Aesthetica_Short_Film_Festival_(ASFF)

Aesthetica Short Film Festival

Aesthetica Short Film Festival

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The Aesthetica Short Film Festival (ASFF) is an international film festival which takes place annually in York, England, at the beginning of November. Founded in 2011, it is a celebration of independent film from around the world, and an outlet for supporting and championing filmmaking.

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ASFF is also a BAFTA-Qualifying festival, meaning short films that are screened may be eligible for a BAFTA award.

The festival is hosted by art and culture publication Aesthetica Magazine, and is supported by York St John University, London College of Communication and the British Film Institute.[1]

History

ASFF is hosted by Aesthetica, a British art and culture magazine. Initially launched as the Aesthetica Short Film Competition,[2] winning films were included on a DVD released with the December/January edition of Aesthetica. The competition received a significant number of entries, and it developed into the Aesthetica Short Film Festival.

2011

The first edition took place in 2011.[2] The festival brought filmmakers and audiences from locations including South Africa, New Zealand, the US and from across Europe, to the city of York.[3] Among those delivering masterclasses were Mark Herman (Screenwriter, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas), Ivana Mackinnon (Executive Producer, Slumdog Millionaire) and the Senior Commissioner for Channel 4.[4]

ASFF 2011 received positive feedback and was covered in The Guardian.[5][6]

2012

ASFF 2012 screened over 200 films across 15 different locations.[7] Masterclasses were held by Danny Cohen (BAFTA-nominated cinematographer of The King’s Speech, The Boat That Rocked and Glorious 39), Barry Ryan the head of Warp Films (Dead Man’s Shoes, Four Lions, This is England and Submarine) and Matt Greenhalgh (BAFTA winning screenwriter of Control and Nowhere Boy).[8] The festival also included screenings, panel discussions, special events and parties.[9][10]

2013

The third edition expanded the Official Programme, screening over 300 films.[11] Saera Jin, director of the comedy Konnichiwa Brick Lane was in attendance, alongside Curt Apduhan who discussed the making of his drama Anniversary. Manjinder Virk received the Festival Winner award for her short Out of Darkness, which the Observer's Chief Film Critic Mark Kermode described as "intriguing and thought provoking."[12][13]

Events included a series of masterclasses from Joakim Sundström (Seven Psychopaths), Craig McNeil from Beggars Group, Warp Films, Film4, Channel 4, Alice Lowe (Sightseers, Hot Fuzz) and more.[14] There were also special programmes from BAFTA, Yorkshire Film Archive, and Screen Bandita.[15]

2014

ASFF received BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television Arts) Recognised status in 2014.[16] The festival was also awarded Festival of the Year by York Press.[17]

Notable films include Alan Holly's Coda, shortlisted for the 87th Academy Awards and nominated for the 42nd Annual Annie Awards, starring Brian Gleeson and Orla Fitgerald.[18] Actors starring in some of the short films also included Adeel Akhtar, Hugo Weaving, Maxine Peake and model Lily Cole.

Guest programmes from screened by Creative England iShorts, Yorkshire Film Archive, Clermont-Ferrand Film Festival, Internationale Kurzfilmtage Winterthur.[19] The festival continued to showcase films in all genres and expanded its programme to include fashion and advertising.[20][21] ASFF's fashion strand was supported by London College of Fashion and screened films from brands such as Vivienne Westwood, Swarovski, Louis Vuitton, Trager Delaney, Topshop, River Island, Karen Millen, Triwa watches and Hub Footwear.[22]

New events included Meet the Film Festivals, which created a place for filmmakers to network with programmers from across the world. Festivals in attendance included Raindance; London Short Film Festival; Edinburgh International Film Festival; Garden State Film Festival and more.[23]

2015

ASFF celebrated its fifth anniversary in 2015. The festival ran from 5 to 8 November and attracted 20,000 admissions.[24][25]

The festival's Masterclass series included sessions from BAFTA-winning Warp Films' Head of Production Barry Ryan (71, Berberian Sound Studio, Four Lions and This is England); Stephen Whelan, Executive Producer and founder at White Lodge; and Price James, who worked previously at Ridley Scott Associates and is a director at BAFTA-winning production company Agile Films. Organisations also included Association of Camera Operators, Rankin Film, Shooting People, National Theatre, British Society of Cinematographers, Studio AKA, Channel 4, Framestore and more. ASFF 2015 also hosted the festival's first Videotheque, enabling festival goers the opportunity to watch all films from the Official Selection.[26]

Winners from each category, plus Best of Fest, People's Choice Award and the York Youth Vote were announced at the ASFF Awards Ceremony on Sunday 8 November.[27]

2016

ASFF 2016 ran 3 from 6 November, taking place in 18 venues. Masterclasses were led by industry representatives from organisations including the BBC, Industrial Light & Magic, and Jagex. BBC Commissioning Editor, Kristian Smith, joined writer of Raised by Wolves Caroline Moran to discuss development and pitching, while actress and writer Alice Lowe (The World’s End, Sightseers) spoke about how to bring a character to life. Events also included new daily Morning Coffee hours at According to McGee art gallery. There were Showcase Screenings curated by cultural organisations throughout the UK, including London College of Fashion University of the Arts London, Plymouth College of Art, University of York, Creative England and Northern Ireland Screen among others.[28]

New for 2016, ASFF partnered with the Northern Film School at Leeds Beckett University to present an award for Best Screenplay in the Official Selection.[29]

The Jury of industry professionals who selected the winners included representatives from BAFTA, Edinburgh International Film Festival and Encounters Film Festival.[30]

2017

Extending to five days, the seventh edition of ASFF screened over 300 films across 18 venues throughout the city of York. The programme featured works from 41 countries.[31] Audiences were given a chance to see several UK premieres with performances from film and TV figures including Martin Freeman, Imelda Staunton, Idris Elba and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau. Masterclasses, networking sessions and panel discussions featured industry representatives from i-D, BBC and the British Film Institute.

ASFF held a collection of exclusive screenings supported by Iris Prize, British Urban Film Festival and Kraków Film Festival.

Best of Fest winners were Benjamin Cleary and TJ O’Grady Peyton for Wave, the story of a man who wakes from a coma speaking a fully formed but unrecognisable language, which also went on to win the Best Drama Award. Cleary was also awarded the Best of Fest in 2015 for Stutterer, which received Best Live Action Short Film at the 88th Academy Awards.[32]

Chris Overton's The Silent Child, a film inspired by real life events, that told the story of a deaf four-year-old girl whose social worker teaches her to communicate through sign language, took home the Youth Award and the People's Choice Award. It went on to win Best Live Action Short Film at the 90th Academy Awards.[33]

2018

ASFF 2018 took place from 7 to 11 November. The programme combined industry-led events with screenings. The line-up included industry representatives from Aardman Studios, Film4, British Vogue, StudioCanal, BBC, Industrial Light & Magic, Dazed, Baby Cow, Pinewood Studios and more.

The eighth edition also included Narrative and Documentary Feature Films for the first time, as a result of many festival alumni progressing to features since first screening at ASFF, most notably director Francis Lee (God’s Own Country).[34] Feature films in competition for the 2018 festival included Akram Khan's Giselle (As part of the English National Ballet), Mark Cousins' The Eyes of Orson Welles and Benjamin Wigley's Paa Joe & The Lion.

ASFF also launched the Screen School VR Lab in partnership with London College of Communication. Screenings were complemented by a series of panel discussions on making and realising VR and 360 film and its ethics, production and storytelling.

Best of Fest was awarded to Ed Perkins for his film Black Sheep, which told the story of Cornelius Walker and the murder of Damilola Taylor, in what became one of the UK's most high-profile cases. The film also received Best Documentary and the Northern Film School Award for Best Screenplay.

2019

The Aesthetica Short Film Festival ran 6 to 10 November. With over 400 films and 100 industry events programmed, it was the largest edition to date. For 2019, Masterclasses included representatives from British Vogue, i-D and Rankin, as well as Emmy- and Oscar-nominated producers, directors, sound designers, editors and cinematographers such as Simon Chinn, Dick Pope, Tracey Granger and Mick Audsley. Industry insights were also given by Framestore, SKY VR, Baby Cow, Bluezoo, BFI NETWORK, Aardman, Industrial Light & Magic, and the BBC.

Additional events included the launch of ASFF's Industry Marketplace. Over 40 exhibitors were included, from BFI NETWORK, Locarno Film Festival, Creative England, to Edinburgh Film Festival, Sheffield Doc/Fest, Hijack Post, London College of Communication and Festival Formula. The event was a platform for attendees and delegates to engage with organisations from across the sector, including international film festivals, screen agencies, sales agents, global distributors and universities.

Guest Programme screenings from The Guardian, Studio AKA, and BBC Arabic Festival also took place across the festival's run, as well as the return of the Screen School VR Lab, created in partnership with London College of Communication.

Best of Festival was awarded to Sasha Rainbow for her film Kofi and Lartey, which tells the story of a man who escaped one of the most toxic places in the world, and his fight to try and empower two young boys to do the same. The 2019 festival also included the presentation of the Hijack Visionary Filmmaker Award, which was taken home by Ellie Rogers for her film They Found Her in a Field. The award recognises directors with exceptional vision and a unique cinematic voice, with the winner receiving a post production package for their next short film.

2020

ASFF's 10th anniversary edition ran 3-8 November in an accessible online space for 2020. From 9–30 November, the content was available on Demand as part of ASFF's virtual platform. ASFF presented over 450 curated films and more than 100 live industry events, all available virtually.

ASFF presented curated guest programmes, showcase screenings from film schools and universities, and a schedule of live industry events.

Guest speakers include Oscar-Winning Director Andrea Arnold (Wasp, Fish Tank, American Honey), BAFTA-winning filmmaker Sarah Gavron (This Little Life, Suffragette, Rocks), BIFA-winning and Emmy-nominated Documentarian Jeanie Finlay (Seahorse, Orion: The Man Who Would Be King, Game of Thrones: The Last Watch), celebrated Filmmaker Sam Feder (DISCLOSURE, Boy I Am), Oscar Winning Sound Designer Glenn Freemantle (Gravity, Annihilation), double Oscar-winning VFX Supervisor Paul Franklin (Inception, Interstellar), as well as animators, cinematographers, editors, production designers and representatives from Film4, BBC Films, and Framestore..

Films in competition were released in 6 Strands from 3–8 November, with 10 programmes per day. The strand titles included: Just Another Day on Earth, Humans and their Environment, Connections: People, Places and Identity, Breaking Down Barriers and Keep on the Sunny Side of Life.

Guest programmes expanded for 2020 and included: Indigenous Cinema: Celebrating Visual Narrative Sovereignty (Native Spirit FF), Cinesisters: A Platform for Female Voices (Cinesisters), Tales from Isolation (Short of the Week), TransFormation, TransAction (Transgender Media Portal), BFI Doc Society Presents: Documenting Modern Britain (Doc Society), Hanoi Stories (Scottish Documentary Institute), Fresh Perspectives: Making Space for Disability (OSKA BRIGHT), The True Glory: Remembering WWII (IWM), I Still Can't Breathe (Directors Notes, Can We Talk DXB), The Future of AI: People and Data (DC LABS), Iris Prize Presents: LGBT+ Shorts (Iris Prize), Short Films from Brazil (São Paulo Short Film Festival), Perspectives from the Arctic Circle: Norway on Film (Norwegian Short Film Festival).

The 2020 tickets were 24-hour, 7-day and 1-Month Film & Industry Passes.

2021

The 11th edition of the BAFTA-Qualifying Aesthetica Film Festival ran 2-30 November and incorporated both live and virtual events in a hybrid approach. It featured over 300 films, 100 industry events and 100 speakers. The programme was curated into six conceptual strands: How it was, How it is, How it will be?, Humanity on the Edge, When Life Gives You Lemons, Make Lemonade, Pleased to Meet You, Mirror, Mirror and Nobody's Free Until Everybody is Free.

The programme included a focus on diversity, with industry events and screenings centred on LGBTQ+, communities, Black Lives Matter, women, gender and identity. The ASFF Guest Programmes included focus on 9/11, commemorating 20 years since the terrorist attack. Complementary programmes featured works from Ireland, China, Kenya and North Africa, including Scottish Documentary Institute, Iris Prize, Imperial War Museum, We Are Parable, and Girls in Film South Africa.

The 2021 industry programme included VFX, animation and cinematography, editing, screenwriting and virtual reality. Industry representatives included Sally Potter, Maxine Peake, Gamba Cole, Craig Roberts, Framestore, ILM, Film4, Channel 4, and BBC Film. The festival featured Aesthetic alumni Alice Seabright, Francis Lee and Prano Bailey-Bond. The festival included networking and connection opportunities, and opportunities to pitch projects to Film 4, BBC Film, Guardian Documentaries, StudioCanal and DocSociety.[35]

2022

In 2022, the Aesthetica Film Festival took place in-person in the centre of York from 1-6 November. It continued virtually through the festival's online platform until 30 November. A programme of 300 films was curated into six thematic strands: Life As We Know It, The Bigger Picture, We'll Cross That Bridge When We Come To It, Who Do You Do?, Be Yourself, Everybody Else Is Taken and The Present Was Their Idea Of The Future. Guest Programmes included shorts from We Are Parable, Queer East Film Festival, Iris Prize, and Scottish Documentary Institute. Showcases from Regents University, York St John University and London College of Fashion focused on filmmaking, authenticity in storytelling and how fashion questions everything from identity politics to the climate emergency.

Masterclasses included sessions on funding, sustainability, cinematography, and making the transition from short to feature filmmaking. The line-up included BAFTA, Oscar and BIFA-winning directors, actors and producers, including Philip Barantini (Boiling Point), Lizzie Franck (Aftersun) and Claire Oakley (Makeup), and organisations such as Ubisoft, BFI, Framestore, Guardian Documentaries, BBC Writersroom, Ridley Scott Creative Group, and Film4. The industry programme was expanded for 2022 to include workshops on VR, 360 film and writing from London College of Communication, London College of Fashion, Gal-dem, and Canon. The festival's new Kids' Workshops gave young people the opportunity to direct, edit and make their own films. 2022 marked the first year of Aesthetica Fringe events, including art exhibition Unite. Transform. Create. held at Streetlife York.

2023

The BAFTA-Qualifying Aesthetica Film Festival took place in York from 8-12 November, across 15 venues. This year’s outstanding screening programme included moving images by Ricky Gervais, Maxine Peake, Ben Whishaw and Oscar-winner Tim Webber. There were 300 films in competition spanning 12 genres, organised into five thematic strands: Now, In This Very Moment, Standing at the Threshold of Change, A Journey of a Thousand Miles Begins With One Step, Be Free From Yourself, It’s Nice to Meet You.

For its 13th edition, Aesthetica developed the UK’s First Games Lab at a film festival with 40 new indie-developed games to play. In addition, there were 20 VR projects in the Screen School VR Lab.

The festival welcomed directors and cinematographers such as Sarah Gavron (Rocks), Mark Jenkin (Bait), Nicolas Brown (1917) Diana Olifirova (Heartstopper) and Kathryn Ferguson (NOTHING COMPARES) to give sessions on their experience working in the industry, from editing, sound design and cinematography to screenwriting, interactive storytelling, games, AI and VR. Aardman, BBC Film, Film4, Framestore, Guardian, Industrial Light and Magic, Studio AKA and Ridley Scott Associates were amongst the line-up of 60 masterclasses and panel sessions.

In 2023, Aesthetica Fringe comprised a sound installation and film premiere in collaboration with Audible; a photography exhibition celebrating women behind the lens; a display of contemporary film posters; and workshops in printmaking, gaming and film for kids and adults.

Call for Entries

The Aesthetica Short Film Festival opens for entries in December and closes on 31 May. The festival accepts submissions from emerging and established filmmakers from around the world. Short films with a maximum running time of 30 minutes are accepted across the following genres: advertising, animation, artists' film, comedy, dance, documentary, drama, experimental, fashion, music video, thriller and VR.[36] Feature films are also accepted across Narrative and Documentary genres, running over 60 minutes.

In 2023, the festival introduced the Games Lab, which is open for submissions until 30 June. At the Aesthetica Games Lab, the festival will exhibit up to 50 projects, offering practitioners the ideal testbed to share new ideas with audiences. The Lab is a celebration of game culture, design and production, which is enhanced by a number of panels and talks.

Awards

All films in the Official Selection are in competition to receive a number of awards. These awards recognise outstanding talent in filmmaking practice. The winning films are selected by a jury of industry experts, and are presented at the Closing Night Awards Ceremony. ASFF is also a BAFTA-Qualifying festival, meaning short films that are screened may be eligible for a BAFTA award.

Sponsored by BFI NETWORK and Film Hub North, the Polaris Award celebrates the achievements of a filmmaker based in the North of England.

Beginning in 2019, the Hijack Visionary Filmmaker Award recognises directors with exceptional vision and a unique cinematic voice. The winner receives a post production package for their next short film.

Previous winners have gone on to achieve further award success, including Oscar wins (The Silent Child, Chris Overton in 2017 and Stutterer, Benjamin Cleary, in 2016).

2011 Winners

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2012 Winners

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2013 Winners

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2014 Winners

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2015 Winners

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2016 Winners

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2017 Winners

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2018 Winners

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2019 Winners

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2020 Winners

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2021 Winners

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2022 Winners

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2023 Winners

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References

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  2. "About ASFF". Aesthetica Short Film Festival.
  3. "ASFF 2011". Aesthetica Short Film Festival.
  4. "ASFF 2011 Masterclasses". Aesthetica Short Film Festival. Archived from the original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
  5. "Review of Aesthetica Short Film Festival". Culture Vulture. 23 October 2011.
  6. "This Week's Film Festivals". The Guardian. 28 October 2011.
  7. "ASFF 2012". Aesthetica Short Film Festival.
  8. "ASFF 2012 Masterclasses". Aesthetica Short Film Festival. Archived from the original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
  9. "Short Films from Around the World". The Guardian. 6 November 2012.
  10. "ASFF Director Navid Nikkhah Azad Q&A". The Independent. 6 November 2012. Archived from the original on 8 November 2012.
  11. "What's On". Creative Review. Archived from the original on 19 March 2015. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  12. "Manjinder Virk" (PDF). Elle India.
  13. "ASFF 2013 Masterclasses". Aesthetica Short Film Festival. Archived from the original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
  14. "BAFTA Recognised Festivals" (PDF). British Academy of Film & Television Awards.
  15. "Coda". And Coda Film.
  16. "ASFF 2014 Masterclasses and Events". Aesthetica Short Film Festival. Archived from the original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
  17. "New Advertising Strand". Aesthetica Short Film Festival.
  18. "New Fashion Film Strand". Aesthetica Short Film Festival.
  19. "Fashion in Yorkshire". Cheery Little Thing. Archived from the original on 12 June 2015. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
  20. "Meet the Film Festivals". Aesthetica Short Film Festival.
  21. "Shorts Round-Up". IFTN. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  22. Hutchinson, Charles (5 November 2015). "Aesthetica Short Film Festival: ten of the best film screenings and events in York". The Press. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
  23. "ASFF 2015 winners". Nouse. 10 November 2015. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  24. "ASFF 2016 Events". Aesthetica Magazine.
  25. "New Award Announced For ASFF 2016" (PDF). Aesthetica Magazine.
  26. "ASFF 2016 Jury". Aesthetica Magazine.
  27. Paterson, Colin (2018). "From Hollyoaks to Hollywood?". BBC News. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  28. "Aesthetica Film Festival". FilmFreeway. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  29. "Call for Entries". Aesthetica Short Film Festival. Archived from the original on 13 June 2015. Retrieved 11 June 2015.

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