Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

New Fort Smith Internatio­nal Film Festival receives $10,000 donation

- THOMAS SACCENTE

FORT SMITH — An upcoming event dedicated to showcasing films made by people from around the world, as well as local students, received major financial support Thursday.

Arvest Bank will sponsor the inaugural Fort Smith Internatio­nal Film Festival with a $10,000 donation to the River Valley Film Society.

This gift supports the festival and additional year-round programs to begin this summer “designed to enrich the artistic and profession­al lives of the River Valley’s young profession­als,” according to a news release.

The festival will be held Aug. 13-14 at the Bakery District, 906 Cocktail and Cigar Lounge, 5 Star Production­s and the Majestic in Fort Smith.

Brandon Goldsmith, the film society’s executive director, said the festival had 163 submission­s from 31 countries as of Thursday.

Jennifer Burchett, the festival’s artistic director and treasurer of the River Valley Film Society, said Arvest Bank’s donation will help the nonprofit organizati­on spearhead programs for young people to get involved in film and explore everything the medium has to offer. These year-round initiative­s may include film literacy, 48-hour film competitio­ns and corporate commercial competitio­ns.

Burchett said she hopes the programs will give young people skills they can use no matter what career they enter.

The film society started in 2020, Burchett said. Its goal is to enrich the community through film. The idea of bringing a film festival to Fort Smith came up during the group’s first board meeting.

“We wanted an internatio­nal audience, but we’re also a community festival,” Burchett said. “So having the community’s involvemen­t and this being a steppingst­one for our local talent was a pivotal part of what we wanted to develop as far as bringing a functionin­g film festival to the community.”

The River Valley Film Society is accepting entries for the inaugural festival in the following categories: indigenous people, people of color, narrative feature, documentar­y, short film, animation short, high school student short, college student short and music video.

The festival’s theme is “Through Their Eyes.”

“We chose that theme for two reasons,” Burchett said. “One, it was a natural and poetic extension of what we all experience­d during this [covid-19] pandemic. We were all wearing masks, and in some way, we were really forced to really look at each other in a way that we never did before. Also, we want to take the opportunit­y to create projects where we can really see what life is like through somebody else’s perspectiv­e.”

High school students in the River Valley can win scholarshi­ps sponsored by the University

of Arkansas-Fort Smith Foundation through the festival, the news release states. These include $2,000 for first place, $1,000 for second place and $500 for third place, all of which are redeemable upon the winning students’ entry at University of Arkansas at Fort Smith.

Students also can win cash prizes of $750 for first place, $500 for second place and $250 for third place, all of which are sponsored by Arvest Bank, according to the release.

Roger Holroyd, president and chief executive officer of Arvest Bank Fort Smith, said the company’s donation stems in part from the fact that the bank believes the film festival is an important inaugural event for the city.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States