ACT Human Rights Film Festival joins international Human Rights Film Network

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The ACT Human Rights Film Festival is the latest festival to be accepted into the Human Rights Film Network (HRFN), an international partnership of 41 independent human rights film festivals. The Network’s general assembly announced ACT’s membership at its annual meeting at the International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam on Nov. 19.

Produced by the Department of Communication Studies at Colorado State University, ACT is only the second U.S.-based human rights film festival to join the network. The first was the Vermont International Film Festival (VTIFF), which was established in 1985 and born out of the anti-nuclear movement.

“Movies that Matter is very pleased to welcome ACT Human Rights Film Festival to the Human Rights Film Network,” says Julie Nederkoorn, the current secretariat of the Human Rights Film Network and international support coordinator for Movies that Matter, one of the Network’s founding members. “In these times of shrinking space for independent media and civil society, we feel it is important to screen films on human rights in every corner of the world, including in the United States.”

Dr. Scott Diffrient at the Human Rights Film Network annual meeting brunch in Amsterdam
Scott Diffrient at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam

About the network

The Human Rights Film Network primarily focuses on promoting exchange, communication, and collaboration regarding the representation of human rights issues in moving pictures, as well as promoting member festivals and assisting established and emerging festivals in securing a sound and independent basis. Through these activities, the network seeks to create a supportive environment for human rights filmmakers, in particular those at risk for their life or repressed by censorship.

“Our acceptance into the Human Rights Film Network is a tremendous accomplishment,” says festival founder and Professor of Communication Studies Scott Diffrient. “To stand alongside top international human rights film festivals as a partner is humbling and inspiring.”

ACT has had its sights on HRFN membership since 2016 when the festival first occurred at CSU. However, the Network requires members to produce a minimum of two consecutive festivals before seeking membership and gain the support of at least two other festival members. ACT secured the support of three: VTIFF; Muestra de Cine Internactional Memoria Verdad Justicia, located in Guatemala; and Festival Internacional de cine de los Derechos Humanos in Bolivia.

In elite company

According to Carol Busch, ACT marketing director and assistant producer, HRFN is keen on protecting the territoriality of festival members and typically limits membership to one per country. But given that more than 2,000 miles separate Fort Collins from Burlington, Vermont, ACT organizers felt confident VTIFF would recognize the value of a second U.S.-based festival.

“We also felt it was compelling to acknowledge that while the United States’ international reputation may be precarious, the addition of a second U.S.-based festival signals that our institution and our community deeply values human rights and is committed to bringing to our small corner of the world visions and voices that would otherwise go unheard,” Busch says.

The fourth annual ACT Human Rights Film Festival returns to Fort Collins April 5-13, 2019. Opening and closing nights occur at the Lory Student Center Theatre. The remainder of films will screen at The Lyric, an independent arthouse theatre located in north Fort Collins. Ticket and film information is available at www.actfilmfest.org.