SLIFF Recap
The 29th Annual Whitaker St. Louis International Film Festival (SLIFF) was held virtually from Nov. 5-22. The fest had a total estimated viewership of 26,100, including 10,400 St. Louis-area students who participated in our free Cinema for Students program. A note on methodology: Because most programs were watched at home by more than a single person, public viewership was estimated by multiplying the number of total programs streamed (8,942) by 1.75.
Because of the virtual nature of this year’s fest, viewers from outside the St. Louis area also participated in many programs, with 45 states and 32 countries represented.
SLIFF screened 374 films in 149 virtual screenings: 64 narrative features, 49 documentary features, 153 narrative shorts, and 108 documentary shorts. There were an additional three film programs exclusive to Cinema for Students. The fest also featured nine livestreamed special events, including six master classes and a New Filmmakers Forum roundtable. A total of 56 programs were offered for free. This year’s festival featured films from 64 countries in 46 languages.
The festival kicked off with a free opening-night special event featuring the documentary short “8:46” — which records a powerful performance by comedian Dave Chappelle in response to the killing of George Floyd — and a livestreamed conversation with Chappelle and the film’s Oscar-winning directors, Steven Bognar and Julia Reichert.
SLIFF concluded with the livestreamed closing-night awards presentation on the evening of Nov. 22. The following juried-competition and audience-choice awards were presented:
Shorts Awards
Juries choose the winners of six awards from among the shorts in competition. The SLIFF shorts competition is officially sanctioned by the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, making the winners in the Best of Fest, Best Animated, Best Live Action, and Best Documentary categories eligible to submit for Oscar consideration.
Best Documentary Short: Colette, directed by Anthony Giacchino
Best Short Short: R.A.S., directed by Lucas Durkheim
Best International Short: The Cut, directed by Chloé Cinq-Mars
Best Animated Short: To the Dusty Sea, directed by Héloïse Ferlay
Best Live Action Short: Black Goat, directed by Yi Tang
Best of Fest Short: Josiah, directed by Kyle Laursen
Interfaith Awards
Juries give Interfaith Awards to both a documentary and a narrative, choosing from among 16 competition films (eight in each category), which were selected for their artistic merit; contribution to the understanding of the human condition; and recognition of ethical, social, and spiritual values.
Best Documentary Feature: A Place to Breathe, directed by Michelle Grace Steinberg
Best Narrative Feature: I Am You, directed by Sonia Nassery Cole
St. Louis Film Critics Association Joe Pollack and Joe Williams Awards
In conjunction with the St. Louis Film Critics organization, SLIFF holds juried competitions for documentary and narrative features. The awards are named in honor of the late St. Louis Post-Dispatch critics Joe Pollack (narrative) and Joe Williams (documentary). The winners are picked by two juries composed of St. Louis film critics. SLIFF chose eight films to compete in each category.
Best Documentary Feature: 9to5: The Story of a Movement, directed by Steven Bognar & Julia Reichert
Best Narrative Feature: Beasts Clawing at Straws, directed by Kim Yong-Hoon
Essy Awards for Best St. Louis Films
Sponsored by the Chellappa-Vedavalli Foundation
SLIFF inaugurated a new juried competition at this year’s festival: The Essy Awards, which honor works either made in St. Louis or by a filmmaker with ties to the area. The awards — for Best Documentary Short, Best Narrative Short, Best Documentary Feature, and Best Narrative Feature — are accompanied by $250 prizes.
Best Documentary Short: I Want to Make a Film About Women, directed by Karen Pearlman
Best Narrative Short: Augustus, directed by Jon Alston
Best Documentary Feature: Zappa, directed by Alex Winter
Best Narrative Feature: Test Pattern, directed by Shatara Michelle Ford
New Filmmakers Forum Emerging Director Award (The Bobbie)
Sponsored by Barry & Jackie Albrecht and Pat Scallet
The New Filmmakers Forum (NFF) annually presents the Emerging Director Award. Since its inception, NFF was co-curated by Bobbie Lautenschlager. Bobbie died in the summer of 2012, and SLIFF honors her memory by nicknaming the NFF Emerging Director Award as the Bobbie. Five works by first-time feature filmmakers competed for the prize, which includes a $500 cash award.
Small Time, directed by Niav Conty
Spotlight on Inspiration Documentary Award
Sponsored by The Albrecht Family
This juried competition awards a $5,000 prize to a feature documentary that focuses on people working to make the world a better place and that inspires audience members and leaves them with a sense of hope for the future.
The Road Up, directed by Greg Jacobs & Jon Siskel
Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality Documentary Award
Sponsored by Zoe Dawn Peterson and Brian Woodman
In addition to SLIFF’s annual audience awards, the fest partnered with the Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality to present a new audience award. Attendees of SSSS’s virtual conference, which coincided with SLIFF, viewed three films — “Cured,” “The Dilemma of Desire,” and “Transhood” — in a program that the organization co-presented with the fest. The conference attendees voted on the award, which is accompanied by a $500 cash prize.
Transhood, directed by Sharon Liese
Best of Fest Audience Choice Awards
Online audience voting determined the winner of five awards from among the films in competition.
Best Documentary Short: Always Coming Back, directed by Nate Townsend
Best Narrative Short: The Mirror, directed by Joel Kohn
Leon Award for Best Documentary Feature: God Save the Wings, directed by Adam Knapp & Kenneth Linn
TV5MONDE Award for Best International Feature: Beasts Clawing at Straws, directed by Kim Yong-Hoon
Best Narrative Feature: Asia, directed by Ruthy Pribar