Skwigly Online Animation Magazine Search

Cardiff Animation Festival announces 2022 official selection

// Festival News

Skwigly



Cardiff Animation Festival (CAF) 2022 PosterThis April, Cardiff Animation Festival (CAF) is back for its third year, and has today announced its official selection of 102 animated short films in competition.

This year, Cardiff Animation Festival is going hybrid, with online events held throughout April, and in-person events held at Chapter Arts Centre in Cardiff from 7–10 April.

A full jam-packed programme of screenings, masterclasses, Q&As, networking events and parties will be announced in early March, but key among them are the short film screenings that showcase some of the best animated work that has been made over the last two years.

With 102 short films from 22 countries – over half of which were directed by women – the selection features a variety of unique voices and a diverse range of stories.

A Bite of Bone (Dir. Honami Yano, image via CAF)

The seven screenings for adult audiences all have hybrid titles that reflect the festival’s 2022 theme.

  • Together/Apart explores the struggles and the joys of relationships, featuring everything from fighting to survive in the post-apocalyptic future in Reduction (Réka Anna Szakály), to reflecting on time spent with a loved one in A Bite of Bone (Honami Yano).
  • Human/Nature asks the question: What makes us human? Are we truly different from everything else on the planet? The concept of humanity is explored through films from the serene The Principle of Sunrise (Ye Song) to the UK premiere of Soft Tissue by Cliona Noonan.
  • Sound/Vision is a treat for the ears as well as the eyes. Music and animation come together to provide a multi-sensory experience, featuring films like the abstract 04111311 (Flora Martyr) and the adorable Polar Bear Bears Boredom (Koji Yamamura).
  • Home/Sick is a selection packed with nostalgia. It’s an opportunity to cosy up with cherished memories from childhood in Forever A Kid (Frederieke Mooij) and a family’s eccentric obsessions with Affairs of the Art (Joanna Quinn).
  • Silent/Cinema shows that a great film transcends language barriers. The films in this selection don’t have dialogue, but each one says a lot. Fall into dreamy summer memories in Chado (Dominica Harrison) and sail away with surreal cruise ship tragicomedy Arka (Natko Stipanicev).
  • Reel/Life is a showcase of animated documentaries. From stories of the Hong Kong Riots in Prince Edward (Hoching Kwok) to an autobiographical portrayal of living with autism in Strange (Cameron Carr), this selection is packed with touching tales and inspiring stories.
  • After/Dark is a late-night screening of shorts with a bit of a bite. From ravenous spiders in Arachnarche (Emma Jordan), to a gruesome re-telling of human history in Cuties (Theo W Scott), this adults-only selection is not for those who are unsettled easily…

Cardiff Animation Festival’s Family programme will also include a variety of events for children. The Animated Family Shorts screening for primary school-age children includes an adventure with some furry friends in A Cat Called Jam (Lorraine Lordan) and an eventful journey to school in Tobi and the Turbobus (Verena Fels). Further events for children and families will be announced in early March.

After having to postpone CAF 2020 at the eleventh hour, the last two years have been a crash course in running online events. This year, we’re combining our experience of running online and in-person events with our first ever hybrid edition. We’re so excited to be back at Chapter and venues around Cardiff with a huge range of in-person events, as well as making lots of the festival available online, giving our audiences the chance to access the festival however they want to. We can’t wait to see everyone in person and in the online chat box!

-Lauren Orme, Festival Director of Cardiff Animation Festival

The Principle of Sunrise (Dir. Ye Song, image via CAF)

Festival passes are on sale now, with a limited number available at reduced Early Bird prices. Tickets for individual events will be on sale following the full programme announcement in early March. About Cardiff Animation Festival Cardiff Animation Festival is a non-profit Community Interest Company. The CAF team have been running animation events in Wales since 2014; 2022 will be the third biennial festival. The first, in 2018, was held primarily at local artistic hub and cinema space, the Chapter Arts Centre. The inaugural festival reached total admissions figures of 5515. The second Cardiff Animation Festival, in 2020, was one of the first animation festivals to switch from in-person to completely online. Over 4000 viewers attended from at least 21 different countries. Cardiff Animation Festival 2022 is funded by Ffilm Cymru Wales, Film Hub Wales as part of the BFI Film Audience Network (FAN), and Ymddiried through the Owen Edwards Scholarship Fund, and sponsored by Picl Animation, Cloth Cat Animation and by the ScreenSkills Animation Skills Fund with contributions from UK animation productions.

Want a more specific search? Try our Advanced Search