Sedicicorto International Film Festival

The Sedicicorto International Film Festival (sometimes stylised as 16corto) is a competitive short film festival held each October in the Italian city of Forlì since 2004.

Sedicicorto International Film Festival
LocationForlì, Emilia-Romagna
Founded2004
Founded byGianluca Castellini
Film titlesShort films
Hosted bySedicicorto Association
No. of films212 selections
46 countries (2020)
Websitesedicicorto.it

History

In March 2004, the Sedicicorto Association was founded in Forlì by Gianluca Castellini with the aim to launch the first short film festival of the Romagna subregion. The project was born during a directing course held by an Argentinian photographer in Forlì, with Castellini as a participant.[1]

The first edition of the festival was established in October 2004. The event lasted four days and was of national character. Starting from 2005, more sections were added in order to award all categories of short films. In 2020, the nine-day festival presented awards for five sections: foreign films, Italian films, experimental animated films, children's films and films under two minutes. Alongside the official selection of about 200 titles out from 5'000 submissions, the festival screens films out of competition. Since 2018, an Iran short film festival is organised annually along with the Sedicicorto.[2] All screenings are held in the theatres of the old town of Forlì.

The name Sedicicorto is a pun on the Italian expression "se dici corto" (if you say short). When artistic director Gianluca Castellini was taking suggestions for the title, he asked his friends: "If you say short (film), what makes you think?". The title is often stylised as 16corto because sedici in Italian means "sixteen".

Award winners

Best foreign film

See also

References

  1. Rabai, Carlo Maria (October 8, 2020). "Interview with Gianluca Castellini, Sedicicorto Film Festival artistic director". Birdmen Magazine (in Italian). Retrieved October 23, 2020.
  2. "Sedicicorto and IranFest". Forlì Today (in Italian). September 11, 2018. Retrieved October 23, 2020.


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