In progress at UNHQ

Note No. 6077

THIRD ANNUAL UNITED NATIONS DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL TO BE HELD 21-22 APRIL, WITH OVER 200 FILM ENTRIES FROM THIRTY COUNTRIES

18 April 2007
Press ReleaseNote No. 6077
Department of Public Information • News and Media Division • New York

Note to Correspondents


THIRD ANNUAL UNITED NATIONS DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL TO BE HELD 21-22 APRIL,


WITH OVER 200 FILM ENTRIES FROM THIRTY COUNTRIES

 


“Stories from the Field: The Third Annual United Nations Documentary Film Festival”, presented by the Media Communications Association-International, New York Chapter (MCA-I NY) and the United Nations Department of Public Information, will take place on Saturday, 21 April, and Sunday, 22 April, at Tishman Auditorium, The New School, 66 West 12th Street (between 5th and 6th Aves.), New York.  It will feature film screenings, panel discussions, workshops and award presentations.


In its third season, the Festival more than doubled its previous entry records, receiving over 200 films, and featuring 30 countries on five continents.


Launched in 2005, the Festival was originally conceived as a showcase for films produced by United Nations offices and agencies around the world.  However, so many non-United Nations filmmakers expressed interest in joining the competition that it was expanded in 2006 to include works from outside filmmakers.


The Festival’s theme, the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, remains the same.  To compete, films must reflect one or more of the eight goals:  eradicate extreme poverty and hunger; achieve universal primary education; promote gender equality and empower women; reduce child mortality; improve maternal health; combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases; ensure environmental sustainability; and develop a global partnership for development.


The Festival is a way to highlight some of the people and cultures in areas with a United Nations presence throughout the world, and discover what these groups are doing to overcome challenges such as poverty, hunger, disease, civil unrest, human trafficking and injustice.  It also serves to show how United Nations programmes and services are helping communities to develop civil society, participation and a better quality of life for their people; and to afford those in the field -- United Nations workers, community leaders and the people they serve -- the opportunity to share their stories of adversity and triumph.


Finalists, which are listed on the Festival’s website, were selected by a screening committee of United Nations officials, MCA-I representatives and New School faculty, based on the topical relevance, artistic merit and production values of their work.  Awards will be presented during the Festival in the following categories:


-- Best Public Film (60 min. and under)

-- Best United Nations Feature (15 min. and longer)

-- Best United Nations Short (under 15 min.)

-- Best United Nations Public Service Announcement


For more information, please visit www.storiesfromthefield.org, or contact Joanna Piucci, piucci@un.org, 212 963 7346.


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For information media • not an official record
For information media. Not an official record.