Rotterdam International Film Festival
Rotterdam, Netherlands
Notes
- The festival takes place since 1972.
Awards
ARTE International Prize
Ammodo Tiger Short Competition
Amnesty International - DOEN Award
Amnesty International - DOEN Award - Special Mention
Arte France Cinéma Award
Audience Award
Best of Roffa Film Club
Big Screen Award
Bright Future Award
Bright Future Award - Special Mention
Cinema of the Future
Critics Award
Dioraphte Award
Eurimages Award
FIPRESCI Prize
FIPRESCI Prize - Special Mention
Found Footage Award
Golden Cactus
- The award has been inaugurated in memory of filmmaker 'Theo van Gogh', who was murdered in November 2004.
Hubert Bals Fund Lions Film Award
IFFR Youth Jury Award
KNF Award
KNF Award - Special Mention
Lions Club Award
Lions Film Award
MovieZone Award
- MovieZone is a project of the Dutch Institute of Film education (NIF).
MovieZone Award - Special Mention
Movies That Matter Award
Netpac Award
Netpac Award - Special Mention
New Arrivals Award
Prince Claus Fund Film Grant
Prix Rotterdam (EFA European Short Film)
Prix UIP Rotterdam (European Short Film)
- The winning film is automatically nominated for the European Short Film Award at the next European Film Awards.
Return of the Tiger Award
Robby Müller Award
Rotterdam Award
- Shortly before the 1986 edition, IFFR asked around 80 film professionals to choose their favorites in five categories for the Rotterdam Awards. The festival's motivation was to direct early attention to filmmakers who didn't find the recognition they deserved.
Short & Mid-length
Short Film Award
Signals: Out of Fashion
Special Mention
Specturm
Tiger Award
Tiger Award - Special Mention
Tiger Award for Short Film
Tiger Award for Short Film - Special Mention
Tiger Club Award
Tiger Club Award - Special Mention
Vision Scopitone
WorldView New Genres Fund Development Award
Wouter Barendrecht Award
Historical Timeline
1999
- The festival had more than 300,000 admissions, 460 titles presented at 1,060 screenings, 1,999 guests. All of this was covered by 487 journalist, 211 of which were foreign press.