Register  |   Log In  |  
Sign up to our weekly newsletter    
Search   
Follow Me on Pinterest
Empire
Trending On Empire
Two free posters with Empire magazine
Subscribe: Get Dead Island: Riptide
Empire's Soundtrack Celebration
90 Years Of Warner Bros.
Vote for your favourite film
Cannes Film Festival 2013
News, photos and more from the Croisette
Empire Blogs
Under The Radar

Back to all blogs Comment Now

EIFF 2012: Round-up

Posted on Monday July 2, 2012, 10:25 by Stephen Carty in Under The Radar
EIFF 2012: Round-up

So the sun has now set on the 66th Edinburgh International Film festival – not that it ever really came out in between all the intermittent trouser-soaking downpours – and the general feeling is sadness that the party is over. Which, if you think about it, is actually a pretty good thing. For while it’s impossible to tell if it was a success from a commercial point of view without knowledge of the box-office figures, this year’s fortnight of films has been met by a largely positive response.

Indeed, right from creative director Chris Fujiwara’s opening address at the listings brochure launch, a wave of relief seemed to wash over the journalists in attendance. Following the ill-received events of last year’s festival, you could argue that Fujiwara merely had to turn up in order to do a better job, yet Fujiwara instantly won us all over with his brave and eclectic choice of programming. In a day and age where we go into big movies having already seen a teaser, a handful of content-varying trailers and a few increasingly-lengthy TV spots (all of which usually give away all the key plot points in order), the theme of discovery was perhaps more important than ever. Though we have a good idea of how each major release is essentially going to play out by the time we sit down in our seats, here it was a refreshing change to go in knowing next to nothing about the majority of features on show.

In truth, there were no stone cold ‘classics’ this time around. But while we didn’t see anything to rival previous EIFF hits like The Hurt Locker, Moon, Let The Right One In, Up or Little Miss Sunshine, there were still lots of notable entries. Compelling documentary The Imposter seems to be the one that most critics have been naming as their favourite over the last few days, while other stand-outs include the hugely enjoyable horror-comedy Grabbers, Lynchian mind-bender Beberian Sound Studio, lovely little drama California Solo and thoughtful martial arts genre-blender Dragon. And of course, William Friedkin’s sleazy, deep-fried Texan noir Killer Joe was a seriously bold movie to open with (not to mention a huge talking point as a whole), while Pixar-Disney’s folksy fairy-tale Brave was an undoubted coup to score as the closing film. In Person talks were scarce, but Jim Broadbent and Elliott Gould (pictured) both gave crowd-pleasing talks at packed Traverse houses.

Certainly, it was very much an arthouse-flavoured line-up overall. But while the festival was hailed as a pleasing return to form among cinefiles and indie-orientated film fans, it remains to be seen whether the EIFF was a commercial success when it came to public screenings. After all, though placing emphasis on the Philippine New Wave and Danish cinema scored bit with the cultured critics, would it get bums on seats? While including a few retrospectives of filmmakers which few of us knew much about (Shinji Somai, Gregory La Cava) was an admirable move, did Joe Public give two hoots?

As noted before, it’s impossible to tell just yet without knowing the box office figures. But although it remains to be seen whether the festival was a ‘success’ in terms of the ka-ching, Fujiwara deserves plenty of credit for bringing its buzz and mojo back. Could it have been better? Yes. Could it have been worse? Definitely. Was it enjoyable? For sure. Are the majority of us sad that it’s over? You bet your Innis & Gunn beer we are.

The Awards:

* The Michael Powell Award for Best British Feature Film went to Penny Woolcock for One Mile Away. The award was presented by a Jury headed by actor Jim Broadbent, who was joined by Japanese actress and producer Kiki Sugino and the founder and director of Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival, Tiina Lokk.

* Andrea Riseborough and Brid Brennan jointly won awards for Best Performance in a British Feature Film for their performances in James Marsh’s Shadow Dancer. The performance awards were voted for by the Michael Powell Jury.

* The Award for Best Film in the International Feature Competition, supported by Innis & Gunn, was won by Chinese documentary Here, Then, directed by Mao Mao was present to pick up this coveted Award. The Jury gave a Special Mention to Argentinian film Papirosen by Gastón Solnicki. This year’s International Feature Competition Jury comprised actor Elliott Gould, who presided over the Jury, independent producer Julietta Sichel and filmmaker Lav Diaz.


Login or register to comment.

Currently No Comments

Log in below, or register to post comments
Username:
Password:
Remember Me:

CATEGORIES

Empire States (412)

Under The Radar (289)

Infinite Lives (75)

Small Screen (53)

Cannes 2011 (28)

Off The Wire (23)

Comic-Con 2010 (21)

Words From The Wise (11)

Casting Couch (2)

Oscars 2011 (1)


RECENT POSTS

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
By Stephen Carty

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
By Olly Richards

Arrow: The Pilot
By Stephen Carty

TV Review: Homeland Episode 1
By Stephen Carty

Empire Visits Fresh Meat Season 2
By Phil de Semlyen

Does Elementary Cut The Mustard?
By Stephen Carty

Dallas: Changing Of The Guard
By Stephen Carty

The Newsroom: First Reaction
By Stephen Carty

House: The Final Finale
By Stephen Carty

True Blood: Season Four - What A Witch
By Helen O'Hara


RECENT COMMENTS

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"Agreed thought the show was absolutely terrific, looking forward to the next few episodes and seeing"  TheDavidFoster
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"I think you need to go a bit easier on the movies Hannibal and Red Dragon. Individually they are bot"  danielthompson99
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"I've been loving it so far but apparently NBC are already having the jitters having already moved th"  kisswithatear
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"I love it so far. I agree that it should have been a Showtime or HBO tv show because there's more ro"  thisiscarlijn
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"Didn't even want to watch this show initially. A friend talked me into watching the premiere episode"  readyrr
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"Agreed. Best new show I have see for a while. Totally destroys the god-awful The Following (not hard"  Youshouldberunning
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"@lankeymarlon, it is in fact possible to access the US Netflix selection in the UK if you are watchi"  Craigmustdie
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"Amazing show, really on a different intellectual level to most things on tv. Mostly avoids using the"  Zimbo
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"Watched the whole series and its been excellent. Its the kind of role Kevin Spacey was born to play "  Popcorn Required
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"I'm 6 episodes in too and this is an impressive start for Netflix as a specially commissioned series"  Brother L
Read comment


POPULAR POSTS

What's The Best TV Show Ever?
307 comments

We Don't Need Another Heroes
122 comments

Lost: The End
112 comments

What's The Best Show On TV Right Now?
104 comments

The Show Must Go On
102 comments

Smallville: The End Is Upon Us
63 comments

Ten Ways To Improve 24
58 comments

Why The US Office Is Undeniably Better Than The Original
57 comments

My Problems With Sherlock
49 comments

Sherlock Holmes And The Curious Case Of The Princess Bride
43 comments


BLOGGERS
Damon Wise (273)
Helen O'Hara (156)
James Dyer (85)
Chris Hewitt (83)
Amar Vijay (71)
Ali Plumb (50)
David Scarborough (38)
Sam Toy (34)
Sam Toy (31)
Stephen Carty (31)
James White (27)
Simon Braund (24)
Olly Richards (23)
Ian Freer (21)
Nick de Semlyen (20)
Phil de Semlyen (18)
Nev Pierce (10)
Glen Ferris (8)
Dan Jolin (8)
Nick de Semlyen (8)
Owen Williams (8)
Peter Lord (6)
Emily Phillips (6)
Kat Brown (3)
Dan Goodswen (3)
Kim Newman (3)
Jodie McEwan (3)
Empire Empire (2)
Sebastian Williamson (2)
Eve Barlow (2)
Emma Cochrane (2)
Edmund Ward (1)
Chris Smith (1)
Alice Wybrew (1)
Jonny Pile (1)
Steve Charnock (1)
Empire Workie (1)
Colin Kennedy (1)
Tom Ambrose (1)
Lucy Quick (1)
Benjamin Lee (1)
David Parkinson (1)
Dallas King (1)
Ross Bennett (1)
John Hitchcox (1)
Siam Goorwich (1)
Sanam Jehanfard (1)
Anton Bitel (1)


CURRENT HIGHLIGHTS
Movie Poster Mashups: The Furniture Edition
You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll be appalled at the punning...

Cannes Film Festival Videblogisodes #1
Leonardo Di Caprio, Baz Luhrmann and a mysterious stranger kick things off

Exclusive: Why Man Of Steel Wasn't Called Superman
Writer and producer David S. Goyer speaks

Dwayne Johnson Talks Fast & Furious 6
'I wanted to come in and frankly dominate the movie.'

Music Celebration: David Holmes On The Making Of The Out Of Sight Soundtrack
'I watched the film... the music was all over the shop'

The Rise And Fall Of The Movie Power Ballad
What happened to those endless movie theme no.1 hits?

Hans Zimmer Career Interview
On The Dark Knight, Man Of Steel and Going For Gold

Subscribe For Only £20
Get Dead Island: Riptide and six issues of Empire for only £20! Subscribe now
Steven Spielberg iPad App
Hollywood's most beloved director in this unique iPad special. Download now
Empire iPad Edition
The world's biggest movie magazine available on iPad Download now
Home  |  News  |  Blogs  |  Reviews  |  Future Films  |  Features  |  Interviews  |  Images  |  Competitions  |  Forum  |  iPad  |  Podcast  |  Magazine Contact Us  |  Empire FAQ  |  Subscribe To Empire  |  Register
© Bauer Consumer Media  |  Terms And Conditions  |  Our Data Promise To You  |  Bauer Entertainment Network
Bauer Consumer Media. Company number 1176085 (England). Registered Office: 21 Holborn Viaduct, London EC1A 2DY