100 Words Film Festival


100 Words Film Festival: Sold Out Crowd at the McGlohon Theatre, Charlotte, NC

The 100 Words Film Festival is an American film festival held annually in Charlotte, North Carolina. Founded in 2014, it celebrates concise, cinematic storytelling — each film must contain exactly 100 spoken words, requiring filmmakers to focus on the essence of the story. The word limit is a part of the festival's goal to democratize filmmaking by making it financially achievable for nearly everyone.[1]

Called "the visual Twitter" of film festivals[2] by former Saatchi & Saatchi global CEO Kevin Roberts, the festival draws entries from around the world[3] as well as critical acclaim from regional media. "This idea really does force people to rethink the idea of film storytelling, something Hollywood virtually never does any more. ... Limits liberate the best of these filmmakers, rather than confining them," wrote Charlotte Observer theater critic and culture reporter Lawrence Lippman[4] in November 2015.

Filmmaker Scott Galloway, founder of Charlotte-based media production company Susie Films, is the festival's founder and director.

2014 Festival

The inaugural edition was held Nov. 22 in front of a sold-out crowd of more than 700 at Charlotte's McGlohon Theatre, with 30 professional and student films. Winning entries:

2015 Festival

The second edition returned to the McGlohon Theatre on Nov. 6-7, with 34 films over two nights. Winning entries:

The festival included five student films made for local charities through its mentoring program, with advice and assistance from industry professionals. They were:

It also included a filmmaker seminar, featuring a conversation with Shadow Distribution president Ken Eisen, actress/filmmaker Karen Young, and Academy Award-nominated documentarian Andy Abrahams Wilson.

Media coverage

External links

References

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