"Happy Birthday" and "Jimmy & The Demons" win $20,000 Grand Prizes. "The Tenderness Tour" wins the Hoodox Indiana Spotlight Award.
Media Contact: Director of Marketing, Jessica Chapman
jchapman@heartlandfilm.org | 317.750.3902
jchapman@heartlandfilm.org | 317.750.3902
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(October 18, 2025) INDIANAPOLIS - The 34th Heartland International Film Festival (HIFF) announced the 2025 award winners and presented more than $60,000 in cash prizes to recipients at the Awards Presentation on Saturday, October 18 at The Jazz Kitchen. The 11-day festival concludes on Sunday, October 19 with in-person and virtual screenings. Encore screenings of the Narrative Feature Grand Prize, Documentary Feature Grand Prize and Hoodox Indiana Spotlight Award will play on Sunday at Alamo Drafthouse Cinema at The Square. The festival's Closing Night film, "Nuremberg" from Sony Pictures Classics, will screen to a sold-out crowd at The Tobias Theater at Newfields on Sunday evening.
"Congratulations to this year's winners," said Artistic Director Greg Sorvig. "Honoring such an international slate of powerful stories right here in the Heartland is truly an honor. I would like to thank every single storyteller who has spent the past 10 days with our audiences."
"Happy Birthday," directed by Sarah Goher, received the $20,000 Narrative Feature Grand Prize, marking the first time that a husband and wife have separately directed films that have won the Narrative Grand Prize (Mohamed Diab, "Cairo 678" in 2012). It is also Egypt's official entry for Best International Feature Film at the 98th Academy Awards®. "Jimmy & The Demons," directed by Cindy Meehl, won the $20,000 Documentary Feature Grand Prize. This documentary followed the 79-year-old artist Jimmy Grashow as he poured four years into his magnum opus. Jimmy passed away in September of 2025. Film subject Guzzy Grashow, Jimmy's widow, accepted the award during the presentation.
Heartland Film has the distinct honor of being the only festival in the world sanctioned by the Stewart Family to present an award in honor of classic actor Jimmy Stewart. "The Eyes of Ghana," directed by Ben Proudfoot, received the $5,000 Jimmy Stewart Legacy Award. This is Ben Proudfoot's feature film debut after being an alumnus of the Indy Shorts International Film Festival with several short films, including Oscar®-winning documentaries "The Last Repair Shop" and "The Queen of Basketball."
The Hoodox Indiana Spotlight Award goes to a film that highlights stories from the Hoosier state or created by filmmakers right here in Indiana. Director Andie Redwine and film subject, Richard D. Propes, accepted the $2,000 Hoodox Indiana Spotlight Award for "The Tenderness Tour." Since 1989, Indianapolis native Richard D. Propes has traveled over 5,000 miles by wheelchair, raising hundreds of thousands of dollars for charities worldwide in his nationally-recognized effort known as the Tenderness Tour. A paraplegic/double amputee with spina bifida, Propes completed the 35th year of the acclaimed event last year. He is also the founder and publisher of TheIndependentCritic.com, a member of the Indiana Film Journalists Association and the recipient of numerous honors, including the Sagamore of the Wabash.
Richard D. Propes is also the namesake to two festival awards. "Comparsa," directed by Vickie Curtis & Doug Anderson, received the $2,000 Richard D. Propes Documentary Social Impact Award. "Shakti," directed by Nani Sahra Walker, received received the $2,000 Richard D. Propes Narrative Social Impact Award, as well as the $2,500 Best Narrative Premiere Award.
Saturday, HIFF hosted the 3rd Annual PitchDox Main Event presented by Hoodox where five local documentary filmmakers presented their project ideas to a live audience for a chance to receive $10,000 to complete their film. The $10,000 Grand Prize went to "Barbara Boyd: On Top of the World," directed by Manòn Voice. Set in Indianapolis during the upheaval of the civil rights era, this documentary explores the groundbreaking career of Barbara Boyd, who became the first African American woman on-air in Indiana in 1969. This film also won the $2,500 PitchDox Audience Choice Award.
The 2025 festival theme, "Connect to What Matters," was inspired by the early days of the World Wide Web and excitement around connecting people and stories from all over the world. Attendees are encouraged to connect to new places, people and perspectives as they browse through festival films, including 19 World/U.S. Premieres, 27 regional premieres, 17 Special Presentations from major distributors and 9 Indiana Spotlight films.
Festival screenings continue through Sunday, October 19 at Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, Living Room Theaters, Kan-Kan Cinema and Newfields. Select award-winning titles will also be available to stream through Sunday, October 26.
Audience Choice Award Winners will be announced on Monday, October 20 in the categories of Overall, Narrative, Documentary, Special Presentation Narrative, Special Presentation Documentary and Indiana Spotlight. Voting for audience choice awards will close at 11:59 PM EDT on Sunday, October 19.
The full film lineup, schedule and tickets for the 34th Heartland International Film Festival can be found at HeartlandFilmFestival.org.

2025 HEARTLAND INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL AWARD WINNERS

Grand Prize for Narrative Feature ($20,000 Grand Prize)
"Happy Birthday," directed by Sarah Goher (Egypt)
Eight-year-old maid Toha goes to great lengths to ensure that her best friend Nelly, the daughter of her wealthy employer, has a successful birthday party in this poignant debut feature exploring classism in modern-day Cairo. Egypt's official entry for Best International Feature Film at the 98th Academy Awards®.
Jury statement: This debut feature is a beautifully crafted film that grips you from the very first frame and leaves you breathless by the end. The sorrow achieved in the final shot lingered with the jury long after the credits rolled. The jury would like to also give special recognition to Doha Ramadan, whose breakout performance as young Toha was truly remarkable, and we look forward to seeing her future work.

Grand Prize for Documentary Feature ($20,000 Grand Prize)
"Jimmy & The Demons," directed by Cindy Meehl (USA)
"Jimmy & The Demons" follows 79-year-old artist Jimmy Grashow as he pours four years into his magnum opus, a towering sculpture of Jesus and demons that is an epic reflection of faith, mortality and his own lifelong fears. A portrait of creative genius, family and a career deserving of celebration.
Jury statement: As filmmakers ourselves, we were particularly captivated by a story that beautifully illuminates the process of creating art and the profound ways dedication to one’s craft shapes a lifetime. The remarkable skill, relationships and love portrayed in this film felt transcendent and infused with courage, challenges and hope—messages that resonate deeply within our community and inspire all of us to be the best versions of ourselves.

Jimmy Stewart Legacy Award ($5,000 Cash Prize)
"The Eyes of Ghana," directed by Ben Proudfoot (USA)
From Oscar®-winning director Ben Proudfoot, "The Eyes of Ghana" is a stunning feature documentary following 93-year-old documentarian Chris Hesse—personal cinematographer to forgotten African icon Kwame Nkrumah—as he races against blindness and time to rescue and repatriate a secret trove of over 1,300 films that captured the birth of African independence in the fifties and sixties. Yet unseen by the public, these films may not only rewrite Ghanaian and African history—but world history itself.

Humor & Humanity Award ($2,000 Cash Prize)
"Tight & Nerdy," directed by Jeff Nucera & Jonathan Ruane (USA)
This award honors a film that best combines comedy and empathy to inspire filmmakers and audiences through the transformative power of cinema.
"Tight & Nerdy" is a hilarious and unexpectedly moving portrait of the fearless women behind the world’s first (and only) burlesque tribute to “Weird Al” Yankovic.

Richard D. Propes Narrative Social Impact Award ($2,000 Cash Prize)
"Shakti" directed by Nani Sahra Walker (USA & Nepal)
A single mother enrolls her nine-year-old daughter in painting lessons in Kathmandu until her child suddenly catches a mysterious illness. When doctors are unable to pin down a diagnosis, her strong-willed mother turns to a local shaman who reveals shared trauma that leads mother and daughter down a path of redemption.

Richard D. Propes Documentary Social Impact Award ($2,000 Cash Prize)
"Comparsa," directed by Vickie Curtis & Doug Anderson (Guatemala, USA)
"Comparsa" immerses audiences in the intensity of Ciudad Peronia, Guatemala, where sisters Lesli and Lupe use art to heal deep wounds. They face extreme rates of femicide, and after 41 girls are killed in a State-run facility, they decide to act. They overcome histories of abuse with a joyful festival.

Best Narrative Premiere Award ($2,500 Cash Prize)
"Shakti," directed by Nani Sahara Walker (USA & Nepal)
A single mother enrolls her nine-year-old daughter in painting lessons in Kathmandu until her child suddenly catches a mysterious illness. When doctors are unable to pin down a diagnosis, her strong-willed mother turns to a local shaman who reveals shared trauma that leads mother and daughter down a path of redemption.

Best Documentary Premiere Award ($2,500 Cash Prize)
"À demain sur la Lune" directed by Thomas Balmès (France)
Amandine is 39 when she is diagnosed with incurable cancer and given just a few months left to live. She is admitted to the palliative care unit of Calais Hospital, in northern France, where she meets an unexpected companion: Peyo, a horse with the unique ability to sense when death is near. With his trainer Hassen, he visits the most fragile patients to soothe them in their final days.

Hoodox Indiana Spotlight Documentary Award ($2,000 Cash Prize)
"The Tenderness Tour," directed by Andie Redwine (USA)
In his hardest physical challenge to date, the complex, dedicated and irreverent activist Richard Propes fights for the very tour that saved his own life. Can Richard raise a million dollars to offset $155 million in medical debt when he's never raised more than $20,000?
About Heartland Film, Inc.
Heartland Film is a nonprofit arts organization that runs the 11-day Heartland International Film Festival in October, the Academy Award®-Qualifying Indy Shorts International Film Festival in July, the Truly Moving Picture Award and other year-round programs. Based in Indianapolis, Heartland Film was founded in 1991 with the mission to curate, promote and celebrate thoughtful and engaging films. Over the years, Heartland Film has presented $3.5 million in cash prizes – the largest total amount awarded by any film festival in North America – presented 200+ studio films with the Truly Moving Picture Award, and showcased more than 2,000 feature and short films, including 10 Oscar®-winning short film titles. MovieMaker Magazine named both the Indy Shorts and Heartland International Film Festival on the top 25 Coolest Film Festivals in the World list for 2023 and 2024. The 8th Annual Indy Shorts International Film Festival ran July 22-27, 2025 and the 34th Heartland International Film Festival is scheduled for October 9-19, 2025. For more information, www.HeartlandFilm.org.
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