DaVinci International Film Festival

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DaVinci International Film Festival
DaVinci International Film Festival logo.png
Honorary Leo Award - DaVinci International Film Festival 2017.jpg
LocationLos Angeles and Washington DC
Founded2017
Founded byChadwick Pelletier
AwardsVitruvian Award, Leo Award
LanguageInternational
Websitedavincifilm.org

The DaVinci International Film Festival (DIFF) is held annually in Los Angeles, California[1] and is produced by the non-profit DaVinci Film Foundation Inc.[2] The festival governs four key programs including their screenwriting competition series STORYLINE, presented by Final Draft, the DaVinci Film Institute, which honors beurgeoning filmmakers with screenings and scholarships held at The Kennedy Center in Washington DC, sponsored by Coca-Cola,[3] and documentaries at DIFFdocs.

DIFF operates quarterly, qualifying and awarding contemporary independent narrative. short, animation, and documentary film projects and screenplay's at STORYLINE, with their Vitruvian Awards. Vitruvian filmmakers and screenwriters remain in competition for the festival's Leo Award, presented at their annual event. Competitive juried categories include Women In Film, Native American, military, and student film.

Special screenings for DIFF's Vitruvian VIP's have included the Consul (representative) of Azerbaijan,[4] Monaco, India, and Russia.

History[]

The DaVinci International Film Festival was founded in 2017 by filmmaker and Creative Director Chadwick Pelletier.[5][6].

Inaugural festival at Laemmle Theaters in Santa Monica, CA.

DIFF's inaugural festival was hosted at the historic Laemmle Theaters in Santa Monica, California on May 17, 2018[7] and was awarded FilmFreeway's Top 100 Best Reviewed film festival,[8] screening Tracktown starring Olympic athlete, Alexi Pappas, Money, starring Jesse Williams (actor), Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World, and Honor Council, written and directed by Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting winner, Scott Simonsen.[9]

DIFF hosted its 2019 Vitruvian Awards at Raleigh Studios in Hollywood, California, expanding its award categories to include documentary filmmaking under DIFFdocs and awarding its first Leo Award to documentarian, Herbert Golder for his film Ballad of a Righteous Merchant starring Werner Herzog, William Dafoe, and Michael Shannon. Other winning films in the narrative category included Aberne by Irati Santiago Mujika and I'm F%$#ing Fine by writer-director Jamie Anderson, starring Bree Turner.

DaVinci International Film Festival's third annual Vitruvian Awards were hosted online as a virtual fest, September 10-13th, 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Among the Vitruvian Awarded films were The Cuban, Anna, Birds of Passage (film), Bluebird, and Mosul (2019 action film).[10] DIFF's Leo Award in the animation category went to Malakout, directed by Farnooshh Abedi.[11] Also in 2020, the DaVinci International Film festival introduced an all-new Ultra-Short Shelter-in-place program called COVIDaVINCI, which opened entries to amateur filmmakers around the world for an opportunity to be screened at DIFF's virtual festival.[12]

Due to the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant, DaVinci International Film Festival hosted its 4th Edition Vitruvian Awards online, October 10-15, 2021.[13] Leo Award winners included[14][15] The Last Tour by director Douglas Pedro Sánchez, The Criminals in the narrative short film category, which also won the Special Jury Award for screenwriting at Sundance Film Festival,[16] Max Steiner: Maestro of Movie Magic, Iara Lee's short documentary From Trash to Treasure: Turning Negatives into Positives, and GON: The Little Fox for best animation film by Japan director, Takeshi Yashiro.

Awards[]

DaVinci International Film Festival honors independent filmmakers and screenwriters with quarterly and annual awards.[17]

DaVinci International Film Festival Vitruvian Awards
DIFF Vitruvian Awards

Vitruvian Award[]

Named after Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man, DIFF's Vitruvian Award is given to quarterly winners in narrative, animation, documentary, and screenwriting categories.[18]

2019 Leo Award, Rwanda

Leo Award[]

DIFF's Leonardo da Vinci bust statue is awarded to Best of Fest in each category and is the highest honor at the international film festival.

Honorary[]

Each year, the DaVinci International Film Festival's Board of Directors honors special achievements in independent film and philanthropy. Among the recipients include CEO and Entrepreneur, Andy Khawaja of Allied Wallet.[19]

Organization[]

The festival has a presence in both the United States and in Europe,[20] and is currently operated by Founder and CEO, Chadwick Pelletier and the NPO's Board of Directors. The festival's international Advisory Board representatives are located in France and Monaco.[21]

Non-profit and Mission[]

DaVinci Film Foundation Inc. was recognized as a registered 501(c)3 nonprofit in 2019[22] with a Mission Statement aimed to cultivate and honor independent Creatives across multiple disciplines in the arts and sciences.[23] According to Pelletier: "DIFF's format was largely modeled after the luminary, Leonardo da Vinci, hence the name," he said. "Our goal at DIFF is to honor the independent creative -- across domains -- and celebrate divergent and meaningful Works with a long-term objective to create a competitive and boutique version of Venice Biennale,” he concluded.[24]

References[]

  1. ^ "Los Angeles Film Festival". Film.ca.gov.
  2. ^ "Yahoo Finance". finance.yahoo.com.
  3. ^ "DaVinci International Film Festival Celebrates Its Move to Washington DC Furthering Its Mission to Support the Arts and Sciences". Businesswire.com.
  4. ^ "Azerbaijan film named at DaVinci International Film Festival". trend.az.
  5. ^ "Festival Organizers". FilmFreeway.com/davincifilmfestival.
  6. ^ "Founder, Chadwick Pelletier". linkedin.com.
  7. ^ "Laemmle Theater". Laemmle.com.
  8. ^ "Top 100 Best Reviewed Festival and Testimonials". davincifilmfestival.com.
  9. ^ "Vitruvian Awards Showcase Results 2018". davincifilmfestival.com.
  10. ^ "2020 DaVinci Film Festival Vitruvian Awards". imdb.com.
  11. ^ "Tehran's "Malakout" at DaVinci Intl Film Festival". mehrnews.com.
  12. ^ "COVID-19 Ultra-short Program". prlog.org.
  13. ^ "DIFF 2021 and Pandemic Update Program". davincifilmfestival.com.
  14. ^ "2021 Leo Award Results". davincifilmfestival.com.
  15. ^ "IMdb - DaVinci Film Festival". imdb.com.
  16. ^ "French Cinema Worldwide - The Criminals". unifrance.org.
  17. ^ "Festival Awards". filmfreeway.com.
  18. ^ "Award Categories". davincifilmfestival.com.
  19. ^ "Honorary Leo Award 2018". davincifilmfestival.com.
  20. ^ "DIFF Locations & Contact". davincifilmfestival.com.
  21. ^ "Board of Directors". davincifilm.org.
  22. ^ "Charity Navigator". Charitynavigator.org.
  23. ^ "DIFF Deck and Statement" (PDF). davincifilmfestival.com.
  24. ^ "VFT Press Release (Archive)". veritasmedia.ca.

External links[]

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