Announcements & Press Releases

From the
Festival Desk

Lineup announcements, tour dates, and the story of how a 40-year-old spring festival grew a summer edition. Press inquiries: press@filmfestdcsummer.org.

July 8, 2026

Award Winners Tour to visit five mid-Atlantic cities, August 14 – September 6

WASHINGTON, DC — The Washington Summer Film Festival today announced the full itinerary of its Award Winners Tour, a five-city traveling program that brings the feature-film award winners of Filmfest DC 2026 to historic independent cinemas across the mid-Atlantic after the festival's August 9 closing night.

The tour opens August 14–16 at the Avalon Theatre, Washington's oldest operating movie house, before traveling to the AFI Silver Theatre in Silver Spring (August 21–23), the Charles Theatre in Baltimore (August 28–30), and — on a shared final weekend, September 4–6 — the Byrd Theatre in Richmond and the Naro Expanded Cinema in Norfolk.

All five stops present the complete slate of winners: Primavera (Audience Award, Best Feature), The Essence of Eva (Audience Award, Best Documentary), Diya (Ted Pedas Award), Happy Birthday (Arabian Sights Award), and Everybody to Kenmure Street (Justice Matters Award). The Avalon stop includes a Q&A with members of Eva Cassidy's DC-area band following the August 16 screening of The Essence of Eva.

Full tour schedule →

July 1, 2026

Full lineup announced: 32 features in two sections

Still from Everybody to Kenmure Street: hundreds of neighbors fill a Glasgow street around a police van

Everybody to Kenmure Street (Felipe Bustos Sierra, UK) — the festival's Closing Night film. Courtesy of the filmmakers.

WASHINGTON, DC — The Washington Summer Film Festival today unveiled the complete lineup of its first edition, held this August at Regal Gallery Place, the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, and The Wharf: thirty-two features in two sections. The festival's public screenings present the five Filmfest DC 2026 award winners; the twenty-seven new selections are official selection nominees, competing for the festival's awards, presented at the Closing Night ceremony on August 9.

The themed section, War & Peace, pairs the five feature-film award winners of Filmfest DC 2026 with twelve nominated selections drawn from the past two years of festival cinema — among them Tomoko Ako's She's in Jail, Kateryna Gornostai's Timestamp, Rithy Panh's Meeting with Pol Pot, and Jesse Moss & Tony Gerber's Washington-set War Game.

The Summer Showcase, the festival's open section, nominates fifteen features from 2024–2025 chosen purely on merit — nine American independents, including Ghostlight, Eephus, and Dìdi, alongside six international selections from Canada, Ireland, Iran, Australia, the United Kingdom, and Iceland.

"War is loud, but most of what these seventeen films record is quiet: a debt repaid, an object returned, a street that refuses to empty. We wanted the first section this festival ever programs to be about the distance between conflict and repair — and the people who walk it." — Shirin Ghareeb, Deputy Director & Head of Programming

The opening ceremony will be held between August 5 and 7 — exact date to be announced — with Primavera, Damiano Michieletto's tale of a virtuoso violinist in Vivaldi's Venice, which Filmfest DC audiences voted Best Feature this spring, as the opening film. Closing Night, Sunday, August 9, presents the awards ceremony followed by Felipe Bustos Sierra's Everybody to Kenmure Street and the panel discussion "Neighbors: Civic Peace in Practice" with local community organizers.

Two free outdoor screenings at The Wharf's Transit Pier — The Essence of Eva and Primavera, dates to be announced — continue Filmfest DC's springtime tradition of free waterfront cinema.

See the full War & Peace lineup →

June 12, 2026

Filmfest DC launches a summer satellite festival

Eva Cassidy performing, from The Essence of Eva

The Essence of Eva (Alex Fegan & Malcolm Willis, Ireland), Audience Award winner for Best Documentary, screens free at The Wharf — date to be announced.

WASHINGTON, DC — Fresh off its 40th annual festival — 40 years, 3,620 films, 144 countries, one amazing festival — the Washington, DC International Film Festival (Filmfest DC) announced today that it will launch a satellite event this August: the Washington Summer Film Festival, a festival of feature films opening in early August 2026, with its opening ceremony to be held between August 5 and 7 and its awards ceremony on Closing Night, August 9.

Where the April festival surveys the breadth of world cinema, the summer edition is built around a single curated conversation. Its inaugural section, War & Peace, brings this year's Filmfest DC award winners back to Washington screens and sets them alongside twelve features from the past two years of international cinema.

"Every April we say goodbye to films that deserve a longer life in this city. The summer festival is our answer — a smaller, sharper program that lets Washington audiences sit with one big question for a long summer weekend, and then sends the award winners out on the road." — Tony Gittens, Founder and Festival Director, Filmfest DC

The festival will use three venues: Regal Gallery Place and the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library downtown, and free outdoor screenings at The Wharf's Transit Pier on the Southwest Waterfront — all locations familiar to Filmfest DC audiences from the spring festival.

An accompanying Award Winners Tour will carry the five award-winning features to independent cinemas in Washington, Silver Spring, Baltimore, Richmond, and Norfolk from mid-August through early September.

April 27, 2026 · From Filmfest DC

The Filmfest DC 2026 Awards went to…

Still from Happy Birthday: eight-year-old Toha in Cairo

Happy Birthday (Sarah Goher, Egypt), winner of the Arabian Sights Award. Courtesy of Filmfest DC.

Filmfest DC successfully wrapped its 40th annual festival this week. As announced on Closing Night, the feature-film awards — whose winners form the backbone of this summer's War & Peace section — went to:

Audience Award, Best Feature: Primavera, Damiano Michieletto (Italy, France)
Audience Award, Best Documentary: The Essence of Eva, Alex Fegan & Malcolm Willis (Ireland)
Ted Pedas Award: Diya, Achille Ronaimou (Chad, France, Germany, Ivory Coast)
Arabian Sights Award: Happy Birthday, Sarah Goher (Egypt)
Justice Matters Award: Everybody to Kenmure Street, Felipe Bustos Sierra (UK)

The Ted Pedas Award jury consisted of Felix Angel, former curator at the Inter-American Development Bank; Peggy Parsons, film curator emerita; and Karen Thomas, producer/director of Film Odyssey. The Justice Matters jury consisted of Nan Aron, founding president of Alliance for Justice; filmmaker and producer Judy Hallet; and Conrad Martin, executive director of the Stewart R. Mott Foundation. Filmfest DC thanks the CrossCurrents Foundation for its support of the Justice Matters series.

Read more at filmfestdc.org →