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International Federation of Film Critics
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The International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI, short for Fédération Internationale de la Presse Cinématographique) is an association of national organizations of professional film critics and film journalists from around the world for "the promotion and development of film culture and for the safeguarding of professional interests." It was founded in June 1930 in Brussels, Belgium.[1] It has members in more than 50 countries worldwide.
Key Information
History
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2023) |
In reaction to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, FIPRESCI announced that it will not participate in festivals and other events organized by the Russian government and its offices, and canceled a colloquium in St. Petersburg, that was to make it familiar with new Russian films.[2]
FIPRESCI Award
[edit]The FIPRESCI often presents awards during film festivals to recognize examples of enterprising filmmaking. Some of these festivals include: the Berlin International Film Festival,[3] the Cannes Film Festival, Vienna International Film Festival, the Toronto International Film Festival, the Venice Film Festival, the Warsaw Film Festival, and the International Film Festival of Kerala.
Winners of the award include:
- Abbas Kiarostami
- Abderrahmane Sissako
- Aditya Kripalani
- Adoor Gopalakrishnan
- Aki Kaurismäki
- Akira Kurosawa
- Antoni Krauze
- Andrei Tarkovsky
- Andrzej Wajda
- Arun Karthick
- Bahman Ghobadi
- Béla Tarr
- Bertrand Bonello[4][3]
- Bruno Jori
- Claire Denis
- Cristian Mungiu
- Danis Tanović
- Djibril Diop Mambety
- Harris Dickinson
- Ingmar Bergman
- Jafar Panahi
- Jean-Luc Godard
- Jonathan Glazer
- Julia Ducournau
- Ken Loach
- Kim Ki-duk
- Laurent Cantet
- Lee Chang-dong
- Makbul Mubarak
- Manoel de Oliveira
- Marco Ferreri
- Michael Haneke[5]
- Michael Moore
- Neeraj Ghaywan
- Nobuhiko Obayashi
- Nuri Bilge Ceylan
- Orson Welles
- Paul Thomas Anderson
- Pedro Almodóvar
- Prateek Vats
- Rainer Werner Fassbinder
- Robert Eggers[6]
- Roman Polanski
- Satyajit Ray
- Shaji N Karun
- Srđan Karanović
- Terrence Malick
- Theodoros Angelopoulos
- Uisenma Borchu[7]
- Yılmaz Güney
- Şerif Gören
- Yôko Yamanaka[8]
- Werner Herzog
- Wong Kar-wai
- Woody Allen
- Wuershan[9]
Robert Bresson refused this award at the 1974 Cannes Film Festival.[citation needed]
FIPRESCI Grand Prix
[edit]The FIPRESCI Grand Prix was created in 1999, and is presented every year at the San Sebastián Film Festival. It is the federation's most representative acknowledgement, as it is not chosen by a jury (like the international critics prize awarded to a film from a festival program), but is elected by all members, and all feature-length productions of the previous twelve months are eligible.
Winners include:
- 1982 - Yol, Yılmaz Güney
- 1985 – Faces of Women (Visages de femmes), Desiré Ecaré
- 1998 – The Hole, Tsai Ming-liang
- 1999 – All About My Mother (Todo sobre mi madre), Pedro Almodóvar
- 2000 – Magnolia, Paul Thomas Anderson
- 2001 – The Circle, Jafar Panahi
- 2002 – The Man Without a Past, Aki Kaurismäki
- 2003 – Uzak, Nuri Bilge Ceylan
- 2004 – Notre musique, Jean-Luc Godard
- 2005 – 3-Iron, Kim Ki-duk
- 2006 – Volver, Pedro Almodóvar
- 2007 – 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, Cristian Mungiu
- 2008 – There Will Be Blood, Paul Thomas Anderson
- 2009 – The White Ribbon, Michael Haneke
- 2010 – The Ghost Writer, Roman Polanski
- 2011 – The Tree of Life, Terrence Malick
- 2012 – Amour, Michael Haneke
- 2013 – Blue Is the Warmest Colour (La vie d'Adèle), Abdellatif Kechiche
- 2014 – Boyhood, Richard Linklater
- 2015 – Mad Max: Fury Road, George Miller
- 2016 – Toni Erdmann, Maren Ade
- 2017 – The Other Side of Hope, Aki Kaurismäki
- 2018 – Phantom Thread, Paul Thomas Anderson
- 2019 – Roma, Alfonso Cuarón
- 2020 – Not awarded[10]
- 2021 – Nomadland, Chloé Zhao[11]
- 2022 – Drive My Car, Ryusuke Hamaguchi[12]
- 2023 – Fallen Leaves, Aki Kaurismäki[13]
- 2024 – Poor Things, Yorgos Lanthimos[14]
- 2025 - I'm Still Here, Walter Salles[15]
Journal
[edit]As of 2005, it also offers an online cinema journal, Undercurrents, edited by film critic Chris Fujiwara.[16]
References
[edit]- ^ "Historical background 1925–1945". fipresci.org. International Federation of Film Critics. Archived from the original on 29 October 2010. Retrieved 31 July 2010.
- ^ "Ukrainian Letters".
- ^ a b "72nd Berlinale – International Film Festival Berlin". fipresci.org. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
- ^ "54th Cannes Film Festival". fipresci.org. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
- ^ "Michael Haneke's Amour, winner of the FIPRESCI Grand Prix". sansebastianfestival.com. Archived from the original on 13 March 2016. Retrieved 30 November 2012.
- ^ "'The Lighthouse' Wins Fipresci Critics Awards At Cannes Film Festival". Deadline.com. 25 May 2019. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
- ^ "Uisenma Borchu". fipresci.org. Archived from the original on 10 April 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
- ^ Takuya, Matsumoto (30 October 2024). "Yamanaka Yōko's "Desert of Namibia" Shows Young Film Director's Promise". nippon.com. Retrieved 7 July 2025.
- ^ Yingjin Zhang (2012). A Companion to Chinese Cinema. Wiley. p. 253. ISBN 978-1-444-33029-8.
- ^ "FIPRESCI to Skip Grand Prix 2020". Retrieved 25 November 2025.
- ^ Roxborough, Scott (18 August 2021). "'Nomadland' Wins International Critics Honor as Film of the Year". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 23 August 2022.
- ^ Roxborough, Scott (22 August 2022). "'Drive My Car' Wins International Critics' Prize for Film of the Year". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 23 August 2022.
- ^ "Grand Prix 2023 to Aki Kaurismäki". Fipresci. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
- ^ "Grand Prix 2024 to Yorgos Lanthimos". International Federation of Film Critics.
- ^ "I'm Still Here by Walter Salles is the Winner of the FIPRESCI Grand Prix for Best Film of the Year". fipresci. Retrieved 25 November 2025.
- ^ "FIPRESCI.org". Archived from the original on 14 March 2016. Retrieved 25 April 2009.
External links
[edit]International Federation of Film Critics
View on GrokipediaHistory
Founding and Interwar Period
The origins of the International Federation of Film Critics trace to 1925, when film journalists from Paris and Brussels established a Professional Association of the Film Press to coordinate professional interests amid the rapid growth of cinema.[3] This initiative laid groundwork for broader collaboration, as evidenced by the 1926 Congress of Cinema held in Paris from September 27 to October 3 at the Rothschild Foundation, where participants proposed forming an International Federation of Film Press to standardize criticism and promote the medium's artistic potential internationally.[3] Negotiations progressed slowly over the next four years due to logistical and national differences, but culminated in the federation's official founding on June 6, 1930, at the Palais des Académies in Brussels, initiated by French, Italian, and Belgian critics operating on an individual membership basis rather than national delegations.[3] Early organizational consolidation occurred through annual general assemblies. The second assembly in Rome in 1931 formalized the name Fédération Internationale de la Presse Cinématographique (FIPRESCI), emphasizing professional autonomy and ethical standards for film journalism.[3] In June 1932, the third assembly in London approved revised statutes that defined governance structures, including a congress meeting at least biennially and an executive committee for interim decisions.[3] The 1933 fourth assembly in Paris introduced practical symbols like a logo and membership card, while assigning Belgium the roles of general secretary and treasurer to centralize administration.[3] These steps reflected FIPRESCI's focus on fostering a unified critical voice, independent of commercial film industries. By the mid-1930s, FIPRESCI expanded its influence amid Europe's cultural expositions and rising political fragmentation. The fifth general assembly, held May 29 to June 1, 1935, in Brussels during the International Exposition, drew representatives from 14 countries and advocated for cinema's recognition as a cultural asset worthy of state support, while proposing information bureaus and reserving foreign correspondent roles for federation members to ensure professional integrity.[3] Membership grew to seven national sections—Germany, Austria, Belgium, France, Italy, Luxembourg, and Czechoslovakia—plus nine individual country representatives by the outbreak of World War II.[3] Throughout the late 1930s, the organization upheld a policy of political neutrality despite intensifying ideological pressures, prioritizing apolitical discourse on film aesthetics and ethics, though this stance faced tests from authoritarian regimes' encroachments on press freedoms in member nations.[3]Post-World War II Reestablishment and Cold War Era
Following the cessation of hostilities in World War II, the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI) was reestablished in 1946 at the inaugural Cannes Film Festival, held from September 20 to October 5, with initiatives led primarily by French and Belgian film journalists to restore organizational normality.[3][12] British critic Dilys Powell was elected as the federation's president that year, marking a shift toward Anglo-European leadership in its revival.[3] Under her guidance, FIPRESCI promptly resumed jury activities, awarding prizes to David Lean's Brief Encounter for its dramatic insight and Georges Rouquier's Farrebique for its documentary realism on rural French life, thereby reasserting the federation's commitment to recognizing films of cultural and artistic merit amid postwar reconstruction efforts.[3] In 1947, French critic Denis Marion succeeded Powell, bringing a diplomatic approach that emphasized international collaboration and the federation's role in elevating film criticism as a professional discipline independent of national cinemas' political alignments.[3] Membership expanded beyond the prewar base of seven national sections, incorporating critics from additional European countries and laying groundwork for broader global outreach, though exact figures remained modest compared to later decades.[3] FIPRESCI's core activities centered on festival jury service, such as at Cannes, where it promoted analytical discourse on cinema's societal reflections, including themes of alienation and recovery prevalent in postwar films.[3] During the Cold War (approximately 1947–1991), FIPRESCI navigated ideological divides by maintaining organizational neutrality, focusing on the intrinsic cultural value of film while participating in festivals that served as proxy arenas for East-West cultural exchange.[3] Events like the Leipzig Documentary and Animated Film Festival in East Germany facilitated encounters between filmmakers and critics from opposing blocs, with FIPRESCI representatives contributing to discussions that transcended propaganda, emphasizing technical and narrative innovations over state ideologies.[13] The federation's juries awarded prizes to works from both sides of the Iron Curtain, such as a 1962 FIPRESCI honor at Locarno for a Czech film amid Switzerland's anticommunist context, underscoring its resistance to geopolitical pressures in favor of aesthetic and critical independence.[14] Challenges included rebuilding networks disrupted by wartime censorship and sustaining funding without compromising autonomy, yet FIPRESCI's emphasis on professional standards helped it avoid alignment with either superpower's cultural diplomacy, fostering a space for unvarnished critique in an era of polarized media landscapes.[3][15] By the late 1980s, under emerging leadership like Klaus Eder's appointment in 1987, the federation had solidified its postwar trajectory, preparing for post-Cold War expansion while upholding principles of impartial film analysis.[3]Expansion and Contemporary Developments
Following the end of the Cold War, FIPRESCI experienced notable expansion in membership, incorporating national sections from former Eastern Bloc countries and increasing representation from Asia, Latin America, and Africa, reflecting broader global democratization of film discourse.[3] By the late 1980s, under General Secretary Klaus Eder's leadership from 1987 to 2024, the federation grew from fewer than 20 active national sections to 50, with individual members in an additional 36 countries, enabling broader jury participation at international festivals and annual polls involving hundreds of critics worldwide.[3][16] This period marked a shift toward an "umbrella federation" model, emphasizing decentralized national associations over centralized individual memberships, which had dominated earlier decades.[3] In contemporary developments, FIPRESCI has maintained involvement in over 80 film festivals annually, dispatching juries to events ranging from Cannes to emerging regional showcases, while conducting Grand Prix polls that in 2024 engaged 739 critics from 75 countries to select outstanding films like Walter Salles's Ainda estou aqui.[17][5] The federation marked its centennial in 2025 with a refreshed visual identity, homage events such as one for Eder at the Munich Film Festival, and discussions on the future of film criticism amid digital media challenges.[10][18] Eder's retirement at the end of 2024 prompted a leadership transition, with the organization continuing to prioritize jury awards, educational initiatives, and collaborations like new partnerships with festivals such as D'A in Catalonia.[16][19] These efforts underscore FIPRESCI's adaptation to a fragmented media landscape, sustaining its role in independent critical evaluation despite declining traditional print outlets.[20]Organizational Structure
Membership and National Sections
The International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI) structures its membership primarily through national sections, which consist of professional associations of film critics and journalists organized by country. Each national section typically represents one primary organization per country, though in exceptional cases up to two organizations may affiliate to form a single national section with unified representation.[4] As of July 2025, FIPRESCI encompasses approximately 62 such organizations across more than 50 countries, including multiple affiliations in nations such as Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, and Peru.[2] These sections must incorporate definitions of film journalism in their own statutes, explicitly excluding individuals engaged in film industry publicity, production, or related commercial activities to maintain independence.[4] Admission to FIPRESCI as a national section requires formal application and approval by the General Assembly, ensuring alignment with the federation's statutes on professional qualifications and ethical standards. Individual membership is available for qualified film critics or journalists in countries without an established national section; applicants must demonstrate relevant professional experience and register with supporting evidence, such as published work, while adhering to the same conflict-of-interest exclusions.[4] Temporary individual membership may be granted to non-members for specific activities, but it is limited to one instance per person, after which they must join via a national section or as a regular individual member.[4] National sections and the collective body of individual members (organized as a "Section of Individual Members") each hold one vote in the General Assembly, promoting equitable representation regardless of size. Members are obligated to pay annual fees, submit updated lists of their affiliates every four years, and comply with federation decisions, with non-compliance potentially leading to suspension or expulsion by a two-thirds majority vote.[4] This framework supports FIPRESCI's operational integrity, enabling participation in juries, polls, and assemblies while prioritizing critics' autonomy from industry influences.[4]Governance and Leadership
The governance of the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI) is structured around two primary organs: the Board, which serves as the management body, and the General Assembly, which functions as the supreme decision-making authority.[4] The General Assembly convenes annually and comprises Board members alongside one delegate from each national section or group of individual members, with decisions made by simple majority vote except for major alterations such as statute amendments or dissolution, which require a two-thirds majority.[4] It oversees critical functions including membership admissions, guideline approvals, and dispute resolutions.[4] The Board handles day-to-day operations and representation of the federation. It consists of the President, three Vice-Presidents, a Treasurer, and a Head of Legal Affairs in a consultative capacity.[4] The President represents FIPRESCI externally and is supported by the Vice-Presidents, all of whom must hail from different nationalities to ensure diverse representation.[4] Elections for the President and Vice-Presidents occur every four years via the General Assembly, with candidates nominated in writing by a specified deadline and announced one month prior; incumbents may serve one consecutive re-election term, and vacancies are temporarily filled by the Board until the next assembly.[4] In early 2025, FIPRESCI adopted revised statutes via unanimous electronic vote from March 26 to April 27, eliminating the longstanding General Secretary position—previously held by Klaus Eder from 1987 to 2024—and transitioning to a more streamlined board model emphasizing democratic oversight.[4] [21] This change took effect following the first General Assembly post-adoption. The current Board, elected on September 17–18, 2025, during the General Assembly in Budapest hosted by the Hungarian National Film Institute, includes President Ahmed Shawky (Egypt), Vice-Presidents Paola Casella (Italy), Elena Rubashevska (Ukraine), and Marina Kostova (North Macedonia), Treasurer Beat Glur (Switzerland), and Head of Legal Affairs Philippe J. Maarek (France).[21] [1] The assembly, attended by 30 delegates from multiple continents, aligned with FIPRESCI's centenary celebrations and prioritized professional continuity amid the leadership transition.[22]Statutes and Operational Principles
The statutes of the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI), as revised and adopted between March 26 and April 27, 2025, define the federation's foundational purpose as promoting film culture on an international scale, safeguarding the ethics of film criticism, and fostering cinema's role as an artistic and educational medium.[4] These documents emphasize creating a platform for critics independent of film industry production or distribution influences, with activities centered on ethical standards, international collaboration, and the advancement of film art beyond ideological or political boundaries.[4] Membership is restricted to professional film critics and journalists affiliated through national sections or as individual members, requiring demonstration of active engagement in criticism without commercial ties to filmmaking entities; applications are reviewed by the Board and ratified by the General Assembly.[4] National sections hold one collective vote in assemblies, while individual members participate in discussions but lack voting rights on core decisions, ensuring structured representation across countries. Annual fees are mandatory for all members to sustain operations.[4] Governance operates through a hierarchical structure: the General Assembly serves as the supreme authority, convening annually to approve budgets, elect officers, and amend statutes via a two-thirds majority; the Board, comprising the President (with casting vote), three Vice-Presidents, Treasurer, and Legal Head, manages daily affairs and represents the federation externally.[4] Officers are elected for four-year terms, renewable once, with nationality diversity mandated to prevent dominance by any single region; recent 2025 revisions distributed administrative tasks across the Board rather than centralizing them in a single secretary role, enhancing collective responsibility.[4][23] Operational principles underscore ideological neutrality and opposition to discrimination, mandating decisions by simple majority unless specified otherwise, and prioritizing the federation's autonomy from political or commercial pressures to uphold unbiased film evaluation.[4] Amendments to statutes require General Assembly approval and can be contested within one month, reflecting a commitment to adaptability while preserving core ethical imperatives like promoting innovative and young cinema globally.[4] These principles, rooted in FIPRESCI's origins in 1930, guide jury selections, publications, and international engagements, enforcing independence as a prerequisite for credible criticism.[4]Core Activities
Festival Jury Service and Awards
FIPRESCI maintains an extensive program of dispatching independent juries to approximately 80 accredited international film festivals each year, enabling member critics to evaluate and recognize films across various sections. These juries typically consist of 3 to 9 members drawn from different countries, selected by the federation's Board from nominations submitted by national sections; jurors must be active FIPRESCI members with recent professional experience in film journalism to ensure diverse perspectives and expertise.[6][10] The General Assembly annually approves the list of participating festivals and specifies eligible film categories or sections, such as main competitions, parallel sidebars, or dedicated showcases for emerging works, with the Board empowered to establish experimental juries or adjust compositions for balance in factors like gender and geography.[6] The core function of these juries culminates in the FIPRESCI Prize, awarded to films demonstrating artistic innovation and potential, with a mandate to promote film art while encouraging new talents, young directors, and national cinemas often overlooked by commercial circuits. Each jury deliberates to select a single recipient by absolute majority vote among publicly screened features or shorts, as appropriate to the festival; the prize takes the form of a diploma inscribed with the film's title and director's name, and provisions allow for no award if no entry meets the criteria or for separate prizes in distinctly compartmentalized sections, with justifications required for abstentions.[6] These regulations, approved by the General Assembly in 2006, standardize the process to prioritize critical independence and substantive cinematic value over popularity or market appeal.[6] FIPRESCI's jury service originated in the immediate postwar period, with its inaugural involvement at the first Cannes Film Festival from September 20 to October 5, 1946, where the jury awarded prizes ex aequo to Brief Encounter (directed by David Lean) and Farrebique (directed by Georges Rouquier) for their exemplary qualities.[3] This precedent evolved into a global network, encompassing premier events such as the Berlin International Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, Locarno Festival (where the prize has been given for over 65 years as of 2022), Toronto International Film Festival, and Rotterdam International Film Festival, alongside regional gatherings that highlight non-Western or debut productions.[3] Through this mechanism, FIPRESCI has influenced festival programming by emphasizing critical scrutiny of bold, unconventional filmmaking, with annual awards underscoring works like the 2024 Cannes recipient The Seed of the Sacred Fig for its provocative narrative or recent Toronto honoree Forastera (2025) for emerging directorial vision.[6]Annual Polls and Grand Prix
The FIPRESCI Grand Prix is an annual award presented to the best film of the year, as determined by a global poll of the federation's member critics. Established in 1999, the prize highlights cinematic works that exemplify artistic excellence from an international critical perspective, with selections drawn from films premiered after July 1 of the preceding year.[9][24] The voting process commences with an open nomination phase, in which all FIPRESCI members are invited to submit up to three qualifying films via an online platform. A shortlist of five nominees is then compiled, followed by a final ballot open to members until a specified deadline, such as midnight CEST on dates like August 5 in recent cycles. Participation has typically involved hundreds of critics; for instance, 791 voters from around the world selected the 2024 recipient, while 739 critics from 75 countries participated in the 2025 poll.[24][9] The award is conferred during the opening gala of the San Sebastián International Film Festival, underscoring FIPRESCI's ties to major European cinema events. Past recipients have included works by established directors, reflecting the poll's emphasis on substantive narrative and formal innovation over commercial metrics.[24][9]| Award Year | Film | Director |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | I'm Still Here (Ainda Estou Aqui) | Walter Salles |
| 2024 | Poor Things | Yorgos Lanthimos |
| 2023 | Fallen Leaves | Aki Kaurismäki |
