Rome Film Festival
International Rome Film Fest is a film festival that takes place in Rome during the month of October. In 2022, the festival was officially recognized as a competitive festival by the International Federation of Film Producers Associations.
History
The Rome Film Festival was established in 2006 by the initiative of former Rome mayor Walter Veltroni. Cinema per Roma Foundation, the RFF's operator, was established in 2007 with the support of several state bodies – Camera di Commercio di Roma, Fondazione Musica per Roma, Lazio and Roma regional governments. The RFF was created to support and promote cinema art in Rome and Lazio. However, Veltroni's ambitions were high, he dreamed the RFF to rival Venice. The inaugural edition was highlighted by 12 world premieres, including The Departed by Martin Scorsese, and the presence of such stars as Monica Bellucci, Nicole Kidman, Gabriele Salvatores, Harrison Ford, Sean Connery, and others. The RFF opened with 95 films in the official selection distributed across several sections: Premiere, Sezione Cinema, Special Events, Extra, and Alice in the City for kids and young adults. The event also featured industry sections New Cinema Network and New International Projects. The Best Film award was presented along with a €200,000 cash prize. The festival reported an attendance of 480,000 visitors and more than 100,000 sold tickets.In 2008, Gian Luigi Rondi was appointed the RFF president, succeeding Goffredo Bettini. The new mayor of Rome, Gianni Alemanno, was sceptical about the event and called it useless. Overall, the third RFF festival was considered weaker than the second. In 2009, Piera Detassis was appointed art director of the RFF.
Rondi stepped down in 2012, succeeded by Marco Mueller. The new head of the festival lobbied for new dates for the RFF – it was shifted from October to late November in order to avoid a direct schedule conflict with the Turin Film Festival. However, two years later the dates were shifted back.
In 2015, the province's government had left the Foundation and was replaced by Cinecitta. In the same year, Antonio Monda was appointed the RFF's art director. An experienced and renowned professional, Monda is an author, exhibition curator, film director, and lecturer at New York University's Film and Television Department. Under Monda, the festival was evolving rapidly. His vision was to make the event a celebration of cinema, not a competition between directors and teams, so the competitive section was eliminated. Monda managed to turn the festival into a high-profile world class event and eased the tension between the RFF and rival festivals. In 2019, he introduced two new sections, Duel, an open talk on film-related topics, and Loyalty/Betrayal, dedicated to film adaptations of famous literary works. In 2022, Monda's second three-year term expired, and he did not receive an offer for a third term, as decided by the Cinema per Roma Foundation. The management did not comment on this move, and a scandal erupted in the public sphere. Monda opposed the dismissal and demanded explanations. As journalists found out, Rome's mayor Gualtieri and Minister of Culture Dario Franceschini decided to dismiss Monda following the complaints of Goffredo Bettini and his sister Fabia, who manages Alice nella Città section of the RFF. Wes Anderson, Meryl Streep, Martin Scorsese, Paolo Sorrentino, Marco Bellocchio, and many other Hollywood and international stars voiced the support of Monda and condemned the dismissal, but to no avail. He was replaced by Paola Malanga, ex deputy director of RAI Cinema. Gianluca Farinelli became president, succeeding Laura Delli Colli. He stepped down in 2025 and was succeeded by Salvo Nastasi.
In 2022, FIAPF officially recognized the RFF as a Competitive Festival. That year’s edition was marked with the reintroduction of a competitive section as well as with such new open sections as Paso Doble, an encounter between authors, and Absolute Beginners, where established authors recount the story of their debut in cinema.
Profile
The RFF is produced by the Cinema per Roma Foundation with support of the chamber of commerce of Rome, Lazio region, Fondazione Musica Per Roma and the Ministry of Culture through Istituto Luce Cinecittà. The event's annual budget is around €6 mln. The Festival's principal venue is the Auditorium Parco della Musica, however, many screenings and events take place in other locations around the city, such as Cinema Giulio Cesare, Teatro Palladium, Scena, Cinema Nuovo Sacher, Policlinico Gemelli, and many more.Launched in 2006, the Business Street started as a 4-days long film market. Already in 2007, it had attracted more than 350 buyers and sellers from 40 countries. By 2011, it had progressed into an industry event that concentrated on cultivation of new projects. The Business Street was relaunched in 2015 as Mercato Internazionale Audiovisivo or Intl. Audiovisual Market.
Sections
The Rome Film Festival official program is divided into several sections:- Cinema d'Oggi – a selection of feature films, with priority given to world premieres. At the end of each screening, the audience votes for the People's Choice Award | Cinema d'Oggi.
- Gala – feature films that are world premieres, international or European premieres.
- Mondo Genere – feature films from various genres that are world, international or European premieres, with priority given to world premieres.
- Prospettive Italia – world premieres highlighting new trends in Italian cinema. At the end of each screening, the audience votes for the People's Choice Award | Cinema Italia and the People's Choice Award | Cinema Italia.
- Progressive Cinema – Visions Of Tomorrow’s World – an international competition, launched in 2022.
- Alice nella Città – a section for children cinema, divided in two competitive subsections, one for over-12 films and the other under-12.
Awards
The Rome Film Festival award is a silver statuette shaped after the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius statue, placed in Michelangelo's Campidoglio Square.BNL People’s Choice Award – the winning film's prize money is given to its Italian distributor, or, if no Italian distributor buys it within six months, to its international seller.
Editions
2022
The 17th edition of the festival, from which it became competitive festival, took place from 13 to 23 October 2022.2023
The 18th edition of the festival took place from 18 to 29 October 2023.2024
The 19th edition of the festival took place from 16 to 27 October 2024 in the Auditorium Parco della Musica and attracted an audience of over 110,000.2025
The 20th edition of the festival is taking place from 15 to 26 October 2025. Paola Cortellesi, Italian actress, comedian, film director, screenwriter and producer, will chair the jury of the Progressive Cinema Competition at the festival.Winners through the years
Best Film
- 2007: Juno by Jason Reitman
- 2008: Opium War by Siddiq Barmak
- 2009: Broderskab by Nicolo Donato
- 2010: Kill Me Please by Olias Barco
- 2011: Un cuento chino by Sebastián Borensztein
- 2012: Marfa Girl by Larry Clark
- 2013: Tir by Alberto Fasulo
- 2022: January by Viesturs Kairišs
- 2023: Toll by Carolina Markowicz
- 2024: Bound in Heaven by Huo Xin, China
Best Actor
- 2007: Rade Šerbedžija
- 2008: Bohdan Stupka
- 2009: Sergio Castellitto
- 2010: Toni Servillo
- 2011: Guillaume Canet
- 2012: Jeremie Elkaim
- 2013: '''Matthew McConaughey'''
Best Actress
- 2007: Jiang Wenli
- 2008: Donatella Finocchiaro
- 2009: Helen Mirren
- 2010: All of the actresses
- 2011: Noomi Rapace
- 2012: Isabella Ferrari
- 2013: '''Scarlett Johansson'''
Jury Special Prize
- 2010: Poll by Chris Kraus
- 2011: The Eye of the Storm by Fred Schepisi
- 2011: Circumstance by Maryam Keshavarz
- 2012: Alì ha gli occhi azzurri by Claudio Giovannesi
- 2013: Quod Erat Demonstrandum by Andrei Gruzsniczk
IMAIE">List of copyright collection societies#Italy">IMAIE Acting Award
- 2007: Sophia Loren
- 2008: Clint Eastwood
- 2009: Meryl Streep
- 2010: Julianne Moore
- 2011: '''Richard Gere'''