Skwigly Online Animation Magazine Search

Ottawa International Animation Festival Selections Are Out

// Festival News

Skwigly



Ottawa International Animation Festival selections have been made and can be seen at AnimationFestival.ca/films!

With 2528 entries received from countries around the globe, this year’s festival shows that although the world may have slowed down, animation did not. Of the entries received, 107 films and animated series from 38 different countries were selected for Official Competition. Forty-eight of those entries are being showcased as a part of OIAF’s Panorama screenings (This number does not include those entries selected for the VR category, which will be announced in August).

Here are some highlights you’ll be excited about:
  • Many film submissions, not surprisingly, dealt with the effects of the pandemic. A couple of those ended up in competition: The End of Stories (OIAF10 Grand Prize winner, David O’Riley) explores the nuances of the human condition and our inability to understand the present or imagine the future when confronted with “unprecedented times”. In the Commissioned category, Peaches ‘Pussy Mask’ (OIAF festival fave, Leah Shore) takes on the pandemic through bold colours, Peaches’ catchy beats, and pussy power.
  • Coming fresh off its win at Animafest Zagreb 2021 for Grand Prix, Taiwanese film, Night Bus (Joe Hsieh) is a competitor in this year’s Narrative Short Category. This thriller combines elements of Hitchcock and Tarantino as it explores love, hatred and revenge during a late-night bus ride.
  • The award-winning and hotly anticipated, Bestia (Hugo Covarrubias), explores the life of a secret police agent during the military dictatorship in Chile. The agent’s relationship with her dog, her body, her fears and frustrations confronts audiences with realizations of a mind and country fractured by trauma. Covarrubia’s film is not one to be missed at this year’s festival.
  • Meat and tension simmer in Slovenian film, Steakhouse (Špela Čadež). Known for addressing human nature and its complexity through her films (her previous film, Nighthawk played at OIAF16 and won multiple international awards), Čadež brings emotions to a boil in Steakhouse. Audiences will need to determine if they can handle the heat or get out of the kitchen.
  • This year’s Animated Feature Film competition serves up about as diverse a crop of films as you can find. From heartwarming comedies (Fortune Favors Lady Nikuko) and poetic works (ArchipelagoMount Fuji Seen From a Moving Train) to bold fusions of documentary and fiction (Bob Spit: We Do Not Like People) and the brilliantly bizarre (EluluChicken of the Mound), the OIAF 21 Animated Feature Competition showcases the work and styles of animators from around the globe.
Check out the complete list at AnimationFestival.ca/films.

Want a more specific search? Try our Advanced Search