Montreal’s IMAGE+NATION film festival - that’s a wrap!
November 2nd, 2009
image+nation, Canada’s oldest and largest LGBT film festival, went off with a bang on Saturday night at the Cinéma Impérial with the screening of its closing film, DROOL, with American director Nancy Kissam in attendance.
image+nation XXII’s jury, comprised of Joe Balass (Director, Baghdad Twist), Étienne Desrosiers (Director, Miroirs d’été) and Meg Hewings (Film critic, Hour), also presented the following prizes:
GRAND JURY PRIZE – BEST FEATURE FILM
SOUNDLESS WIND CHIME (Hung Wing Kit, China/Switzerland)
“For its complex and sensual treatment of human relations, delivered with finesse in a self-reflexive narrative.”
JURY PRIZE – BEST DOCUMENTARY
BEYOND GAY: THE POLITICS OF PRIDE (Bob Christie, Canada)
JURY PRIZE – BEST SHORT FILM
JAMES (Connor Clemments, Northern Ireland)
Special Jury Mention – COWBOY (Til Kleinert, Germany)
20+20 VISIONARY AWARD
This programmers’ award, created in 2007 to honour image+nation’s milestone 20th anniversary, is presented to a filmmaker who puts forth an innovative, creative and singular vision:
FEATURE FILM: DONNE-MOI LA MAIN (Pascal-Alex Vincent, France)
“For its ability to both grasp and share with an audience the unspoken relationship between two symbiotic beings.”
Special Mention – MAGGOTS AND MEN (Cary Crowenwell, U.S.A.)
SHORT FILM: CECI N’EST PAS UNE DRAG QUEEN (Olivier Lessard, Canada)
AUDIENCE CHOICE AWARD – FEATURE FILM
DROOL (Nancy Kissam, U.S.A.), tied with HANNAH FREE (Wendy-Jo Carlton, U.S.A.)
AUDIENCE CHOICE AWARD – DOCUMENTARY
FERRON: GIRL ON A ROAD (Gerry Rogers, Canada)
AUDIENCE CHOICE AWARD – SHORT FILM
FALLING FOR CAROLINE (Christine Chew, Canada)
This edition of the festival also saw the launch of QUEEREMENT QUEBEC, a web-based initiative that gives all Quebecers – especially those living outside of Montreal – the opportunity to screen the homegrown shorts presented during the festival. This evolving project is a reflection of the myriad perspectives and viewpoints of those who live as members of the LGBT community in a contemporary Quebec society.
image+nation XXII offered up 11 days of wall-to-wall inventive queer cinema at the Cinéma Impérial, the Goethe Institute and the JA de Sève Theatre. Once more, image+nation confirmed its relevance on the local and international festival circuit as an important cultural event.
image+nation invites you to visit its website over the coming weeks, when the dates for its twenty-third edition will be revealed. For further information about the festival, please visit www.image-nation.org
Published by Lina Harper





