362 OF 364 FESTIVALS
Cannes, France
Cannes is the apex of the international film festival circuit, drawing the biggest names in cinema alongside a market that moves billions in distribution deals each May. Selection alone — even in a sidebar — can redefine a filmmaker's career overnight. This festival is best suited for auteur-driven narrative features with strong international appeal, ideally backed by an established sales agent or producer with existing industry relationships.
$75–$95
Park City, USA
Sundance is the premier independent film festival in the United States and one of the most influential in the world, consistently launching careers and generating major distribution deals across narrative, documentary, and short film categories. It draws the densest concentration of buyers, agents, and press of any American festival, making a premiere here genuinely career-altering. Filmmakers with bold, character-driven independent work — especially those tackling urgent social themes or fresh perspectives — should absolutely submit, though competition is ferocious.
$50–$85
Annecy, France
Annecy is the undisputed global capital of animation, drawing every major studio, streamer, and independent animator to a picturesque French Alpine town each June. No other festival carries this level of concentrated industry weight specifically for animation — a competitive selection here signals serious artistic and commercial legitimacy worldwide. Animators at every career stage should consider submitting, but the festival especially rewards distinctive artistic vision over purely commercial work.
$50–$80
New York, USA
Tribeca Festival runs June 3-14 2026 in New York City. Founded by Robert De Niro after 9/11 to revitalize Lower Manhattan, it has grown into one of the most filmmaker-friendly major festivals in the world. Known for strong narrative features, documentaries, and an increasingly powerful TV and podcast slate. Tribeca is unique in that it maintains genuine public accessibility — screenings are open to New Yorkers, not just industry.
$45–$80
Cannes, France
Semaine de la Critique is an independent parallel section of the Cannes Film Festival, run by the French Syndicate of Cinema Critics since 1962, dedicated exclusively to debut and sophomore fiction features and shorts. It operates inside the Cannes ecosystem, giving selected filmmakers access to the Marché du Film, press, and buyers without competing in the main selection. It is best suited for narrative fiction directors making their first or second feature who have a bold, auteur-driven vision and are ready for serious international exposure.
$0–$0
Clermont-Ferrand, France
Clermont-Ferrand is the undisputed capital of short film globally, drawing over 160,000 attendees annually to a dedicated market and competition that no other shorts-only festival can match in scale or industry weight. It is the only festival in the world where short films are the main event, not an afterthought, with a professional market (Marché du Film Court) that connects filmmakers directly with international distributors, broadcasters, and buyers. Animators, experimentalists, narrative short filmmakers, and documentary short directors with completed works of genuine artistic ambition should prioritize this festival above nearly all others.
$15–$0