Lynne Ramsay will receive the Glasgow Film Festival’s Cinema City Honorary Award on March 6, with the festival placing the Scottish director at the center of a public conversation event during its Industry Focus program, organizers said in an announcement released ahead of the 2026 edition. The honor will be presented during “From Page to Pulse,” an onstage discussion about adaptation hosted by Glasgow filmmaker Adura Onashile.
Festival organizers framed the award as a home-city recognition for a filmmaker who grew up in Maryhill and began her feature career with the Glasgow-shot Ratcatcher, which won a BAFTA for Outstanding Debut. The same announcement points to Ramsay’s later features, including We Need to Talk About Kevin, You Were Never Really Here and Die My Love, while stressing her reputation for visually driven storytelling.
The timing matters for the festival’s industry ambitions. Organizers said the event sits inside the 11th Industry Focus strand, which runs March 2-6 and expands to five days across two venues. They also said the 22nd festival runs February 25-March 8, with 126 films from 44 countries and a heavy premieres slate, making Ramsay’s appearance a flagship draw for both professionals and local audiences.
Paul Gallagher, the festival’s head of program, called Ramsay “one of a very small number of filmmakers” able to realize a singular vision on screen and said her films “have changed our understanding of what cinema can do and be.” Samantha Bennett, the festival’s industry manager, described her appearance as “a true honour” for the Industry Focus lineup and signaled a strong push to position the talk as a key moment for Scotland’s screen sector.
The award itself is still new. Glasgow Film says it launched the Cinema City Honorary Award in 2024, naming it after the city’s historic reputation for cinema-going, and previously gave it to Viggo Mortensen and James McAvoy. McAvoy is due back at this year’s festival for the closing gala and the UK premiere of his directorial debut, California Schemin’, linking Ramsay’s honor to a wider emphasis on Scottish screen talent across the program.





















































