Our history
The history of the festival Europe by Europe
A European vision of cinema
The Europe by Europe festival was born in 2006, under the impetus of filmmaker Irena Bilić, with a clear objective: to create a bridge between European auteur cinemas in all their diversity.
At the time, few festivals in France offered a program specifically dedicated to the entire European continent, with an emphasis on independent authors, countries with low production capacity, unique voices or even hybrid formats (documentary, fiction, experimental).
From the outset, the festival has been part of an artistic, cultural and political approach : defending cinema as an art of freedom, memory, language and the encounter between peoples.
From Normandy to Paris: an upward trajectory
The first edition of the festival, then called the Southeastern European Independent Film Fair, was held in Normandy (Bernay, Évreux, Moulin d’Andé). It was produced by Art Gothique Tendre – Evropa Film Akt, an association founded by filmmaker Irena Bilic and artist Nenad Zilic. The screenings were intimate, the discussions lively, and the reception enthusiastic.
In 2008, due to growing demand, the festival moved to Paris, while occasionally maintaining regional branches (Strasbourg, Brussels, Rouen, Le Havre, Lisieux, Pont-Audemer, etc.). Since the 2013 edition, screenings have taken place in Paris and the Île-de-France region (L’Entrepôt cinema, Le Saint-André des arts, the Latin Quarter Film Library, the Grand Action, the Jérôme Seydoux-Pathé Foundation, the Méliès, the Christine 21, the Eden, the Atalante, the Louis Lumière School, etc.).
This change of territory marks a strategic turning point: Paris becomes the beating heart of the festival, with roots in renowned art house venues, foreign cultural centers, university venues, and international partners.
A strong editorial line : defending European auteur cinema
From the very first editions, the festival has asserted a unique vision :
- Giving a voice to non-national European films,
- Highlighting countries that are underrepresented in commercial circuits,
- Create continuity between the masters of the 7th art and the next generation,
- Cross artistic, historical, political and philosophical perspectives.

Each year, a strong theme guides the programming: a common thread allowing for dialogue between the works and offering critical reflection on our times.
- 2009 : New perspectives on love and war.
- 2010 : Freedom and dependencies.
- 2011 : Heroes and Antiheroes.
- 2012 : Silence and noise.
- 2013 : Memory and Becoming.
- 2014 : Light and Darkness.
- 2015 : Body and soul.
- 2016 : Chaos and Harmonies.
- 2017 : Migration exists. Death does not.
- 2018 : Borders.
- 2019 : Animals and Mens.
- 2020 : Animals, mens, machines, robots.
- 2021 : Bodies in motion.
- 2022 : Black and white.
- 2023 : Portraits, landscapes, world.
- 2024 : Faces of men, faces of history.
- 2025 : Tell Me Lies – in tribute to Peter Brook.
An architecture in constant expansion
Over the years, the festival has structured its program around major sections :
- Official competitions :
- 🏆 Prix SAUVAGE (feature-length fiction film)
- 📽️ Prix PRESENT (documentary)
- 🎞️ Prix SAUVAGE CORTO (short film)
- Young Jury Prizes :
- ⭐ Prix LUNA (young professionals)
- 🐺 Prix LUPETO (European students)
- ✨ Prix E-MOTION (young people of the European Movement)
- Non-competitive sections :
- 🎬 THEMA (theme of the year)
- 🌿 Wildlife (films related to ecological issues)
- 🧪 Experimental Salon (research cinema)
- 🌍 Connections (international collaborations)
- 🤝 Meetings and events (signings, masterclasses, debates…)
Each edition is also punctuated by tributes to great filmmakers, national retrospectives and carte blanche to renowned programmers and critics.

A stage for invisible voices
The festival has always been keen to provide visibility :
- To authors from French overseas territories,
- To minority filmmakers,
- To films on issues of gender, migration, colonial memory,
- In rare languages, often not widely spoken.
It has shown films in Albanian, Nenets, Armenian, Finnish, Turkish, Greek, Norwegian, etc., with significant translation and subtitling work each year.
Guests of honor who have marked the history of the festival
Over the years, the festival has welcomed major figures from European cinema, such as :
🎥 Agnès Varda, Carlos Saura, István Szabó, Eugène Green, Ralitza Petrova, Albert Serra, Isabelle Huppert, Jean-Claude Carrière, Márta Mészáros, Jonas Mekas, Krzysztof Zanussi, Roy Andersson, Anja Breien, Ildikó Enyedi, etc.
Each jury president leaves a mark, embodying the diversity of European sensibilities.
Emblematic places in the heart of Paris
Since 2008, the festival has invested in numerous partner venues, notably :
- The cinema The 7 Parnassians,
- The Pathé – The Fauvettes,
- Le Studio des Ursulines,
- The Lincoln,
- The Méliès at Montreuil,
- The Jérôme Seydoux-Pathé Foundation,
- The Arts Arena,
- The INALCO,
And many cultural centers, embassies and universities.
Each of these places is chosen for its programming, its audience, its accessibility, and the quality of the exchanges it allows.
A collective and committed adventure
Europe by Europe is supported by the Evropa Film Akt association, created in 2005, with a clear mission : to bring Europe into dialogue through cinema.
The artistic direction has been provided by Irena Bilić since the beginning, and the presidency has been entrusted to Ghislaine Masset since 2024..
Over the years, volunteers, interns, students, researchers, translators, journalists, filmmakers, activists, professors, projectionists and enthusiasts have contributed to bringing this project to life.
And now ?
With nearly 20 editions to its name, the festival continues to evolve with :
- Opening up to new formats (exhibitions, publications, workshops)
- A digital platform for masterclasses
- New strategic European partnerships
- Programs throughout the year, outside of the festival, in the neighborhoods
- The objective of welcoming 30 European countries per edition by 2027
The festival continues to be rooted in its time, while maintaining a critical and poetic perspective on cinema as a reflection of our societies.