Full Frame Announces 2022 Award Winners
Six awards for a combined value of $35,000 in cash prizes are announced for the 2022 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. Full Frame is a qualifying event for nominations for the Academy Award Documentary Short Subject category and the Producers Guild of America Awards. In light of the global pandemic, the 2022 festival took place online, featuring screenings of 22 feature and 15 short films.
“We are honored to recognize the 2022 award winning films,” said Sadie Tillery, Full Frame interim festival director and artistic director. “We would like to thank the jurors who joined us in reviewing the films this year and our award sponsors whose support makes these prizes possible.”
The Full Frame Grand Jury Award is presented to I Didn’t See You There, directed by Reid Davenport. An Honorable Mention was presented to Chernobyl: The Lost Tapes, directed by James Jones.
Remarking on I Didn’t See You There and Chernobyl: The Lost Tapes, the Grand Jury members said, “It’s with enormous excitement that we give the Grand Jury Award to I Didn’t See You There. This film delivers a profoundly moving experience with astonishing vulnerability and a visionary creative voice.
Through deeply impactful storytelling and use of rare archival footage, Chernobyl: The Lost Tapes carries a gut punch that continues to reverberate in our minds and hearts. We are elated to extend the Honorable Mention to Chernobyl: The Lost Tapes.”
Jessica Beshir, Luke Lorentzen, and Michèle Stephenson participated on the jury.
The Full Frame Jury Award for Best Short is presented to The Silent Shore, directed by Nathalie Giraud and Timothée Corteggiani.
The award is provided by Drs. Barbra and Andrew Rothschild. The jurors were Logan Lynette Burroughs, Rebekah Fergusson, and Danny Navarro.
The Charles E. Guggenheim Emerging Artist Award honors a first-time documentary feature director. The 2022 award is presented to Jannis Lenz for Soldat Ahmet. The award is provided by the Charles E. Guggenheim Family. Mike Attie, Carla Gutierrez, and Dee Hibbert-Jones participated on the jury.
The John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute Award, which is given to a short film that highlights documentary as a formally inventive artistic medium, is presented to Abyssal, directed by Alejandro Alonso. The award is sponsored by the John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute at Duke University and was juried by representatives for the institute: Franklin Cason, Joshua Gibson, Guo-Juin Hong, Ranjana Khanna, Shambhavi Kaul, Jennifer Zhou.
Representatives on behalf of the President’s Office of Duke University juried the prize for the Full Frame President’s Award, given to the best student film. This year’s award is given to No Soy Óscar, directed by Jon Ayon.
Aftershock, directed Paula Eiselt and Tonya Lewis Lee, received the Kathleen Bryan Edwards Award for Human Rights. Provided by the Julian Price Family Foundation in memory of Melanie Taylor, the award is given to a film that addresses a significant human rights issue in the United States. Representatives from the Kathleen Bryan Edwards family juried the prize: Anne Arwood, Laura Edwards, Clay Farland, Margaret Griffin, and Pricey Harrison.
For more information on the award winners and for complete juror statements, please visit fullframefest.org. Tickets are on sale now to stream films through Sunday, April 10 at store.fullframefest.org.
About Full Frame
The Full Frame Documentary Film Festival is an internationally recognized, Academy Award–qualifying event that proudly presents the best of nonfiction films on the festival circuit each year. Based in Durham, North Carolina, the annual festival gathers thousands of enthusiastic fans from around the globe to celebrate the documentary art form, engage in meaningful conversation, and experience the impact of exceptional nonfiction cinema firsthand. The 25th Annual Full Frame Documentary Film Festival is takes place virtually April 7–10, 2022.