Full programme announced for Glasgow Short Film Festival 2024

The full programme has been announced for the 17th edition of Glasgow Short Film Festival (GSFF), running at GFT, CCA and Civic House from 20 to 24 March.

For the 17th edition, Glasgow Short Film Festival will provoke audiences to reflect on collectivity, liberation and archives, with a special strand entitled Towards Liberation. Towards Liberation will utilise archive, documentary and fictional short films from across the globe to examine threads around imprisonment, imperialism, representation and resistance.

The strand will include a programme of Palestinian short films (Weapons of criticism and dedicated consciousness), which will be followed by a live performance by British-Palestinian musician and sound artist Kareem Samara, whose joining of traditional and contemporary genres explores threads of decolonial possibilities and diasporic identity. 50% of ticket sales from this screening will be donated to Medical Aid for Palestinians.

Tying in with this year’s programme, GSFF has invited several population groups at HMP & YOI Polmont to watch the 2024 Scottish Competition titles and add their votes to the Scottish Audience Award. The winner of this award will be announced at the award ceremony on the last day of the festival (24 March 2024).

They will also be given the opportunity to participate in workshops run by award-winning animator, Ross Hogg, and watch several other festival highlights programmes during the festival week. This programme is delivered in partnership with Glass Performance, with support from the National Lottery Community Fund.

A still from Gracemary (1966), courtesy of GSFF. A woman wearing a 60s style glittery blue dress, grey fur stole and white evening gloves stands outdoors, with a tower block in the background.

Other highlights across the packed five day programme include:

  • Opening event, Bill Douglas Unseen Super 8, will debut six early 8mm films by the great Scottish filmmaker Bill Douglas, charting his development as a visual storyteller. This programme will be accompanied by a live score composed and performed by Scottish musician Gerard Black (Babe, Archipel, François & the Atlas Mountains), and introduced by Bill's lifelong friend, confidante and collaborator Peter Jewell.

  • A spotlight on French-Moroccan filmmaker Randa Maroufi (Bab Sebta, Barbès, Close-Up), who will be in attendance for a retrospective screening and in-conversation event. Born in Casablanca and based in Paris, Maroufi carefully stages and measures moving image works that observe layers of socio-political realities, often focusing on the images and narratives of public spaces and who occupies them, the seen and unseen, interrogating and subverting their conventions. Her films have screened at festivals such as IFF Rotterdam, DOK Leipzig, MoMA’s New Directors/New Films, and FIDMarseille, winning several awards. Randa’s work The Intruders will be exhibited in CCA’s Intermedia Gallery during the festival from Thursday 21 - Saturday 23 March. Intermedia Gallery is free to enter. Complementing this focus on Randa Maroufi is a programme of contemporary Moroccan artist moving image work, curated by Myriam Mouflih.

  • A collaboration with archive collective Invisible Women, who will present an expanded focus on the rarely seen and boundary-pushing films of 1970s Mexican feminist filmmaking group Cine Mujer, exploring gender roles and domestic labour. Complementing these works is an archive programme in the Until Liberation strand and an artists’ conversation about reframing archive as a political tool, which will include Jyoti Mistry and other filmmakers.

  • GSFF will work closely with Glasgow primary and secondary schools on a dedicated learning programme. Family Shorts will screen to primary schools at CCA and Platform in Easterhouse, accompanied by animation workshops, and filmmakers drawn from the Scottish competition will visit several secondary schools to present and discuss their work. This programme is supported by Screen Scotland.

Still from A Bear Named Wojtek, courtesy of GSFF. An animated image featuring four soldiers walking beside a bear in the desert.

Glasgow Short Film Festival has two annual competitions, awarded at the close of the festival. The Scottish Short Film Award, sponsored by Blazing Griffin (cash prize of £1500), honours inspiration and innovation in new Scottish cinema, with twenty new films selected. Named in honour of the legendary Scottish filmmaker, the Bill Douglas Award for International Short Film (cash prize of £1000) promotes cinematic storytelling that places sound and image centre stage, and this year includes twenty eight documentary, animation, fiction and experimental shorts from Haiti, Sudan, Kosovo, Brazil, Egypt, Thailand, and more.

The GSFF24 audience will have the opportunity to choose their favourites to win the International Audience Award, sponsored by Shorts TV+ (cash prize of £1000) and the Scottish Audience Award, sponsored by Savalas (in kind prize of studio time) whilst the Bill Douglas Award is selected by an international jury including Céline Roustan, programmer and film critic for SXSW and Short of the Week; Jonathan Ali, programming director at Third Horizon Film Festival and programme consultant for Locarno Open Doors, Alchemy Film & Arts, and others; and Randa Maroufi, the subject of our filmmaker focus.

The Scottish Short Film Award, sponsored by Blazing Griffin, is awarded by a jury consisting of Jason Anderson, international short film programmer at Toronto International Film Festival and programme director at Aspen Shortsfest; Niels Putman, artistic director of Kortfilm.be, co-founder/chief editor of Talking Shorts and freelance curator; and Glasgow-based screenwriter/director Raisah Ahmed.

The Young Scottish Filmmaker Prize also returns for a third year, with two competition categories dedicated to showcasing talented Scottish filmmakers aged 18 - 25. Each winner will receive £1500 in funding, and all shortlisted filmmakers will receive £250 in addition to continual support and guidance. The Young Scottish Filmmaker Prize is delivered in partnership with Glasgow Film Festival, Glasgow Film, Eden Court, supported by BFI Film Academy, National Lottery funding and designed in consultation with Short Circuit and GMAC Film.

The full GSFF24 industry programme will be unveiled in the next coming weeks.

Matt Lloyd, Festival Director said: "Welcome to the 17th edition of Glasgow Short Film Festival! This year’s programme - sadly the final one to be delivered by our outgoing Programme Director Sanne Jehoul - is as challenging, curious and diverse as we’ve come to expect from her. Plunging into the archive, from the early film experiments of Bill Douglas to the work of artists like Jyoti Mistry and curators Invisible Women, we consider how repurposed archive film can challenge our contemporary context in ways big and small.

"I'm thrilled that the strand Towards Liberation, devised by Sanne with Festival Coordinator Oisín Kealy and exploring themes of imprisonment and oppression, is accompanied by the realisation of her long-held ambition to offer some of the festival programme to Scottish prison populations. Thanks to the National Lottery Community Fund for supporting this collaboration with Glass Performance and HMP Polmont.

"Huge thanks as ever to our funders Screen Scotland, Film Hub Scotland and Glasgow Life. We're really grateful to be working with award sponsors Blazing Griffin, Shorts TV+ and Savalas this year, along with our stalwart venue partners Glasgow Film Theatre, CCA and Civic House, Platform in Easterhouse and a host of primary and secondary schools across the city. And finally of course, a personal heartfelt thank you to Sanne, who after ten editions of the festival leaves an indelible stamp on its identity, values and purpose. She’ll be irreplaceable."

Glasgow Life Chair, Bailie Annette Christie, said: "Glasgow is renowned as an outstanding destination for cultural events, and our internationally acclaimed, much-loved film festivals contribute so much to the city’s reputation as an innovative hub for the arts and creative industries. They demonstrate Glasgow’s appreciation of great cinema and our recognition of its life-enhancing, inspirational importance.

"We are proud to be the host of Scotland’s leading event celebrating short films – which are so often an under-celebrated form of visual storytelling. This 17th edition of Glasgow Short Film Festival features a dynamic, diverse programme that will appeal to a broad range of audiences, and we look forward to welcoming them to what will, I’m sure, be another fabulous city festival celebrating great world cinema.”

 

More information

Since 2008, Glasgow Short Film Festival has been the leading short film event in Scotland. We host an inclusive community of filmmakers and film lovers, showcasing ground-breaking works of visual storytelling. The festival nurtures, promotes and inspires diverse forms of cinematic expression, in Scotland and around the world. In everything we do, we aim to be critical and curious, welcoming and accessible.

In 2019 the festival reconstituted as a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation (SCIO), charity number SC049556.

Glasgow Short Film Festival is delivered with support from Glasgow Life and Film Hub Scotland, and funded by the National Lottery, through Screen Scotland.

Images: Still from In My Network by Randa Maroufi, courtesy of GSFF; Still from Gracemary by Bill Douglas, courtesy of GSFF; Still from A Bear Named Wojtek by Iain Gardner, courtesy of GSFF.