24/7 Film Festival

24/7 Film Festival
The logo for the 24/7 Youth Film Festival.  The image background is white.  Along the top run "24" and "7" with a dotted line between them.  Running up the right side of the image is the phrase "Youth film festival"
Location Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Founded 2002
Awards received Local Government Cultural Award (2005)
Website http://www.247youthfilmfestival.com.au/

The 24/7 Film Festival is an annual amateur film festival in held in the Mosman, Manly, Warringah Council and Pittwater Council area, all northern suburbs of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. First held in 2002, the Council-sponsored event consists of a challenge to 12- to 24-year-olds to produce a 7-minute film in 24 hours. The festival also consists of film workshops and is crowned by the showing and judging of the entries, held at various local cinemas.[1]

In 2005 the festival won a local government cultural award for leadership in cultural programs and projects.[2]

Item List

A list of 'items' is published each year at the commencement of the competition. It is required that an item from each of the 4 categories appears in each film and that a total of at least 5 items are used. This is to ensure that films were made specifically for the competition and were made in the 24-hour period designated. The four categories are Locations, Concepts, Lines of Dialogue and Objects.

A "Secret Rule" is announced each year at the same time, placing some extra restriction on films to further ensure adherence to the time constraint. The rules for 2006 and 2007 have been to have a line of dialogue in a language other than English, and to have two characters say a line of dialogue at the same time, respectively.[3]

Rules

References

  1. 24/7 Youth Film Festival (from the Pittwater Council website)
  2. Calling young film makers - Warringah Council media release, Wednesday 26 July 2006
  3. "hens night sydney". Saturday, 3 December 2016

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.