The Santa Fe Film Festival is a non-profit organization which presents important world cinema that represents aesthetic, critical, and entertainment standards highlighting New Mexican film. The organization partners with educational groups, schools, and other non-profits to provide a forum for filmmakers, critics, educators, and historians. The award is in the form of a mounted original sculpture. The festival has been listed as one of the top independent film festivals in the United States.[1]
Festival and awards
The festival is generally run between Thanksgiving and Christmas time (late November to early December) in the
Santa Fe, New Mexico area and was inaugurated in 1999[2] but began an institutionalized schedule starting in the year 2000 which sold over 9,000 tickets and passes. The festival was founded by Kurt Young and Joanna England [3] The awards varied over the years. Initial categories included: Best Short, Best Documentary, Best Feature, Best Native American Film, and Best Latino Film. By 2006, the awards became the Milagro Award (best American independent film), the Independent Spirit Award (Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Independent Spirit Award), and the Audience Award, Honorable Mention (if needed), Creative Spirit Award, and the Lifetime Achievement Award (if warranted).
The major contributors to the event, Robert O'Connor, Ben Mason, Jon Bowman and John Armijo, serve as the board of directors, along with Linda Horn.
Kurt Young was the first director of the festival and appointed Jon Bowman. Jon Bowman was the director of the festival for ten years.
Individuals awarded include:
1999
Best Feature- Cider House Rules
2000
Best Short - This Guy Is Falling (2000) - Michael Horowitz (I); Gareth Smith (I)
Screenwriting - Fall to Grace (2005) - Mari Marchbanks
Best of the Southwest - Self Medicated (2005) - Monty Lapica (director); Tommy Bell (II) (producer)
Best Animation - Souvenir (2004) - Stephen Rose (III)
Creative Spirit Award in Documentary - Balloonhat (2005) - A.G. Vermouth
2006
Milagro Award -
Cowboy del Amor (2005) - Michèle Ohayon and English as a Second Language (2005)
Independent Spirit Award - Jam (2006/I) - Craig Serling; Nicole Lonner
Audience Award - Gymnast, The (2006) - Ned Farr
Lifetime Achievement award for Hungarian cinematographer Laszlo Kovacs[5] Kovacs has more than 60 feature films to his credit, including the 1969 biker film
Easy Rider,
Five Easy Pieces,
Paper Moon and
Ghostbusters. Actress
Ali MacGraw hosted the ceremony.
Jury Award: Best Dramatic Feature-
The Only Good Indian (2009)- Kevin Willmott, Thomas L. Carmody, J.T. O'Neal, Scott Richardson, Greg Hurd, Matt Jacobson, Jeremy Osbern, Dan Wildcat, Wes Studi, Matt Cullen