New Zealand International Film Festival
The New Zealand International Film Festival is a film festival held annually across New Zealand. The festival is operated by the New Zealand Film Festival Trust. It programmes international and New Zealand films.
History
The festival grew through a merger in 1984 of the Auckland International Film Festival and the Wellington Film Festival. In 2009, the festival didn't use regional names and united the various festivals under the banner of the New Zealand International Film Festival. Until then, each region had been promoted with the region's name despite having shared a common programme and artwork since 2002. The festival has a tradition of supporting New Zealand filmmakers and New Zealand cinema.In 1996 the New Zealand Film Festival Trust was set up by Bill Sheat, the founding chairperson who remained in that role until 2003.
In 2019 long-serving festival Director Bill Gosden retired after 40 years of service. "I look back with pride on the astounding array of national and international filmmaking that has found its first New Zealand audience at NZIFF. I leave with great confidence that whoever steps up next will be working with a remarkable and cohesive crew who love NZIFF and know it backwards.” said Gosden. New Director Marten Rabarts was appointed in October 2019. Gosden died on the seventh of November 2020.
In early 2020 General Manager Sharon Byrne resigned from the festival after more than twenty years of service and Communications Manager Rebecca McMillan resigned after a decade with the organisation. In November 2021 Director Marten Rabarts stood down from the festival. The Auckland part of the festival was cancelled in 2021 due to COVID-19 restrictions. The Wellington programme screened 164 feature films.
In 2023 there were 129 titles presented in 15 regions, a similar size to before COVID-19 interrupted business. In November 2023 NZIFF released a 10-year strategy, Te Ahua o te Whānau Mārama, citing the effects of the global pandemic and other aspects in New Zealand as affecting the viability of the festival.
In early 2024 five key Festival Programmers all stood down from their roles with NZIFF. Senior Programmer Sandra Reid ; Incredibly Strange Programmer Ant Timpson ; Square Eyes Programmer Nicola Marshall ; Animation Programmer Malcolm Turner and Asian & LGBTQ Programmer Vicci Ho. The 2024 festival was originally planned to only include Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin, cutting out Hamilton, Tauranga, Palmerston North, New Plymouth, Masterton, Hawke's Bay, Whangarei, Gisborne, Nelson, Gore and Timaru. Then-festival chairperson Catherine Fitzgerald said COVID-19 impacts over 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023 have impacted the festival. However, in March it was announced that the festival would be occurring as planned in Hamilton, Napier, Nelson, New Plymouth, Masterton, and Tauranga.