticisms solely for her son. Nobody avoid the hostility of Agnes Skinner.

    Superintendent Chalmers

    FOX – Credit: C/O

    Former Simpsons writer Bill Oakley has called Chalmers his favorite character. The superintendent was introduced into the show to be a “straight man,” the one sane individual in a town full of wacky characters. He provided a fine juxtaposition to Skinner, and the two provided a lot of great comedy together.

    As time went on, Chalmers started to pop up more. He’s even been central to a couple episodes, and now he has a daughter, Shauna, who shows up occasionally as well. Good ol’ Gary Chalmers has no patience with anybody, and in many cases rightfully so.

    Different types of comedic archetypes are important, especially in a show that has been on for over 30 years.

    Lunch Lady Doris

    FOX – Credit: C/O

    The trope of an apathetic lunch lady serving up slop is well worn. Adam Sandler wrote an entire song about it. But The Simpsons‘ Lunchlady Doris (now known as Dora after the death of Doris Grau, the original voice actor) is arguably the foremost purveyor of garbage food served to kids.

    With a cigarette ever dangling from her mouth, Doris is brimming with a lack of consideration for health or nutrition.

    Horse meat. Malk. Enough grease to lube up a jacked Scotsman. Doris has it all. Her deadpan, distinct voice helped to make the character memorable, even if minor.

    Also Read: SNL 50th Anniversary Photo Shoot Maybe Wasn’t as Fun as You’d Think

    Dr. Nick Riviera

    Credit: C/O

    If you want a reasonably good doctor, you go to Julius Hibbert. If you want to save money, or need a quack for an iffy lawsuit, you go to Dr. Nick. While the doctor has largely disappeared from the show, he made quite the splash. There was no dubious product he wouldn’t put his name on, even if it was a gravestone cleaner.

    His incompetency never marred his enthusiasm. The medical “professional” was always ready with a chipper “Hi, everybody!” leading to the familiar reply, “Hi, Dr. Nick!” Then, the medical malpractice would begin.

    Hey, if you’re going to be a risk to your patients, you might as well have a bright bedside manner.

    Roger Meyers Jr.

    FOX – Credit: C/O

    In the world of The Simpsons, Itchy & Scratchy is the most-popular cartoon. It’s basically Tom & Jerry, but overtly violent to the point of being gory.

    The man behind the cartoon mouse and cat (and briefly Poochie)? That would be Roger Meyers Jr.

    Voiced by the late Alex Rocco, Meyers was an ornery sort. Whether with Marge, his writers, or Chester J. Lampwick, Meyers wasn’t afraid to raise his voice or to get combative. Every time Meyers showed up, it was fun. While we likely won’t see him again, Meyers had a few memorable turns as one of our favorite minor Simpsons characters.

    Disco Stu

    FOX – Credit: C/O

    He started as a one-off joke. Homer had a jacket he tried to emblazon with the words “Disco Stud,” but ran out of room. The jacket, available at a yard sale, was seen by Disco Stu, who let us know that “Disco Stu doesn’t advertise.” So began a one-note, but delightful, run.

    The joke is simple. Stu loves Disco. He talks in the third person, and in rhymes. You could never build an episode around him. Heck, you can barely build a scene around Disco Stu.

    Still, he’s one of many minor Simpsons characters who have hustled laughs out of us time and time again. Plus, he deserves sympathy. He can’t get his fish out of his platform shoes!

    Elizabeth Hoover

    Minor Simpsons Characters Elizabeth Hoover
    FOX – Credit: C/O

    The late Edna Krabappel was a secondary character, like her on-and-off paramour Skinner. Hoover, Lisa’s teacher, gets a lot less attention. Maybe she’s not as funny as her former coworker, but Hoover has her good moments as well.

    Hoover is just as apathetic as Edna, but doesn’t have the same world-weariness. Maybe it’s because she drinks Kahlua while she grades tests.

    Sure, Hoover may be in the shadow of Krabappel. But Scottie Pippen was in the shadow of Michael Jordan, and he’s still a Hall of Famer.

    Also Read: The 15 Best SNL Characters, Ranked

    Lenny Leonard

    Minor Simpsons Characters Lenny
    FOX – Credit: C/O

    Surprisingly, Carl Carlson has arguably graduated to being a secondary character. He’s gotten a couple episodes built around him.

    But Lenny? Well, he’s still stuck in minor character standing. Of course, that hasn’t stopped him from being funnier than Carl.

    Lenny is put upon, and his eyes are often in peril. He’s dumber than Carl, his best friend and possible unrequited love (though that joke has sort of dissipated in recent years). In the early days, Lenny was just Homer’s jovial buddy and coworker, and he had good lines even then.

    Eventually, the writers started to make a joke of his Simpsons minor character status, and that took him up a notch.

    Mona Simpson

    Minor Simpsons Characters Mona
    FOX – Credit: C/O

    Homer’s dad, Abe, is a great character, but also arguably at or near the top of the secondary level. On the other hand, Homer’s mother, Mona, has had such infrequent appearances that they can be counted on one hand. Her first appearance, though, ensured she would be memorable from the get go.

    The fittingly titled “Mother Simpson” gave us our first look at Homer’s mother, voiced by Glenn Close. She had disappeared from Homer’s life one night when he was a young kid, and there was a lot of time to make up, but also some making up to do emotionally.

    Then, alas, Mona had to flee again. “Mother Simpson” is a funny episode, but also one of the sweeter ones.

    Sideshow Bob

    Minor Simpsons Characters Sideshow Bob
    FOX – Credit: C/O

    With Bob Terwilliger, it’s tricky. Almost every time he shows up, Sideshow Bob is central to the episode. They are literally considered “Sideshow Bob” episodes. On the other hand, there are only 14 Sideshow Bob episodes in a show that has had well over 700 episodes.

    Voiced indelibly by TV icon Kelsey Grammer, Bob is Krusty the Clown’s former sidekick, a genius, an aesthete, and, oh yeah, a homicidal maniac. When he isn’t singing opera, Bob is probably trying to commit a crime, most likely trying to kill his nemesis, one Bart Simpson.

    A few of the Bob episodes are dicey, but about a half-dozen of them are all-timers. Bob is a star when he shows up, but he shows up so rarely he’s still special (and, just barely, a minor Simpsons character).

    Like This List of the Best Minor Simpsons Characters?

    Minor Star Wars Characters
    Credit: C/O

    You might also like this list of gay cartoons characters we love — including some Simpsons characters.

    Or you might like this list of Rad ’80s Movies Only Cool Kids Remember.

    Main image: Homer Simpson and Disco Stu. FOX.



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  • The 12 Best Superhero Movies Ever Made

    The 12 Best Superhero Movies Ever Made


    What’s the best superhero movie ever made? For our money, it’s one of the following — presented in no particular order.

    The Dark Knight (2008)

    Heath Ledger as The Joker in The Dark Knight. Warner Bros. – Credit: C/O

    This is the most obvious choice — a jittery, chilling morality play in which everyone does everything right, anchored by Christian Bale as the best Batman and Heath Ledger in an Oscar-winning role as one of the best-ever screen villains, a mastermind posing as a clown.

    One could argue this doesn’t belong on a list of superhero movies, since no one has super powers… but that’s part of what we love about The Dark Knight.

    Avengers: Infinity War (2018)

    Disney – Credit: C/O

    After an astonishing opening that promises anything could happen, Infinity War invests in character development as much as action before ending on a cliffhanger to end all cliffhangers.

    Its sequel, Avengers: Endgame, not only resolves that cliffhanger but also pays off more than a decade of Marvel superhero movie storylines.

    Watching Infinity War and Endgame back to back, it’s hard not to feel like you’re revisiting the high water mark of the MCU. Hopefully Kevin Feige and company can recapture the greatness of the late 2010s with Avengers: Doomsday and Avengers: Secret Wars, which will bring back some of our old favorites.

    Spider-Man 2 (2004)

    Sony – Credit: C/O

    Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) learns that with great power comes not just great responsibility, but great sacrifice, as he realizes that his role as Spider-Man endangers the love of his life, Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst).

    Doc Ock (Alfred Molina) is one of the all-time best spider villains, and the highlight of the whole film comes in a truly marvelous sequence in which New York City saves Spidey, for a change. The most romantic of all superhero movies, except for the last one on our list.

    Sony made an inspired choice when they hired Sam Raimi to land this one, and he nailed it — he brought the very Peter Parkeresque scrappiness of his Evil Dead franchise to an at-the-time unproven property, recognizing that Spider-Man is as much about heart as heroics. And sometimes heart and heroics are the same thing.

    X2: X-Men United (2003)

    Best Superhero Movies XMen 2
    Fox – Credit: C/O

    2003’s X-Men 2 far improves on the original from the first scene: It starts with Nightcrawler (Alan Cumming) operatically invading the Oval Office, and never slows.

    The fight between Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) and Lady Deathstryke (Kelly Hu) feels far more grounded and high-stakes than terrible CGI fights that would ruin so many superhero movies in the years to come, and Brian Cox is menacingly flawless as Col. William Stryker, a very believable nemesis to our favorite band of mutants.

    Fox seemed timid about the first X-Men, since superhero movies seemed a little niche at the time of its release. But X2 stays truer to the Chris Claremont X-Men comics, and soars as a result.

    Logan (2017)

    Logan
    Hugh Jackman in Logan. Fox – Credit: C/O

    A break-all-the-rules story of sacrifice, loss, and one loner’s struggle to get through centuries on this planet doing more good than harm.

    Director James Mangold proved once and for all that comic book movies aren’t just for kids with a metaphorical story of aging as gracefully as you can.

    Mangold returned to the theme of an aging action hero, meanwhile, in the recent Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny. But honestly, we prefer Logan.

    Deadpool (2016)

    Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) in Deadpool. Fox – Credit: C/O

    The most flat-out funny comic-book movie ever made, which made it to the screen through Ryan Reynold’s stubborn insistence that one of Marvel’s weirdest, least likely screen stars could be one of its greatest.

    And yes, we enjoyed last year’s megahit Deadpool vs. Wolverine — but not as much as we enjoyed their solo adventures.

    Black Panther (2018)

    Disney – Credit: C/O

    The world-building is stellar and acting top-notch throughout. Michael B. Jordan plays perhaps the MCU’s best villain ever, and Chadwick Boseman delivered a beautiful turn as a king torn between his people and the people of the world in this Best Picture nominee from Ryan Coogler.

    It’s kind of stunning that both Black Panther and Infinity War were released just months apart — 2018 was quite a year for Marvel, and superhero movies in general.

    And that’s before we even get to the next super movie on our list.

    Spider-Man: Into the Spider Verse (2018)

    Sony – Credit: C/O

    Breaking with every kind of staid tradition, this boldly experimental, utterly gorgeous animated film is a loving, awe-inspiring homage to decades of Spider-mythology and an optimistic look ahead at what comic book movies — and their young fans — can aspire to be.

    It’s incredible how many spider friends — and villains — the movie fits in, making it all look effortless. It’s a movie you can watch dozens of times, catching something new on each viewing.

    We just wish its often-fantastic sequel, Across the Spider-Verse, hadn’t ended on such a tough cliffhanger.

    X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014)

    Jennifer Lawrence as Mystique in X-Men: Days of Future Past. Fox – Credit: C/O

    A fairly faithful screen adaptation of one of Christopher Claremont’s most iconic storylines from the comics, though it puts Logan (Hugh Jackman) center stage instead of Kitty Pryde and ambitiously melds the X-Men movies of the 2000s and their prequels of the 2010s.

    Long before the many movie metaverses made time travel or alternate realities feel exhausting, this X-Men film had what was then a fresh and thrilling take.

    Blade (1998)

    New Line Cinema – Credit: C/O

    Blade isn’t perfect, but it expanded everyone’s idea of what a superhero movie could be by pulling from one of Marvel’s lesser-known heroes: a vampire hunter who wears a leather jacket instead of a cape or tights.

    Blade opened the door to the reality that Marvel could have as much or even more success with its second-tier or forgotten characters, like Ant-Man or the Guardians of the Galaxy, than it could with heroes we had seen onscreen before.

    And of course Wesley Snipes is awesome in the lead role, and delivers the classic line, Some mother—-er’s are always trying to ice skate uphill.”

    The Incredibles (2004)

    Pixar – Credit: C/O

    Pixar’s The Incredibles is both a great family superhero movie and a dark deconstruction of superhero tropes — note that Mr. Incredible bails out on the business because of legal threats, not because of bad guys.

    The animation is groundbreaking and stellar, combining dynamic character design with Art Deco touches that harken back to the days of Batman and Superman. It’s funny, it’s sweeping, it’s curiously dark. The grainy black-and-white rescue segment takes it to a daring new level. It’s a super movie in every way.

    Superman (1978)

    Warner Bros. – Credit: C/O

    The film that started it all. Its earnestness and total reliance on practical effects — as well as stellar performances and moving love story between Lois Lane (Margot Kidder) and Supes make it feel more charming and inspiring with each passing year.

    Christopher Reeve will always be our Superman, and, as we mentioned, it’s the most romantic superhero movie.

    We have high hopes for the upcoming James Gunn take on Superman — and are especially excited to meet Krypto, Superman’s dog.

    Liked This List of the Best Superhero Movies?

    Sleazy 1970s Movies
    Vinegar Syndrome

    You might also like this list of 1970s Movies That Don’t Care About Your Respect.

    Main image: Jennifer Lawrence as Mystique in X-Men: Days of Future Past.



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  • Can You Name These 11 Hit Movies of the 1970s From a Single Image?

    Can You Name These 11 Hit Movies of the 1970s From a Single Image?


    How many of these 11 hit movies of the 1970s can you guess from the image? Remember your number, because we’ll tell you how you scored at the end.

    1970

    Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O

    This was the No. 2 top-grossing movie of 1970, with an all-star cast that included Burt Lancaster, Dean Martin, George Kennedy, Helen Hayes, Jean Seberg and Jacqueline Bisset. It earned more than $106 million at the box office.

    Want a hint? Note the background of the shot, and where our stars are.

    Ready for the answer? OK. It is… scroll down…

    1970 Answer: Airport

    How Many of These Hit 1970s Movies Can You Name?
    Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O

    Coming in just behind the top-grossing film of 1970s, Love Story, Airport followed a formula that The Poseidon Adventure, The Towering Inferno, and other 1970s disaster movies would follow:

    Take a bunch of A-list stars, put them in peril, and watch the sparks fly.

    Burt Lancaster once dismissed Airport as “the biggest piece of junk ever made,” but it inspired three sequels and was later satirized, of course, by 1980’s Airplane.

    1971

    Warner Bros. – Credit: C/O

    This story of a Vietnam veteran, part-Navajo hapkido master was one of the biggest hits to come out in 1971 — especially after its re-release — and even beat Dirty Harry, the first of Clint Eastwood’s five films about San Francisco cop Harry Callahan.

    Okay, one more huge hint: It starred Tom Laughlin in the title role, and was known for the song “One Tin Soldier.”

    Ready? Scroll down for the answer…

    1971 Answer: Billy Jack

    How Many of These Hit 1970s Movies Can You Name?
    Credit: C/O

    Warner Bros.

    Yes, we know it’s crazy, but Billy Jack really did beat Dirty Harry. Of course, Billy Jack had the advantage of being based on a character audiences already knew: Billy Jack had made his debut in the 1967 outlaw biker hit The Born Losers (above).

    Billy Jack remains one of the cult favorite movies of the 1970s.

    1972

    United Artists – Credit: C/O

    Marlon Brando starred in two of the Top 10 movies at the box office in 1972. The first, as you probably guessed, was The Godfather.

    Can you guess the second one, in which he starred with Maria Schneider (above)?

    Hint: It has a city in its title.

    And the film is…

    1972 Answer: Last Tango in Paris

    Credit: C/O

    United Artists

    Yep, it’s Last Tango in Paris, a film that has been castigated in recent years because of Schneider’s allegations that she was mistreated by Brando and director Bernardo Bertolucci during a crucial scene involving butter.

    It’s one of the movies of the 1970s that also made our list of Sex Scenes Someone Should Have Stopped.

    1973

    Paramount Pictures – Credit: C/O

    This one looks like a classic film from the 1940s, not one of the hit movies of the 1970s, and that’s very much by design.

    If you’ve seen this absolute charmer, featuring the star of the biggest hit of 1970 and his real-life daughter, you certainly remember it.

    It’s sad, but also an absolute charmer.

    Scroll down for its title…

    1973 Answer: Paper Moon

    Credit: C/O

    Paramount Pictures

    Paper Moon starred Ryan O’Neal, who also topped the box office opposite Ali MacGraw in 1970’s Love Story. For Paper Moon, a Depression-era story of a con man on a road trip with a cantankerous child who just might be his daughter.

    Director Peter Bogdanovich wisely paired O’Neal with his real-life daughter, Tatum, who deservedly won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress.

    1974

    20th Century Fox – Credit: Teri Garr and Gene Wilder in Young Frankenstein. 20th Century Studios

    1974 was a very good year for Mel Brooks: He released not only the Western satire Blazing Saddles, the top film of the year, but also another comedy, satirizing another genre.

    We know, for comedy fans, this is an easy one.

    By the way, here are some Behind the Scenes Stories of Blazing Saddles.

    And now, scroll down for the answer.

    1974 Answer: Young Frankenstein

    20th Century Fox – Credit: C/O

    The comedy classic Young Frankenstein was still playing in theaters through 1975, when members of Aerosmith saw it and borrowed one of the best jokes in the film for the title of their hit “Walk This Way,” as we detail in this list of Classic Rock Songs Inspired by Movies We Love.

    So it isn’t just one of the hit movies of the 1970s — it also helped inspire one of the biggest hit songs of the 1970s.

    1975

    20th Century Fox – Credit: C/O

    This one is a cult hit that still plays in theaters all over the country today.

    If you don’t know what it is, please go see it immediately. Preferably at midnight.

    And scroll down for the title…

    1975 Answer: The Rocky Horror Picture Show

    Credit: C/O

    20th Century Fox

    Yep, it’s The Rocky Horror Picture Show, starring Susan Sarandon, Tim Curry, and many more.

    Rocky Horror isn’t just a cult hit, but also a legit hit: It was solidly in the Top 10 movies of 1975, behind hits like Jaws, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, and Shampoo.

    All of those movies are terrific, but they don’t inspire midnight singalongs across America.

    1976

    20th Century Fox – Credit: C/O

    We can’t stress enough what a red-hot star Gene Wilder was in the 1970s.

    This was the first of his four pairings with one of the greatest comics of all time, Richard Pryor.

    Scroll down for the name of the film.

    1976 Answer: Silver Streak

    Credit: C/O

    20th Century Fox

    Silver Streak casts Gene Wilder as harried book editor George, who teams up with car thief Grover (Richard Pryor) after George is falsely accused of murder.

    Wilder and Pryor would pair up again in 1980’s Stir Crazy, 1989’s See No Evil, Hear No Evil, and 1991’s Another You.

    1977

    Hit Movies of the 1970s
    Columbia Pictures – Credit: C/O

    1977 is of course a crucial year because it was the year of the original Star Wars, a movie that changed forever what type of movies get the green light in Hollywood and was perhaps had the greatest cultural impact of all the hit movies of the 1970s.

    The movie above, while less popular, got a lot of attention in 1977, thanks in large part to its female lead.

    We’ll give you another hint: It was co-written by Peter Benchley, the writer of the novel Jaws and co-writer of the film.

    Scroll down for its title…

    1977 Answer: The Deep

    Columbia Pictures – Credit: C/O

    The Deep, starring Jaqueline Bissett and Nick Nolte, is about a pair of divers who uncover treasure and then have to defend it.

    The marketing focused heavily on underwater shots of Bissett.

    It earned $47.3 million, making it No. 6 on the list of the 10 top movies of 1977, by domestic box office, not adjusted for inflation.

    1978

    Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O

    This is a very easy one if you were around in 1978. It’s one of the biggest hit movies of the 1970s.

    It starred a the Not Ready for Prime Time Player above, who is also one of the subjects of the recent Jason Reitman film Saturday Night.

    Scroll down for this very easy answer.

    1978 Answer: Animal House

    Universal Pictures – Credit: C/O

    This John Landis-directed National Lampoon film was a breakout hit for John Belushi, the Saturday Night Live star who became an instant movie star for his portrayal of the hard-partying Bluto.

    In the same year he appeared in Animal House, Belushi also appeared in Goin’ South, which Jack Nicholson starred in and directed.

    Belushi felt like he didn’t have enough to do in Goin’ South, which Animal House trounced at the box office.

    1979

    MGM – Credit: C/O

    Margot Kidder starred in both the No. 1 and No. 2 movies at the 1979 box office.

    The No. 1 movie was Superman.

    Can you guess the No. 2 movie, above?

    Scroll down for its name…

    1979 Answer: The Amityville Horror

    MGM – Credit: C/O

    Margot Kidder starred with James Brolin in the Stuart Rosenberg-directed Amityville Horror, based on Jay Anson’s 1979 book of the same name about the Lutz family, who said they endured paranormal activity while living in a home where Ronald DeFeo murdered his family in 1974.

    It was one of many films about the Amityville story, which remains haunting today — whether or not you believe the house is haunted.

    And that ends the movies of the 1970s. Or does it?

    Bonus: 1980

    Paramount Pictures – Credit: C/O

    We’re adding this one for those of you who contend that a decade ends in its 10th year. And because we’re having fun and don’t want this list of hit movies of the 1970s to end.

    Though Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back was easily the No. 1 movie, the film above, directed by Robert Redford, won Best Picture at the Oscars. Can you remember its title?

    Scroll down if you like…

    1980 Answer: Ordinary People

    Paramount Pictures – Credit: C/O

    Ordinary People earned a very respectable $55 million in domestic box office in 1980, and cleaned up at the Oscars.

    Besides winning Best Picture, it earned Best Director for Robert Redford, a Best Supporting Actor for Timothy Hutton, and Best Screenplay for Allen Sargent.

    It has aged very well.

    How’d You Score?

    Hit Movies of the 1970s
    Fozzie Bear in The Muppet Movie. Disney – Credit: C/O

    How many of these hits of the 1970s did you recognize? Here’s how you score:

    9 or more correct… The Godfather

    7 or more correct… Cleopatra Jones

    5 or more correct… Dirty Harry

    3 or more correct… Fozzie Bear

    Fewer than 3 correct… The Jerk

    Liked Guessing These Hit Movies of the 1970s?

    NBC

    You might also like this video of 5 Sleazy 1970s Movies That Don’t Care About Your Respect or this list of the 15 Best SNL Characters — several of whom are from the 1970s.

    Main image: A promotional image of Jaqueline Bisset for The Deep. Columbia Pictures.



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