Caroline King introduces filmmakers at the AWFF opening night on Sept. 24. (Photo by Delaney Tarr.)

In the small Seven Stages theatre in Little Five Points, a group of women from across the world gathered on Sept. 24 for an evening with a little bit of everything: Strip club vampire action horror, experimental animation, a Coen Brothers-style heist comedy, and an African girls documentary.

They’re all short films made by women filmmakers, and they make up the opening night of the Atlanta Women’s Film Festival. 

It’s the intimate festival’s fifth year in business. AWFF kicked off five years ago through film collective CinemaLife and its founder and CEO, Caroline King. She gathered submissions to host the single-day event in the back of a local brewery during COVID-19. 

Now, AWFF is a four-day festival with over a hundred entries and enough attendees to fill a theater. But Caroline King’s goal remains the same. 

“The Atlanta Women’s Film Festival was started because women are such phenomenal storytellers,” King said. “Having this branch of the festival just being able to highlight such amazing women and people and allies is such a huge privilege.” 

From Sept. 24 to 28, the festival featured 114 films, 57 screenplays, and a roster of career-oriented panels and workshops for women in every part of the industry.  The panels were less about big-picture ideas and more focused on the nuts and bolts of working in Atlanta’s industry. 

One workshop taught creatives how to do their taxes and incorporate. Another focused on utilizing social media for a career advantage. They’re the kind of conversations King said creatives are often left out of, and she wanted to incorporate them into a festival of her own design.

“I don’t want it to ever just be a festival where we’re popping it in and pressing play,” King said. “I want people to really leave having gained something.” 

The result is a festival that combines career boot camp and global meetings of the minds. First-time filmmakers sat next to industry veterans, while locals mingled with creatives from as far as New Zealand. King said it’s a weekend of “like-minded, powerful women.” 

Attendees like producer Vanessa Claire Stewart credit the environment to Atlanta’s intimate film scene. Stewart spent over a decade in Los Angeles before she moved to Georgia, and she said she “loves it here.”

“It felt like a weight lifted,” Stewart said. 

The producer said the local scene is more supportive and less competitive than other entertainment industry hubs. 

The producer credits the local scene for being more supportive and less competitive. King says the festival offers a dose of “southern hospitality to its attendees. It’s a heavy workload for the founder and CEO, though. She works a full-time job in corporate marketing and often pays for festival expenses out of pocket. 

But King calls the festivals the “plant she can’t stop watering,” and the reward comes with every annual event. This year, she spoke to several first-time filmmakers who had never even been to a festival before. 

“At the event, I told them, I hope all of you in the room have eliminated your imposter syndrome,” King said. 

In the future, she hopes to keep growing AWFF. She also wants to expand the other festivals hosted by Cinema Life, like Georgia Shorts Film Festival, Atlanta Comedy Film Festival, Women’s Comedy Film Festival in Atlanta, and a monthly Film PItch ATL event.

“But I want it to be prestigious, not pretentious,” King said. 

She also hopes to open a creative coworking space for local filmmakers, another way to support women and allies in the industry. King also hopes to expand festivals to other cities. 

“We have come so far,” King said. “We still have so far to go.” 

See Kelly Jordan’s photos from the opening night of AWFF below.

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1 Comment

  1. The Atlanta Women’s Film Festival sounds like such an inspiring celebration of creativity, community, and mentorship! It’s amazing to see a festival that not only showcases incredible women filmmakers but also equips them with the tools to thrive in the industry. Kudos to Caroline King for cultivating such a supportive and empowering environment—Atlanta’s film scene is lucky to have this!

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