Competition
Film Fest Gent gladly helps you select your favourite films from our programme. Via Sections & Tags you can find out which films suit you best. In the Competition section, you will find all films competing for the Grand Prix or the Georges Delerue Award. Discover the films included in this section here.
Discover the section
International Jury
The International Jury surrenders themselves to FFG’s Official Competition, a tradition since 1985 that highlights the impact of music on cinema. At the end of their cinephile journey, the jury members award the festival’s two top honours: the Grand Prix for Best Film and the Georges Delerue Award for Best Soundtrack or Sound Design.
Charlotte Adigéry
Born in France and raised in Ghent, Belgian-Caribbean artist Charlotte Adigéry has risen to the foreground of the international music scene, creating genre-blurring electropop – often in collaboration with Bolis Popul, with whom she released the album Topical Dancer (2022), a biting yet humorous exploration of racism, sexism and post-colonialism. Through indie dance group Soulwax, she got the opportunity early in her career to sing on the soundtrack of Felix Van Groeningen’s Belgica (2016).
Alain Dessauvage
With films like Close, Girl, Small Things Like These, Bullhead, Patrick and The Ardennes, editor Alain Dessauvage has left a defining mark
on a new generation of Belgian cinema. Directors such as Lukas Dhont, Tim Mielants and Michaël Roskam have found in him a creative partner who brings added nuance to their stories. Dessauvage’s sense of rhythm and his ability to capture intimate emotions on screen make him a driving force in the Belgian film industry.
Denise Fernandes
Born in Lisbon to Cape Verdean parents and raised in Switzerland, filmmaker Denise Fernandes made her feature debut in 2024 with
Hanami, which won her the Best Emerging Director award at Locarno and a slot in FFG’s competition. With a gentle, poetic style already evident in her shorts, she has captivated audiences at international film festivals, marking her as a talent to watch.
Maxime Jean-Baptiste
Having grown up in the context of the Guianese diaspora in France, filmmaker Maxime Jean-Baptiste’s work delves into the complexity of Western colonial history by detecting the survival of past traumas in the present. His audiovisual and performance work
focuses on archives and forms of re-enactment as a perspective for conceiving a living, embodied memory. His feature debut Kouté vwa world-premiered at Locarno, winning two awards.
Theresa Russell
Theresa Russell was a magnetic screen presence throughout the 1980s and ‘90s, holding her own alongside Hollywood’s leading actresses. With standout roles in Black Widow (1987) and Whore (1991), she’s especially celebrated for her layered, vulnerable performances in six films by Nicolas Roeg. In the 2000s, Russell continued acting, mainly in TV series and independent films.
Ramon Zürcher
Swiss writer-director Ramon Zürcher makes films together with his twin brother Silvan. Their debut The Strange Little Cat (2013) became a festival hit, followed by The Girl and The Spider and The Sparrow in the Chimney, which earned them even more accolades. Zürcher’s cinema is rich with simmering tensions, meticulously orchestrated through a precise visual language.