Another weekend of superb film programming, captivating panels, John Waters appearances, and even a clambake is in the books for the annual Provincetown Film Festival.
The light and local-audience-friendly festival, situated along the beachy tip of Cape Code and against gorgeous June weather, opened with Adam Shankman’s RuPaul who’s-who disaster spoof comedy “Stop! That! Train!” and closed with the Kyra Sedgwick-Kevin Bacon family affair “Family Movie.” In between, Provincetown celebrated Ryan Murphy, “The Four Seasons” star Marco Calvani, Jane Schoenbrun and Hannah Einbinder, A24’s upcoming Anthony Bourdain biopic “Tony,” and festival fixture Waters with tributes, special events, and conversations. Plus, the festival offered a five-day marathon to catch up on new films fresh off the festival circuit — many of which were LGBTQ-focused.
On Sunday, the festival revealed its 2026 juried award winners, with audience awards following on Monday. Juried short film winners become eligible for the short film Academy Awards prizes, while the narrative feature awards of the Provincetown Film Society-operated festival offer either support for upcoming theatrical releases or cause for distribution for those entries still seeking it.
Multiple prizes went to Kai Stänicke’s historical drama “Trial of Hein,” which I previously called a “sneaky metaphor for coming out” told in a “walls-down, Brechtian style.” Another audience award for best narrative feature went to Sam McConnell’s bruising, queer bodybuilder drama “Test,” while documentary prizes went to films about women such as artist Anne Packard, tennis icon Billie Jean King, and queer filmmaker Barbara Hammer.
See the full list of winners below. Language comes courtesy of the festival and jury statements.
PIFF Audience Awards
The Audience Awards are voted on by in-person festival attendees. For the first time in the festival’s history, there was a tie in both categories.
PIFF Audience Award / Best Narrative Feature: TEST directed by Sam McConnell and TRIAL OF HEIN directed by Kai Stänicke
PIFF Audience Award / Best Documentary Feature:
ANNE PACKARD: AN ARTIST’S RESOLVE by Arthur Egeli and GIVE ME THE BALL! by Liz Garbus and Elizabeth Wolff
John Schlesinger Awards
These juried awards are presented to a first-time narrative and documentary feature filmmaker. The Narrative Award was juried by filmmaker John Krokidas (KILL YOUR DARLINGS). Filmmaker Dawn Porter (WHEN A WITNESS RECANTS) selected the Documentary Award.
John Schlesinger Narrative Award:
Kai Stänicke (TRIAL OF HEIN)
Trial of Hein captures the feeling of anyone who has ever dared to become someone other than the person the world expected them to be, and the strength it takes simply to remain oneself. – John Krokidas via provided statement
John Schlesinger Narrative Special Mention:
John Early (MADDIE’S SECRET)
A film that takes satire, melodrama, performance, food culture, shame, and spectacle, throws them into a blender, and comes out with something both deranged and deeply felt. – John Krokidas via provided statement
Fergus Campbell (SPARKS)
A beautifully strange and unexpectedly tender film about queer identity, friendship, and the need to escape to become, where French New Wave cinema, small-town boredom, and a time portal collide, until adolescence itself starts to feel like science fiction – because let’s face it, it does. – John Krokidas via provided statement
John Schlesinger Documentary Award:
Efrain Mojica & Rebecca Zweig (JARIPEO)
A rare look at a culture within a culture. Beautifully filmed and achingly poignant. Too many people hide. I am so glad we got to see some of them. – Dawn Porter via provided statement
John Schlesinger Documentary Special Mention:
Brydie O’Connor (BARBARA FOREVER)
As inspirational as Barbara herself, this film is lovingly crafted and beautifully told. There will never be another Barbara, thankfully we have this remembrance. – Dawn Porter via provided statement
Juried Short Awards
The 2026 shorts jury consisted of a skilled group of film and art professionals including Yen Tan, Kristen Becker and Will Harrington. The Provincetown International Film Festival is an Academy Award-qualifying festival. The short films that received Best Narrative Short, Best Queer Short and Best Documentary Short awards will now be automatically eligible to enter the Short Films competition for the concurrent season of the Oscars.
Best Documentary Short: SOME KIND OF REFUGE by Alexandra Kern
For its moving exploration of a community living on the edge, where encroaching waters threaten both land and legacy. With compassion and urgency, the film captures a New Orleans community’s determination to preserve its identity in the face of a disappearing homeland.
Best Narrative Short: CALLBACK directed by Matthew Puccini
For its razor-sharp writing, exceptional performances and keenly observed exploration of the messy intersections of love, ambition, and self-worth.
Best Queer Short: BUBBE & TAL – directed by Daisy Rosato
For its tender, quietly radical portrait of intergenerational connection, illuminating the unexpected bonds of family, identity, and healing through humor.
Best New England Short: CREATURE OF THE DEEP – directed by Angus Reardon
For its darkly comic portrait of family obligation, class anxiety, and the strange rituals we perform to appease those with power.
Best Animated Short: APART directed by Pola Maneli
For its extraordinary artistry and deeply resonant portrayal of friendship, empathy, and moral courage in the face of division and injustice.
Honorable Mention New England Short: ON THE TIDE – directed by Mimi Mailcoat Bois
For its intimate and beautifully observed portrait of oyster farmers in Wellfleet, capturing the labor, legacy, and changing tides of a coastal tradition with quiet clarity and deep affection for place.
Honorable Mention: ROOM OF THE ABSOLUTE by Natalie Shirinian & Elizabeth Baudouin
For its haunting visual poetry and profound portrait of Alla Hurenko, illuminating the enduring power of art in the face of war and upheaval.

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