MIFF 2005

James Hewison
#54

Each year Melbourne International Film Festival acts as a lightning rod for currents in world cinema, and indeed' chronicles world events. In 2005, we check the pulse of contemporary China via the celebrated filmmaker Jia Zhang-ke and his cinematographer-turned-filmmaker Yu Likwai. Amid the bustle of Hong Kong, Fruit Chan has been revealing, often wittily, the daily travails of the city's people. This year; Chan is our filmmaker in focus.

Again MIFF focuses on the myriad cultures, and sometimes conflicts, of the Middle East, with Kurdish Iranian filmmaker Bahman Ghobadi central to 'Homelands Now'. As member nations of the European Union muse over a future constitution, iconoclasts such as Moodysson and Denis engage with notions' of freedom and identity, as our 'New Europe' spotlight reveals. Meanwhile, auteurs as diverse as Bergman, Ruiz and Tsai put forward arguments for what cinema can and should be.

 Back in Australia, the argument has a rather different tone. 'Australian Showcase' reveals cinema that is spirited, playful and challenging. I believe these filmmakers prove Australian cinema is far from moribund, as some would have us believe. This is an argument I'm prepared to have with anyone!

James Hewison 
Executive Director

Introduction taken from the 2005 official guide

Festival Program
276 feature films and 132 short films were screened from 20 July to 7 August
Full Program

Program in Focus
The 54th festival continued to feature films grouped under International Panorama, Australia Showcase, Raw Japanese Cinema, Regional Focus The Middle East in Focus, Documentaries, New Media, Music on Film, Animation Gallery and short films streams. Homage was paid to Japanese director Uchida Tomu and a collection of his features from the 1950s and 1960s was screened. Cinema from Argentina was put under the spotlight, as was new female filmmakers from Europe. Hong Kong's acclaimed iconoclast Fruit Chan was a guest of the festival and a selection of his films were screened. 

Opening Night Film
Little Fish (Rowan Woods, 2005)  
More

Image Gallery

Films

USA
MIFF 2005
MIFF 2005

peacock

Kong que
Director Gu Changwei
MIFF 2005

princess raccoon

Operatta Tanukigoten
MIFF 2005

SATellite

Satellite
Director Ben Speth
MIFF 2005

stolen life

Sheng Si Jie
Director Li Shaohong
MIFF 2005

From the Festival Files

Making the Festival

The Melbourne Film Festival began as the idea of a few passionate individuals. A sub-committee, formed from delegates to the 1951 Australian Council of Film Societies film weekend, suggested that a small festival of films in the tourist town of Olinda should be held in 1952. The resulting festival was a testament to the do-it-yourself initiative of the Olinda festival committee. As some 800 festiv …

The Living Festival

What would a festival be without its audience? There wouldn’t be a festival at all! … People are the beating heart of MIFF. It was the coming together of some 800 people in Olinda in 1952 that gave birth to the Melbourne Film Festival. Since that unanticipated outpouring of community love for film, MIFF has become an annual gathering space for film enthusiasts and the cine-curious from Melbourne …