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ADIFF Announces Winner for the 2025 Public Award for the Best Film Directed by a Woman of Color

Sugar Island

Sugar Island Winner ADIFF 2025

Best of ADIFF - Jan 16 to 18, 2026

Sugar Island Screening Best of ADIFF

Sugar Island Poster

Sugar Island, directed by Johanne Gómez Terrero, is the recipient of the 2025 Public Award for Best Film Directed by a Woman of Color.

NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES, December 29, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ -- The African Diaspora International Film Festival (ADIFF) announces Sugar Island, directed by Johanne Gómez Terrero, as the recipient of the 2025 Public Award for Best Film Directed by a Woman of Color. The award was determined by audience vote during the 33rd annual ADIFF NY held from November 28 to December 14, 2025.

Sugar Island follows Makenya, a Dominican-Haitian teenager living in a Batey (sugarcane fields) who confronts pregnancy, labor, and colonial memory as a mysterious theater troupe ushers her into a lyrical, Afrofuturist reckoning with identity and survival. Directed by Johanne Gómez Terrero, one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary Afro-Caribbean cinema, the film blends social realism with performance, ritual, and speculative imagery to explore labor exploitation, anti-Haitian racism, reproductive autonomy, and inherited colonial trauma.

The film had its New York Premiere at ADIFF NY 2025, where it generated strong audience engagement and emerged as the top-voted title in a highly competitive category. The Public Award reflects both its artistic ambition and its resonance with audiences engaged in conversations on issues of Caribbean history, migration, youth agency, and women’s rights.

The runner-up for the award was The Last Meal, directed by Maryse Legagneur, an intimate drama about a dying father and his estranged daughter reconnecting through food and memory, confronting buried trauma and the emotional legacy of Haitian family history.

The 2025 Public Award for Best Film Directed by a Woman of Color featured five feature length films selected to premiere in New York during ADIFF.

The films in competition were:
• Sugar Island – A Dominican-Haitian teenager confronts pregnancy, labor, and colonial legacy through a poetic blend of realism and Afrofuturist imagination.
• The Last Meal – A father and daughter reconnect at the end of life through food, memory, and unresolved family wounds.
• Village Keeper – A recently widowed mother struggles with grief and burnout as she learns to reclaim her strength and protect her children.
• Brides – Two teenage best friends on a long-awaited trip confront diverging futures and questions of belonging.
• Black Women and Sex – Women from across Africa share deeply personal testimonies that challenge patriarchy, sexual taboos, and the policing of Black female bodies.

“At ADIFF, we are committed to highlighting filmmakers who push artistic boundaries while engaging deeply with the lived realities of people of African descent,” said ADIFF Co-Director Dr. Reinaldo B. Spech. “The audience response to Sugar Island confirms the importance of cinema that is both politically grounded, artistically creative and formally daring.”

The 33rd edition of ADIFF NYC presented over 70 films from more than 30 countries, including over 30 New York and U.S. premieres, with screenings held at Teachers College, Columbia University and Cinema Village.

ADIFF will continue the celebration of films and talent during the Best of ADIFF, a curated encore series taking place January 16–18, 2026, at Teachers College, Columbia University, featuring audience favorites and award-winning films from ADIFF NY 2025.
Follow the festival on Facebook, Instagram, and Letterboxd @nyadiff.
For additional information and tickets, visit nyadiff.org

ABOUT THE AFRICAN DIASPORA INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
Established in 1993, the African Diaspora International Film Festival (ADIFF) is a Harlem-based, minority-led non-profit international film festival. Its mission is to present, interpret, and educate about films that explore the human experience of people of color worldwide. ADIFF aims to inspire imaginations, disrupt stereotypes, and help transform attitudes that perpetuate injustice. The festival expands traditional views and perceptions of the Black experience by showcasing award-winning, socially relevant documentary and fiction films about people of color, from Peru to Zimbabwe, and from the USA to Belgium and New Zealand to Jamaica. www.nyadiff.org

Sugar Island is distributed by ArtMattan Films

PRESS CONTACT
Diarah N’Daw-Spech
African Diaspora International Film Festival
Tel: 1-212-864-1760
Email: pr@nyadiff.org

Diarah N'Daw-Spech
ArtMattan Films / ADIFF
+1 212-864-1760
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Sugar Island Trailer

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