Lynne Ramsay Honored at Glasgow Film Fest with Cinema City Award

The Glasgow Film Festival will honor acclaimed local filmmaker Lynne Ramsay with its Cinema City Honorary Award. She will receive the accolade during a special 'In Conversation' event exploring her distinctive approach to adaptation. The award recognizes her outstanding contribution to cinema through films like 'We Need to Talk About Kevin' and 'You Were Never Really Here'. The festival's 2026 edition will also feature appearances by James McAvoy, Felipe Bustos Sierra, and other filmmaking talent.

Key Points: Lynne Ramsay Gets Cinema City Award at Glasgow Film Festival

  • Honors Ramsay's 3-decade career
  • Award celebrates contribution to cinema
  • Event includes 'In Conversation' session
  • Festival runs Feb 25-Mar 8, 2026
3 min read

Lynne Ramsay to receive Cinema City Honorary Award at Glasgow Film Festival

BAFTA-winning filmmaker Lynne Ramsay receives the honorary award at GFF 2026. Explore her career and the festival's star-studded lineup.

"Her films have changed our understanding of what cinema can do and be. - Paul Gallagher, GFF head of program"

Glasgow, February 24

BAFTA-winning Glaswegian filmmaker Lynne Ramsay will be honoured with the Cinema City Honorary Award at the 22nd Glasgow Film Festival. She will receive the accolade on March 6 during a special In Conversation event titled 'From Page to Pulse', hosted by Glasgow filmmaker Adura Onashile as part of the festival's Industry Focus strand. The session will explore Ramsay's "unparalleled approach to adaptation," organizers said, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Ramsay made her feature debut with the 1999 Glasgow-shot 'Ratcatcher', which won the BAFTA for Outstanding Debut. Over the last three decades, she has become known for her distinctive visual style and powerful storytelling, directing films including 'We Need to Talk About Kevin', 'Die My Love', and 'You Were Never Really Here', the festival noted.

Launched in 2024, the Cinema City Honorary Award recognizes filmmakers who have made "an outstanding contribution to cinema." The award is named after Glasgow's nickname "Cinema City," given in the 1930s when the city had more cinemas per capita than anywhere else in the U.K. Previous recipients include Viggo Mortensen and fellow Glaswegian James McAvoy, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

"Lynne Ramsay is one of a very small number of filmmakers who have the seemingly miraculous power of taking a unique vision in their minds and creating it onscreen exactly as they imagined," said Paul Gallagher, GFF head of program. "Her films have changed our understanding hiiiof what cinema can do and be."

Added Samantha Bennett, GFF industry manager, "It is a true honor to welcome a homegrown talent of Lynne's calibre to the Industry Focus program," according to The Hollywood Reporter.

GFF's 2026 lineup of guest will also include a variety of other stars and filmmakers. McAvoy will attend GFF's closing gala for the U.K. premiere of hos directorial debut California Schemin', joined on the red carpet by film cast members Samuel Bottomley, Seamus McLean Ross and Lucy Halliday.

Glasgow-based director Felipe Bustos Sierra (Nae Pasaran) will return to the fest for the opening gala of Everybody to Kenmure Street, after the film won an award at Sundance, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Other filmmaking talent attending the festival includes Alice Winocour, Mark Jenkin, Polly Findlay, Marc Evans, Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard, and Edinburgh filmmaker Sean Dunn for the U.K. premiere of his black comedy The Fall of Sir Douglas Weatherford, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

The 22nd edition of the Glasgow Film Festival will run from February 25 to March 8, 2026.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Glasgow being called "Cinema City" is interesting! Reminds me of how Mumbai is our film city. Lynne Ramsay's work is intense but brilliant. Hope our film festivals in India also honor such unique artistic voices beyond just commercial success.
A
Arjun K
Honestly, I haven't seen any of her films. The article is well-written but focuses heavily on names and events. It would be more engaging for international readers if it explained her "unparalleled approach to adaptation" with a specific example. Just a thought.
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Sarah B
As someone who studied film, Ramsay is a true auteur. Her visual style is incredible. It's great that Glasgow celebrates its own. Makes me wonder which Indian city could claim a "Cinema City" title – maybe Chennai or Kolkata for their rich cinematic history?
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Vikram M
Congrats to her! The festival lineup for 2026 sounds exciting with James McAvoy too. Good to see such events promoting cinema as an art form. Our Indian film festivals should also have more "In Conversation" events with our legendary directors.
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Kavya N
'You Were Never Really Here' was a masterpiece! So gritty and emotional. Joaquin Phoenix was phenomenal. It's inspiring to see filmmakers who stick to their vision for decades. Wishing her all the best for the award! 👏

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