Chicago International Film Festival
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The Chicago International Film Festival is an annual film festival that is presented by Cinema/Chicago. First held in 1965, it is one of North America's oldest film events.
It is held every October. In 2005, the festival presented 101 feature films and 42 live action and animated short films. Among the film professionals who presented their works that year were Susan Sarandon, Cameron Crowe, Stanley Kwan, Patrice Chéreau, Nicolas Cage, Melvin Van Peebles, and Manoel de Oliveira.
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The International Connections Program was created in 2003 to raise awareness of the international film culture and diversity of Chicagoland, and to make the festival more appealing to audience and staff of various ethnicities. Foreign films are screened for free throughout the city weekly from July through September.
- 2006 - Charshanbe soori (Iran)
- 2005 - Mój Nikifor (Poland)
- 2004 - Kontroll (Hungary)
- 2003 - Talaye sorkh (Iran)
- 2002 - Madame Satã (Brazil)
In 2006, director Steven Spielberg was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award. Previous winners include Shirley MacLaine, Lord Richard Attenborough, Francois Truffaut, Jodie Foster, Robin Williams, and Clint Eastwood.
- Terrence Howard (2005)
- Susan Sarandon (2005)
- Shirley MacLaine (2005)
- Robert Zemeckis (2004)
- Irma P. Hall, Robert Townsend and Harry J. Lennix (2004)
- Annette Bening (2004)
- Robin Williams (2004)
- Nicholas Cage (2003)