Photos: Virginia Film Festival Guests and Crowds Delighted To Be Back in Person

November 6, 2022 By Anne E. Bromley, anneb@virginia.edu Anne E. Bromley, anneb@virginia.edu

From the opening night’s full house at the Paramount Theater for the area premiere of “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery” to many other sold-out movies and illuminating discussions, the 35th Virginia Film Festival, held Wednesday through Sunday, drew big crowds – free this year from COVID restrictions on social gatherings.

“We all want the arts to come back strong this year,” Jody Kielbasa, University of Virginia vice provost for the arts and director of the film festival, said on opening night. All signs indicate that came true. Kielbasa said he was excited to have all events back in person, as he welcomed a sold-out crowd to the opening night’s film.

Audience in the Paramount Theater

Many of the films sold out and crowds packed venues like the Paramount Theater. (Photo by Jack Looney)

The festival, a program of the University and its offices of the provost and vice provost for the arts, presented more than 100 films in locations on Grounds and around downtown Charlottesville.

This year’s guests presenting films featured fresh faces and some that were undoubtedly familiar from many years of significant roles. Dozens of up-and-coming contemporary actors, directors and producers, along with seasoned veterans, screened their films and afterward talked about their roles before the audiences. Panel discussions also included UVA scholars and other experts, critics and participants.

When UVA President Jim Ryan officially opened the festival Wednesday night, he told about the first time he encountered the festival. As a UVA law student in the early 1990s, he “stumbled” into a film festival event, he recalled. The movie being shown was “To Kill a Mockingbird,” the well-known 1962 film about a Southern attorney who defended a Black man wrongly accused of sexual assault. Added to Ryan’s surprise, the much older actors Gregory Peck, who starred as attorney Atticus Finch, and Mary Badham, who played his daughter Scout, appeared to talk about the film afterward. The festival became one of Ryan’s favorite annual events.

Here’s a selection of scenes from the festival.

President ryan speaking to a crowd from a podium at the Virginia Film Festival
After taking a selfie with the audience in the background, UVA President Jim Ryan introduced the film “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery” on opening night. (Photo by Justin Ide)
Jody Kielbasa greeting film festival guests
Director of the Virginia Film Festival Jody Kielbasa, UVA’s vice provost for the arts, greeted film festival guests from Wednesday through Sunday. (Photo by Coe Sweet)
Man speaking from a podium presenting the Breakthrough Star Award for 2022 at the Virginia Film Festival
Jonathan Majors receives the Virginia Film Festival’s “Breakthrough Star” award after the screening of his new film, “Devotion,” in which he stars as Jesse Brown, the U.S. Navy’s first Black fighter pilot. (Photo by Jack Looney)
Katie Couric, Din Blankenship, Erin Bernhardt, and Stephen Mull on a discussion panel
UVA alumni, from left, Katie Couric, Din Blankenship and Erin Bernhardt discuss their film “Refuge” with moderator Stephen Mull, UVA’s vice provost for global affairs. (Photo by Eze Amos)
Earl White and a close up of his fiddle
After the documentary, “Black Fiddlers,” made by local filmmaker Eduardo Montes-Bradley, Earl White, a fiddler living in Floyd County who worked at UVA many years ago, played a tune for the sold-out audience. (Photo by Coe Sweet)
Jamie Sisley recieving the Gov. Gerald L. Baliles Founder’s Award
UVA alumnus and director Jamie Sisley, who brought his film, “Stay Awake,” to the festival, received the Gov. Gerald L. Baliles Founder’s Award. (Photo by Coe Sweet)
Discussion panel with Krysta Jones, Clarissa Doutherd, Tamara Perkins, Sara Maamouri, and Brian Johns
Discussion of the documentary “Clarissa’s Battle,” moderated by Krysta Jones, left, of the nonprofit Vote Lead Impact, included Clarissa Doutherd, the film’s main subject; director Tamara Perkins; editor Sara Maamouri; and moderator Brian Johns of Virginia Organizing. (Photo by Coe Sweet)
Discussion panel with Kevin Everson, Claudrena Harold, and Julide Etem
UVA art professor and filmmaker Kevin Everson, right, presented a suite of short films on Friday. UVA history professor Claudrena Harold, left, co-directed two of them. They talked with moderator Julide Etem, UVA assistant professor of media studies. (Photo by Coe Sweet)

Media Contact

Anne E. Bromley

University News Associate Office of University Communications