Atlantic International Film Festival


The Atlantic International Film Festival is a Canadian international film festival held annually in Halifax, Nova Scotia since 1980. AIFF is the largest Canadian film festival east of Montreal, regularly premiering the region's top films of the year, while bringing the best films of the fall festival circuit to Atlantic Canada.
In 2017, the festival rebranded itself as the FIN Atlantic International Film Festival, with the FIN blending a dual reference to a fish's fins due to Halifax's connection to the ocean fisheries, and the conclusion of a film. In 2023, the festival dropped the "FIN", and returned to its previous branding as the Atlantic International Film Festival.

Events

AIFF holds multiple events throughout the year. The Atlantic International Film Festival is an 8-day event, screening films from Canada and around the world, and showcasing Atlantic Canadian films and artists. During the first three days of the Festival, AIFF simultaneously runs AIFF Partners, an international co-production and co-financing market focusing on narrative feature film and series, which brings together producers and industry decision-makers from Canada and around the world. In the spring, AIFF holds AIFF Kids, a touring event designed to engage, entertain, and educate young people. AIFF Outdoor is AIFF's outdoor summer film series held in various locations across the Halifax Regional Municipality.
Although the festival screens films from across Canada and internationally, its principal awards program is reserved specifically for films from the Atlantic Canada region. It also does not generally bill most of its screenings as "galas", as many larger film festivals do; apart from the opening and closing films, the only other screenings to be billed as galas are the "Atlantic Canadian Gala", highlighting a film made within the region, and the "Reel Coast Shorts" gala, highlighting short films by Atlantic Canadian directors.

Attendance

The 2005 festival experienced a 24 per cent attendance increase from the previous year with 29,400 in overall attendance, including 28 sold-out screenings and events. In 2007 attendance was up 18 per cent over 2006, with a record-setting 33,500 people taking part in the 27th annual event.

Awards, premieres, and gala screenings

2003

The opening film was The Event, directed by Thom Fitzgerald.

2004

The opening film was Wilby Wonderful, directed by Daniel MacIvor.

2005

The opening film was 3 Needles, directed by Thom Fitzgerald, and Jason Eisener's short The Teeth Beneath premiered.

2006

The opening film was The Journals of Knud Rasmussen, directed by Zacharias Kunuk, and the closing film was Susanne Bier's After the Wedding.

2007

The opening film was Shake Hands With The Devil and The Bodybuilder and I was named best Canadian documentary.

2008

Down to the Dirt won Best Atlantic Feature and Jason Eisener received the award for Best Editing for his short film Treevenge.

2009

The opening film was Trailer Park Boys: Countdown to Liquor Day.

2010

Films that were screened included Bruce McDonald's Trigger, Evan Kelly's debut feature The Corridor, and Paul Andrew Kimball's debut feature Eternal Kiss.

2011

Charlie Zone won Best Atlantic Feature and Best Director and Thom Fitzgerald's Cloudburst won the People's Choice Audience Award. A number of high-profile actors, including Brenda Fricker, Billy Boyd, Adam Sinclair, Kristin Kreuk and Famke Janssen, were in attendance. The opening film was Rollertown, the closing film was Mike Clattenburg's Afghan Luke, and the CBC Shorts Gala featured short films by Cory Bowles and Christian Sparkes.

2012

Blackbird was awarded Best Atlantic Feature and Best Director. This year's festival also featured the premieres of Roaming, the first film produced through Telefilm Canada's First Feature Program, The Disappeared, and Paul-Émile d'Entremont's documentary Last Chance.

2013

There Are Monsters was awarded Best Atlantic Feature and Best Director.

2014

2015

  • Gordon Parsons Award for Best Atlantic Canadian Feature: Across the LineDirector X
  • Best Atlantic Documentary: Strange and Familiar: Architecture on Fogo Island — Katherine Knight, Marcia Connolly
  • Best Atlantic Short Film: 4 QuartersAshley McKenzie
  • Best Atlantic Short Documentary: The Weir: Fishing Fundy's Giant Tides — Jerry Lockett
  • Best Atlantic Animation: Alien Love Story — Ron McDougall
  • Best Atlantic Canadian Director: Stephen Dunn, Closet Monster
  • Michael Weir Award for Best Atlantic Screenwriting: Stephen Dunn, Closet Monster
  • Joan Orenstein Award for Outstanding Performance by an Actress: Meredith MacNeill, Your Money or Your Wife
  • David Renton Award for Outstanding Performance by an Actor: Craig Brown, Your Money or Your Wife
  • Best Atlantic Cinematographer: Marcia Connolly, Strange and Familiar: Architecture on Fogo Island
  • Best Atlantic Original Score: Lukas Pearse and Mike Ritchie, ''North Mountain''

2016

2017

  • Gordon Parsons Award for Best Atlantic Canadian Feature: Black CopCory Bowles
  • Best Atlantic Documentary: In the WavesJacquelyn Mills
  • Best Atlantic Short Film: Thug — Daniel Boos, Simon Mutabazi, Emmanuel John
  • Best Atlantic Short Documentary: Invading Giants — Melani Wood, Kevin A. Fraser
  • Best Atlantic Animation: Him — Lorna Kirk
  • Best Atlantic Canadian Director: Cory Bowles, Black Cop
  • Michael Weir Award for Best Atlantic Screenwriting: Darcy Spidle, The Crescent
  • Best Atlantic Cinematographer: Guy Godfree, Suck It Up
  • Best Atlantic Editor: Jacquelyn Mills and Steve Wadden, In the Waves
  • Best Atlantic Original Score or Song: Seth A. Smith, The Crescent
  • Joan Orenstein Award for Outstanding Performance by an Actress: Danika Vandersteen, The Crescent
  • David Renton Award for Outstanding Performance by an Actor: Simon Mutabazi, Thug
  • Telefilm Canada Script Pitch: Rebecca Babcock, ''Anew''

2018

2019

  • Gordon Parsons Award for Best Atlantic Canadian Feature: Murmur - Heather Young, Martha Cooley
  • Best Atlantic Documentary: Drag Kids - Megan Wennberg
  • Best Atlantic Short Film: Little Grey Bubbles - Charles Wahl
  • Best Atlantic Short Documentary: I Am Skylar - Rachel Bower
  • Best Atlantic Canadian Director: Heather Young, Murmur
  • Michael Weir Award for Best Atlantic Screenwriting: Heather Young, Murmur
  • Best Atlantic Cinematographer: Jeff Wheaton, Murmur
  • Best Atlantic Editing: Andrew MacCormack, Gun Killers
  • Joan Orenstein Award for Outstanding Performance by an Actress: Sophia Bell, Sunnyside
  • David Renton Award for Outstanding Performance by an Actor: Joel Thomas Hynes, ''Body & Bones''

2020

  • Gordon Parsons Award for Best Atlantic Canadian Feature: Bone CageTaylor Olson
  • Best Atlantic Canadian Director: Taylor Olson, Bone Cage
  • Best Atlantic Documentary: Bread in the Bones — Darrell Varga
  • Best Atlantic Short Documentary: Queen of Chaos — Kaila Bolton
  • Best Atlantic Short Film: Taylor Olson, Inceldom, or Why Are the Angry Men Angry
  • Michael Weir Award for Best Atlantic Screenwriting: Taylor Olson, Bone Cage
  • Best Atlantic Cinematographer: Kevin Fraser, Bone Cage
  • RBC Script Development: It's the Fear That Keeps Me AwakeScott Jones

2021

2022

AIFF Partners

AIFF Partners is an annual international film co-production market, held in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The event has been held annually since its inception in 1998, and is held simultaneously with the first three days of the Atlantic Film Festival. The 28th edition of the event will take place on September 10-13, 2025.
Every year, the AIFF Partners organizers accept a robust and curated roster of delegates from around the world, in a bid to provide a 'one-stop shop' for film and TV producers and early-stage projects. Similar in format to International Film Festival Rotterdam's Cinemart, the European Film Market's co-production forum, and Independent Film Week's No Borders, AIFF Partners is Canada's premiere film and television co-production event. While the event attracts a strong core attendance from Canada, the US and the UK, it also focuses on an annual group of spotlight countries.

Spotlight countries

2024/2025: The 5 Nordics
2023/2024: New Zealand
2020/2021: Benelux, Germany, and the United States
2018/2019: United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland, and the United States
2016/2017: Nordic countries and the United States
2014/2015: Latin America and the United States
2013: India and United Kingdom
2012: United States and the United Kingdom
2011: South Africa, United States and Australia
2009: Germany and Ireland
2008: Argentina, Brazil and Mexico
2007: France
2006: Australia, New Zealand and South Africa
2005: Germany
2004: Ireland