Each year, the festival screens over 200 documentaries from countries around the world. Hot Docs is recognized as a qualifying festival for the Academy Awards® in the Documentary Feature and Documentary Short Subject categories. The winner of Hot Docs' Best International Feature Documentary Award qualifies for consideration for the Oscar for Documentary Feature, and the winner of Hot Docs' Best Canadian and International Short Documentary Awards qualify for consideration for the Oscar for Documentary Short Subject without standard theatrical runs. The festival also presents juried awards for
Best Canadian Short Documentary (Betty Youson Award) and Best International Short Documentary.
Audience Awards There are several audience awards at the Hot Docs Festival. The Hot Docs Audience Award, Hot Docs DocX Audience Award and Rogers Audience Award for Best Canadian Documentary are all selected by audience ballot. The Hot Docs Audience Award and DocX Audience award are announced the day after the Festival closes. The Rogers Audience Award for Best Canadian Documentary was established in 2017. It is announced at an encore screening of the winning film on the final Sunday of the festival, and includes at $50,000 prize courtesy of Rogers Group of Funds.
Unbranded (2015), and
Angry Inuk (2016). At the 2017 and 2018 Festivals, one film took both the Hot Docs Audience Award and the Rogers Audience Award:
Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World in 2017 and
Transformer in 2018. In 2020, to help mitigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on film promotion and distribution, festival organizers opted to split the Rogers Audience Award among all of the top five Canadian films rather than naming a single winner. The films
The Walrus and the Whistleblower,
9/11 Kids,
The Forbidden Reel,
First We Eat and ''
There's No Place Like This Place, Anyplace were each awarded $10,000, while the Jury Award was presented to the film Prayer for a Lost Mitten''. The Scotiabank Docs For Schools Student Choice Award is determined by audience ballot at Docs For Schools in-cinema screenings, and includes a $5,000 prize courtesy of Scotiabank. The Student Choice Award is announced the day after the festival closes.
Special Awards Each year, the Hot Docs Board of Directors celebrates a distinguished filmmaker and their career with the Hot Docs
Outstanding Achievement Award. Recipients include:
Barbara Kopple (2018),
Tony Palmer (2017),
Steve James (2016),
Patricio Guzmán (2015),
Adam Curtis (2014),
Les Blank (2013),
Michel Brault (2012),
Terence Macartney-Filgate (2011),
Kim Longinotto(2010),
Alanis Obomsawin (2009),
Richard Leacock (2008),
Heddy Honigmann (2007),
Werner Herzog (2006),
Errol Morris (2005),
Michael Maclear (2004),
Nick Broomfield (2003),
Frederick Wiseman (2002),
D. A. Pennebaker and
Chris Hegedus (2000) and
Albert Maysles (1999). The annual
Doc Mogul Award recognizes an individual who has made essential contributions to the creative vitality of the documentary industry over the course of their career. The award is presented by the Hot Docs Board of Directors at a luncheon on the Monday of the festival. Recipients include: Cara Mertes (2018), Monique Simard (2017), Iikka Vehkalahti (2016), Takahiro Hamano (2015),
Mette Hoffman Meyer (2014),
Debra Zimmerman (2013),
Diane Weyermann (2012),
Ally Derks (2011), Jan Rofekamp (2010),
Sheila Nevins (2009),
Nick Fraser (2008), and
Rudy Buttignol (2007). The
Don Haig Award is presented to a Canadian producer with a film in the festival, and recognizes creative vision and entrepreneurship. The winner receives at $10,000 cash prize courtesy of the Don Haig Foundation and Telefilm Canada; and the recipient also awards $5,000 to an emerging female documentary filmmaker of their choice to support career development. In honour of her legacy, the
Lindalee Tracey Award is presented to an emerging Canadian filmmaker. The winner receives a $5,000 cash prize from the Lindalee Tracey Fund, $5,000 in post-production services and a specially commissioned, hand-blown glass sculpture by Andrew Kuntz.
Industry Awards Each year at the Hot Docs Forum, three types of pitch prizes are awarded to projects:{{cite web •
first look Pitch Prizes – Two to three projects receive a total of more than $100,0000, which is awarded by the
first look participants. • Hot Docs Corus Pitch Prize – A $10,000 prize, disbursed from the Corus-Hot Docs Funds, which is awarded to the best Canadian Forum pitch, as voted by attending international buyers. • Cuban Hat Award – A no-strings-attached cash prize, donated by Forum observers, determined by Forum observer ballot. == Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema ==