The Seattle International Film Festival wrapped its 51st edition on 25 May by handing the Official Competition Grand Jury Prize to Brittany Shyne’s U.S. documentary “Seeds,” while audiences awarded the Golden Space Needle for best film to Miki Magasiva’s New Zealand coming-of-age drama “Tinā.”
Documentary filmmaker Robinson Devor captured the juried documentary crown with “Suburban Fury,” his portrait of would-be presidential assassin Sara Jane Moore, with Spain’s “Deaf” winning the Ibero-American section and Iranian debut “The Crowd” topping the New Directors slate.
The 11-day festival screened 245 titles from 74 countries, including 19 world and 27 North American premieres, and collected more than 20,000 ballot votes for its audience prizes. Artistic director Beth Barrett said the results “absolutely reflect the intention behind this year’s focal points” of amplifying independent and international voices. Nearly half of this year’s filmmakers identified as female or non-binary, and more than a third identified as BIPOC, continuing SIFF’s effort to foreground under-represented creators.
Shyne, whose film follows Black farmers fighting to reclaim family land, called the prize “a galvanising moment for rural justice stories” in a statement to Filmmaker Magazine. Devor told Film Comment that Seattle’s embrace of his true-crime study “brings the narrative home” after its New York premiere earlier in the season. Magasiva, accepting remotely from Wellington, thanked SIFF voters for recognising a Māori-language feature that “puts Pacific adolescence on the global map,” according to festival social-media coverage.
The prizes cap a festival that opened 15 May with Kurosawa Kiyoshi’s Cloud and sprinkled local fare among international debuts. Observers noted that several winners, including Shyne’s and Devor’s documentaries, still lack U.S. distribution, positioning SIFF as an increasingly important launchpad ahead of fall acquisition markets.