A world premiere is the first public screening of a film anywhere in the world. That is the entire definition. What makes it matter is the consequence: the moment your film screens publicly for the first time, the world premiere is gone, and it can never be offered to another festival again. It is the single most valuable, and most easily wasted, piece of leverage a new film has.
The premiere hierarchy
Festivals do not just care that a film is good. They care about exclusivity, because being the first to show a notable film is part of how a festival builds its own reputation. So premieres are ranked, and the ranking only ever moves in one direction, from most exclusive to least:
A world premiere is the first screening anywhere. An international premiere is the first screening outside the country of origin, so the film may already have played at home. A continental premiere, such as a European or Asian premiere, is the first on that continent. A national premiere is the first in a particular country, and a regional or city premiere is the first in a smaller area. You can give each of these exactly once, and you can only ever step down the ladder, never climb back up.
Why festivals require premieres
When a top festival insists on a world premiere, it is protecting its own value. A festival that consistently hosts the first screening of important films becomes the place buyers, press and audiences go to see what is next. That exclusivity is why a world or international premiere requirement is common at the largest competitive festivals, and why those festivals can be unforgiving if a film has already screened, even at a tiny event or, in some cases, publicly online.
A public online screening can count as a premiere. Posting your finished film to a public video platform, or screening it at an event with a general audience, can quietly burn your world premiere before you ever submit to a festival. If festival selection matters to you, keep the film private until you have a premiere plan.
Treat it as a one-time resource
Because a world premiere is irreplaceable and many festivals require one, the cardinal rule of festival strategy is to never spend a higher premiere status than a festival actually asks for. Giving your world premiere to a festival that would have accepted a regional premiere wastes it, and may lock you out of the bigger festival that needed it. Map every festival's premiere requirement before you submit anywhere, and decide deliberately where your world premiere goes.
This is exactly the trap Circkit's Premiere Guard is built to prevent. It records your film's premiere status, shows each festival's requirement in plain English, and blocks a submission that would burn a premiere you have already used, so the most valuable card in your hand is never played by accident.
Frequently asked questions
What is a world premiere?
A world premiere is the first public screening of a film anywhere in the world. Once your film has screened publicly even once, it can no longer offer a world premiere to anyone else. Many of the most prestigious festivals require a world premiere to programme a film in competition, which is why a world premiere is treated as a scarce, one-time resource in festival strategy.
What is the difference between a world premiere and an international premiere?
A world premiere is the first public screening anywhere. An international premiere is the first screening outside the film's country of origin, which means the film may already have screened domestically. Below those sit continental premieres (such as a European or Asian premiere), national premieres (first in a given country) and regional or city premieres. Each step down is less exclusive, so each is easier for a festival to accept.
Can a film have more than one premiere?
Yes, but only one of each kind, and the order is fixed. A film has exactly one world premiere, then can offer an international premiere, then continental, national and regional premieres at later festivals. You can only ever move down the hierarchy, never back up. That is why burning your world premiere at a festival that did not require it is a costly mistake you cannot undo.
Do all film festivals require a world premiere?
No. Premiere requirements vary widely. The top competitive festivals often demand a world or international premiere, but a great many strong festivals happily accept films that have screened elsewhere. The rule is simple: never spend a higher premiere status than the festival actually requires. Circkit's Premiere Guard flags every festival's premiere requirement and blocks you from accidentally burning a premiere you have already used.
Protect your premiereNever burn a premiere by accident
Circkit's Premiere Guard tracks your film's premiere status and every festival's requirement, and blocks any submission that would waste a premiere you cannot get back.