Location | Wilmington, North Carolina, U.S. |
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Founded | 1994 |
Language | International |
Website | www |
The Cucalorus Film Festival is a film festival held annually in Wilmington, North Carolina. It is one of the largest film festivals in the U.S. South and recognized as a destination film festival for indie filmmakers. [1] MovieMaker magazine recognizes it as "one of the coolest film festivals in the world", and "one of 50 film festivals worth the entry fee". [2] [3] The Brooks Institute named it one of the top ten film festivals in the nation. [4]
Dan Brawley is currently the head ("chief instigator") of the festival. [5] [6]
The Cucalorus Film Festival presents around 150 independent films each year, often controversial, and putting an emphasis on supporting films directed by women and by people of color. The festival also showcases performance art, fringe-style theatre and panels about social justice. [7] [8] [9] [10]
The festival was founded in 1994 by independent filmmaker collective Twinkle Doon. The first official Cucalorus was one standing-room-only night of locally-made indie films dubbed "An Evening of Celluloid Art: a film festival for open minds." Since then, the event expanded to multiple venues in Wilmington and became a permanent fixture in the arts calendar of the town. [11] [12]
The event grew into an interdisciplinary foundation [13] supporting innovation in film, arts and performance and business with programming throughout the year. [14] [15] [16] [17]
Aaron Hillis is one of the festival programmers and curates the "Convulsions" genre program since 2013. [18] [19]
The festival's name is a reference to the term "cucoloris."
Karyn Kiyoko Kusama is an American filmmaker. She made her feature directorial debut with the sports drama film Girlfight (2000), for which she won Best Director and the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival and was nominated for the Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature.
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Reconvergence is a 2012 documentary film directed by Edward Tyndall featuring the lives and views of four characters: naturalist Eustace Conway, scientist Preston Estep, historian Waite Rawls, and poet Caleb Whitaker. The film features a wide exploration of their views on history, memory, consciousness, and the changes wrought by technologies. The film screened at various American film festivals and was distributed by Mobius Films.
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Film and television shot/produced in Wilmington are usually independent and/or low-budget films, mainly due to Wilmington, North Carolina being relatively more affordable than other cities to film in. Other reasons for Wilmington's appeal include the local university (UNCW), its location on the coast, the presence of historic buildings/sites, and vast swamps and waterways outside of Wilmington. It has remained the largest film production area in North Carolina since the 1980s.
The Julien Dubuque International Film festival (JDIFF) is an annual film festival held in Dubuque, Iowa, United States for four days in April. The festival is named after Julien Dubuque, a French-Canadian explorer who founded the city of Dubuque. The festival was ranked in 2022 as one of the top 50 film festivals worth the submission fee by moviemaker magazine. In 2013, the magazine had listed it as one of the "25 Coolest Film Festivals".