Edinburgh International Film Festival draws to a close – and celebrates a new beginning

 The relaunched Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) has drawn to a close following a seven-day programme of sold out premieres, talks, retrospectives and well-received industry events.

The Festival ran from 15 – 21 August with 37 new feature films, 18 World Premieres including 10 World Premieres competing for the new Sean Connery Prize for Feature Filmmaking Excellence,  won by Jack King’s The Ceremony and 5 short film programmes including the new Thelma Schoonmaker Prize for Short Filmmaking Excellence competition, won by Trevor Neuhoff’s Manny Wolfe.

The Festival hosted 6 special retrospective screenings with introductions from special guests plus packed In Conversation events with iconic filmmaker Gaspar Noé, legendary editor Thelma Schoonmaker and filmmaker Alex Garland and producer Andrew Macdonald in conversation.

The Festival launched a strand of thrilling Midnight Madness screenings beginning with the UK Premiere of Fede Alvarez’s Alien: Romulus and concluding with Corelie Fargeat’s The Substance which added to the seven-day celebration of world-class new cinema championing a new generation of UK and international talent and seeing audiences, press and industry engage with the best of Edinburgh’s other arts and cultural Festivals.

The Festival captured audiences’ imagination across the city who responded with support, attendance and admiration. EIFF this year initiated groundbreaking new collaborations working with venue partners Cameo Cinema, Summerhall; 50 George Square in partnership with Assembly Festival; Inspace in partnership with Monkey Barrel Comedy; and Tollcross Central Hall, in a programme which embedded the Festival in the heart of the Fringe landscape.

With 170 screenings and 13 Industry events, the Festival saw a total in person attendance of over 12,000.

The Industry Programme was very well received by attending guests with praise for EIFF as a place to gather and share ideas whilst championing the spirit of independent cinema on a global and local level.

Well-attended events running across the first weekend of the Festival included a Scrapper to Screen: A Case Study panel event which explored the development to distribution of the hit 2023 film Scrapper; a Stand Up To Screen panel involving creatives who have transitioned from live performance/TV to filmmaking, a documentary panel in partnership with Scottish Documentary Institute and networking events in partnership with Screen Fringe, Summerhall, Monkey Barrel Comedy, BBC Film, Screen Academy Scotland and NFTS Scotland.

The Festival kicked off on 15 August with Nora Fingscheidt’s The Outrun starring Saoirse Ronan and presented a selection of compelling new and established voices in cinema including 18 World Premieres and 19 UK Premieres. Closing the Festival was the World Premiere of Carla J. Easton and Blair Young’s powerful new documentary Since Yesterday: The Untold Story Of Scotland’s Girl Bands, which sat within a programme with a strong presence for Scottish filmmakers and Scottish talent.

The Festival programme showcased new work from filmmakers from Scotland, UK, US, Canada, Mexico, Norway, China, Kazakhstan, Belgium, Iran and beyond. 

Every film screening was introduced by a member of the team, and BSL interpretation was offered at all screenings that were presented with Descriptive Subtitles.

The Festival welcomed over 100 filmmakers, producers and distributors to present their films.

Filmmakers and actors attending the Festival included Thelma Schoonmaker, Alex Garland, Andrew Macdonald, Gaspar Noé, Saoirse Ronan, Brian Cox, Nora Fingscheidt, Amy Liptrot, Damian Lewis, Euros Lyn, Kelly Macdonald, Nina Conti, Alice Lowe, Kate Dickie, Fionn O’Shea, Mark Cousins, Sophie Fiennes, Ben Rivers, Greg Kwedar, Lauren Lyle, Abdolreza Kahani and many more.

EIFF Director, Paul Ridd said: “I am thrilled with what has been achieved these past seven days after months of hard work, dedication and diligence from my incredible team.

“From packed out screenings of Competition Titles from all over the world to fascinating talks with film legends, from lively industry panels and networking events to Midnight Madness and especially introduced classics, we have celebrated film and film culture in all its glory in a host of different spaces with lively, enthusiastic audiences.

“We are so excited for the future and expanding on the collaborative, cooperative spirit of our new festival. EIFF 2025, bring it on.”

Isabel Davis, Executive Director, Screen Scotland said: “A massive congratulations to Paul and his very talented team on this first edition of the resurgent Edinburgh Film Festival.

“The calibre and diversity of international and local filmmaking talent represented across the programme, from Thelma Schoonmaker, Gaspar Noé, Alex Garland and Mark Cousins, the new energy coming through the collaboration with the Fringe and venues across town have set the direction and ambition for the festival. Congratulations to all involved.”

EIFF 2024 is supported by Screen Scotland and the BFI Audience Projects Fund, awarding National Lottery funding, the Industry Programme is backed by EXPO funding from the Scottish Government through Creative Scotland, and EventScotland part of VisitScotland’s Events Directorate.

Edinburgh International Film Festival ran from Thursday 15 to Wednesday 21 August 2024.

Helmed by Festival Director Paul Ridd and Festival Producer Emma Boa, EIFF creates a world-class showcase for independent film and filmmaking talent.

Former Acquisitions Executive Ridd is supported by an expanding Board, including Chair Andrew Macdonald of DNA Films, producer of the iconic Edinburgh-based film Trainspotting; Peter Rice, former Chairman of General Entertainment at Disney and President of 21st Century Fox; and Amy Jackson, producer of last year’s BAFTA award-winning indie, Aftersun

Edinburgh International Film Festival will open with the UK premiere of Nora Fingscheidt’s The Outrun

Orkney-set drama stars Saoirse Ronan

  • Edinburgh International Film Festival will open with the UK premiere of Nora Fingscheidt’s Orkney-set drama The Outrun starring Saoirse Ronan
  • The Festival also announces its shorts competition will be titled The Thelma Schoonmaker Prize for Short Filmmaking Excellence with the legendary film editor in attendance

The relaunched Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) has today announced that this year’s 77th edition of the Festival will open with Nora Fingscheidt’s adaptation of Amy Liptrot’s best-selling memoir, The Outrun.

The Outrun stars Saoirse Ronan (Ladybird, Brooklyn) as a young woman who finds herself washed up back home on the Scottish islands of Orkney as she battles to rebuild her life after a decade of addiction. 

Ronan, who also co-produced the film, will join filmmaker Nora Fingscheidt (System Crasher) in attendance at this year’s EIFF, alongside writer Amy Liptrot and the film’s producers Sarah Brocklehurst and Dominic Norris.

The film had its world premiere at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, and will be released by STUDIOCANAL in the UK and Ireland on September 27, 2024.

The Outrun was developed and produced by Sarah Brocklehurst of Brock Media, Dominic Norris of Arcade Pictures, Saoirse Ronan and Jack Lowden, with the support of BBC Film and Screen Scotland.

Executive Producers on The Outrun are Protagonist Pictures, BBC Film, Screen Scotland and MBK Productions.

EIFF has also revealed the name of its short film competition as The Thelma Schoonmaker Prize for Short Filmmaking Excellence.

Thelma Schoonmaker is celebrated for her iconic work as an editor on landmark moments in cinema history and for her legendary collaborations with Martin Scorsese, including Raging Bull, Goodfellas, The Wolf of Wall Street and Killers of the Flower Moon. Thelma will be in attendance at this year’s festival. The award comes with a cash prize of £15,000.

The short film competition runs alongside four additional shorts programmes, 10 world-premiere feature films competing for The Sean Connery Prize for Feature Filmmaking Excellence and programming strands including Out of Competition – which includes international premieres, UK premieres and additional world premieres, a Midnight Madness strand showcasing the best in genre cinema from around the world and a retrospective strand honouring film history.

Industry activity will run across the first weekend of the Festival with announcements around guests and activities to follow in the next weeks. Industry delegates will experience the wealth of the film programme and also access all that is on show in the wider festivals month via new collaborations with partners including Screen Fringe.

EIFF honours 70+ years of film festival history, showcasing the very best talent in filmmaking in a format rooted in a local Scottish context whilst embracing the international diversity of creative expression. 

The Film Festival encourages general audiences, film fans and industry professionals to make the trip this summer to Edinburgh, which is universally recognised as a place of beauty, history, discovery and adventure.

The full EIFF programme will be launched on Thursday 4 July when tickets will also go on sale.

EIFF Director, Paul Ridd said: “The Outrun is a truly special film. Powered by an electric and fearless central performance by Saoirse Ronan, this is lyrical, momentous cinema of real rigour and intelligence, and exactly the kind of bold work we want to champion with our relaunched festival.

“I have been a fan of Nora Fingscheidt’s uncompromising, emotional filmmaking ever since her debut System Crasher and I can think of no more fitting combination of announcements than this wonderful film as our opening with the confirmation of the legendary Thelma Schoonmaker’s gracious support for our Shorts Prize. We are honoured to be working with such phenomenal women of cinema.” 

Isabel Davis, Executive Director of Screen Scotland said: “It’s great to see Paul set out his ambition for the relaunched EIFF with such a significant title for Scotland. Orkney’s primal beauty and unique natural landscape is at the heart of things, not only as the setting but as the source of redemption, courage and healing.   

“Nora’s exceptional talent, combined with Amy Liptrot’s raw, imaginative writing and Saoirse Ronan’s breathtaking performance make for a compelling and emotional ride. And it seems fitting, for a festival that intends to work with its creative partners across the Fringe, Book, TV and International Festivals that this hugely successful creative collaboration should take centre stage.”

From August 15 to August 21 2024, the 77th edition of EIFF will take place at unique venues in Edinburgh, including Summerhall and the historic Cameo cinema, allowing audiences to seamlessly experience the best of the Fringe along with the world-class programme of cinema at EIFF.

Submissions to EIFF have now closed with more information being found at www.edfilmfest.org.

Helmed by Festival Director Paul Ridd and Festival Producer Emma Boa, the team aims to create a world-class showcase for independent film and filmmaking talent. Former Acquisitions Executive Ridd is supported by an expanding Board, including Chair Andrew Macdonald of DNA Films, producer of the iconic Edinburgh-based film Trainspotting; Peter Rice, former Chairman of General Entertainment at Disney and President of 21st Century Fox; and Amy Jackson, producer of last year’s BAFTA award-winning indie, Aftersun. EIFF 2024 is supported by Screen Scotland.