Jump to content

CON-CAN Movie Festival

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Danimations (talk | contribs) at 01:38, 9 December 2015 (Tamashii Award Winners: Correct short film title). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

CON-CAN Movie Festival
Company typeFilm festival produced by Media Research, Inc.
IndustryFilm festival, Motion pictures
FoundedSendagaya, Tokyo, Japan (2005)
Headquarters
Sendagaya, Tokyo
,
Japan
Key people
Masahiro Yoshino, Chairman
Nofil Iqbal, Director
Websitehttp://en.con-can.com

CON-CAN Movie Festival (CON-CAN) is an audience-interactive online international short movie festival which aims to discover hidden creative talent from all over the world, enabling image creators and a global audience to share the underlying messages and sheer creativity expressed in profound short movie productions. Founded in 2005, the short movie festival enables users to watch short movies for free on its site. The festival's award ceremony is held annually in Tokyo, Japan.

The 2008 CON-CAN Movie Festival is currently underway and will have its award ceremony in Mid-November 2008.

History

The idea for the CON-CAN Movie Festival was founded by Masahiro Yoshino, CEO of Media Research, Inc., a Japanese company that specializes in IT consulting, translation, publishing and media arts.[1] Media Research, Inc. launched CON-CAN Movie Festival online in 2005. The name CON-CAN was first thought of in Japanese (魂観). CON(魂) represents the soul and CAN(観) represents viewers watching with true appreciation.

The 1st CON-CAN Movie Festival was held in 2005 as an international online short movie festival with two types of awards; one, an Audience Award that is presented by viewers, and the other a Grand Prix award (the best short movie) and two Tamashii awards (special jury awards) decided by the CON-CAN International Jury. A total of 151 short movies from 25 different countries were submitted. Since then, CON-CAN has expanded to receive over 550 submissions from over 50 different countries in 2008.

Selection process

Once the submission deadline passes, the process of selecting the movies for the movie festival begins. The programming department at CON-CAN is responsible for a preliminary screening of the movies. The best 80 movies out of all the submitted movies are selected to be part of the movie festival and their directors are notified via email.

The movie festival then branches off into two parts. One part consists of the 80 movies being passed through a first round evaluation and judged by a domestic (Japanese) jury. These preliminary jury members select the best 20 movies to be considered for the final evaluation process. In the final evaluation round, international jury members selected by the CON-CAN staff select the top three nominations to be awarded the Grand Prix award (the best short movie) and the two Tamashii awards (special jury awards).[2] The winner of the Grand Prix award and the two Tamashii award winners are invited to Tokyo with travel and accommodations paid for in order to attend the award ceremony. The award ceremony hosts famous people from the movie industry and notable news networks.

Another part consists of the 80 movies being categorized into four groups. Each group is independently displayed on CON-CAN's website. During this time, registered voters are able to watch free movies and animations, rate the movies and comment on them. The movie with the highest rating in each category is awarded an Audience Award.

Awards

Grand Prix Winners

Year Movie Director Nationality of Director
(at time of movie's release)
2009 Fleeting Images Edmund Yeo Malaysia
2008 Ata Cagla Zencirci & Guillaume Giovanetti France
2007 The Pond Huang Ying China
2006 (October) Gospel of The Creole Pig Michelange Quay France
2006 (April) Perkele Arto Tuohimaa Finland
2005 Ohayo Shinya Okada Japan

Tamashii Award Winners

Year Movie Director Nationality of Director
(at time of movie's release)
2008 Chain Gestures (Gestos em Cadeia) Carla Mota Portugal
On Earth as It Is in Heaven Hervé Demers Canada
2007 Nasja Rios Guillermo Spain
A Shift in Perception Dan Monceaux Australia
2006 (October) Broad Day Rajeev Ahuja India
Love Me or Leave Me Alone Duane Hopkins United Kingdom
2006 (April) The Chamber Yu Seock-hyun Republic of Korea
Sister Daniel Mulloy United States
2005 Demon Irina Evteeva Russia
Djamel's Eyes David Casals-Roma Spain

Audience Award Winners

Year Movie Director(s) Nationality of Director(s)
(at time of movie's release)
2010 (December) In my prison Alessandro Grande Italy
2007 4 1/4 Aundre Johnson United States
A Shift in Perception Dan Monceaux Australia
The Clearing Pedro Touceda Spain
The Spirit Child Elinor Geller United Kingdom
2006 (October) Crash Umut Aral Turkey
2006 (April) Sister Daniel Mulloy United Kingdom
2005 Hair Sapiens Tsuyoshi Nakakuki Japan
Out of Time Blake Ritson
Dylan Ritson
United Kingdom

Jury

The international jury which chooses the three best movies during the final evaluation round features famous people from the movie industry. Below are the juries from previous years.

The 6th CON-CAN Movie Festival

The 5th CON-CAN Movie Festival

The 4th CON-CAN Movie Festival

The 3rd CON-CAN Movie Festival

The 2nd CON-CAN Movie Festival

The 1st CON-CAN Movie Festival

  • Babak Payami (Film director in Iran/Canada)
  • Dennis Lim (Film critic and film editor for Village Voice)
  • Fei Zhao (Professor at the Beijing Film Academy)
  • Jean-Michel Frodon (Journalist, film critic and cinema historian)
  • Jukka-Pekka Laakso (Chairman of the Tampere Film Festival)
  • Peter Millynn (Production executive at the Australian Film Television and Radio School)
  • Shoichiro Sasaki (Director of Audio and Visual Images)

References

  1. ^ Aoki, Mizuho (2007-11-30). "A film fest on the Net". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2008-06-26.
  2. ^ Jeffs, Angela (2008-06-13). "CON-CAN launches movie competition". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2008-06-25.