66th SFFILM Festival: Celine Song’s ‘Past Lives,’ Boots Riley’s ‘I’m a Virgo’ and more
SFFILM today announced the full lineup for the 66th San Francisco International Film Festival (SFFILM Festival), the longest-running film festival in the Americas. This year’s program, curated from over 5,000 submissions and invitations, will screen exclusively in theaters across San Francisco, Oakland, and Berkeley from April 13–April 23.
As previously announced, Peter Nicks opens the Festival at Oakland’s Grand Lake Theatre with the hometown premiere of Stephen Curry: Underrated, and the festival finishes with a major sneak of the hotly anticipated Prime Video series I’m a Virgo from Boots Riley and starring Emmy Award-winning actor Jharrel Jerome, who also serves as an executive producer. Playwright Celine Song brings her Sundance 2023 hit Past Lives starring Greta Lee to SFFILM as the festival Centerpiece, which will screen at the historic Castro Theatre.
“It is SFFILM Festival season once again and I cannot wait to share this year’s program with local audiences,” said Jessie Fairbanks, SFFILM’s Director of Programming. “The line-up includes a wealth of Bay Area filmmakers across all sections, and highlights new—and seminal—work from eminent filmmakers. Our curatorial team, dedicated to showcasing evocative stories, prioritized films that unite us all through cinematic expression and outstanding narrative craft. We continue SFFILM’s legacy of bringing international work to the Bay with stories from 37 countries and an exciting array of emerging artists. For the third year in a row, half of this thematically diverse program is helmed by female or non-binary filmmakers and we are so proud to share these stories with festival attendees.”
Local Bay Area filmmakers make a significant showing throughout the lineup featuring Academy Award winner W. Kamau Bell’s latest project, 1000% Me: Growing Up Mixed as well as SFFILM-Supported filmmakers with outstanding debuts: Earth Mama from Savanah Leaf and Fremont from Babak Jalali, as well as several mid-length and short films. SFFILM also welcomes local youth organizations including East Oakland Youth Development Center (EOYDC), Eat. Learn. Play. Foundation, and the Oakland Unified School District to Opening Night.
Some of the special honors of the 2023 SFFILM Festival include SFFILM’s Persistence of Vision Award going to Northern Irish director and film historian Mark Cousins. The Mel Novikoff Award will honor Firelight Media founded by filmmakers Stanley Nelson and Marcia Smith, and will be presented along with a special retrospective screening of Nelson’s pivotal work, The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution. There are two Sloan Science in Cinema programs featuring the Sloan Science in Cinema Award for Matthew Johnson’s SXSW standout BlackBerry, a film about the rise and fall of the world’s first smart device, as well as a special presentation of Sundance favorite The Pod Generation, which will be screened in Dolby Atmos at the stunning Dolby Cinema. SFFILM will honor Canadian-British director Mary Harron with a tribute and screening of Dalíland, her latest film starring Academy Award winner Sir Ben Kingsley. Harron’s work has been ahead of its time for decades, and it’s time to celebrate her vision.
Four exceptional marquee documentaries include Being Mary Tyler Moore from James Adolphus and produced by Lena Waithe; Invisible Beauty about groundbreaking Black fashion model and icon Bethann Hardison co-directed with Frederic Tcheng and produced by Lisa Cortes; STILL: A Michael J. Fox Movie from Davis Guggenheim who will join in person; and a very special Castro Theatre screening of Joan Baez: I Am A Noise with the inimitable Ms. Baez in person.
Family-friendly offerings include a free community screening of Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. starring Academy Award winner Kathy Bates, and Academy Award nominee Rachel McAdams and an animation workshop with Disney legend Andreas Deja. SFFILM Education will also host its 32nd annual ‘Schools at the Festival’ for students and educators in the Bay Area.
The prestigious juried competition Golden Gate Awards carries on for the 66th year with the following categories: New Directors Prize, McBaine Best Documentary Feature, McBaine Best Bay Area Documentary Feature, Best Mid-Length Film, the Cine Latino Award, Best Narrative Short, Best Documentary Short, Best Animated Short, Best Bay Area Short Film, Best Family Short Film, and Best Youth Works Short Film.
The 2023 SFFILM Festival will run in theaters across the Bay Area, including the Grand Lake Theatre in Oakland, the Dolby Cinema @ 1275 Market, the Castro Theatre, the Premier Theater, The Walt Disney Family Museum, and Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA). The central hub of the Festival will be at CGV San Francisco to allow for maximum viewing; this location will also feature a hospitality lounge presented by KLM Royal Dutch Airlines for guests to meet and mingle with each other in between screenings.
Here is the complete lineup of the 66th SFFILM Festival.
Tickets are now on sale for SFFILM members today, Wednesday, March 22, at sffilm.org. The online box office will open to the general public on Friday, March 24 at 10 am.
Opening Night: “Stephen Curry: Underrated”
Peter Nicks (USA 2023, 110 min)
Thursday, April 13 | 6:30 pm PT | Grand Lake Theatre
Thursday, April 13 | 9:30 pm PT | Grand Lake Theatre
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Award-winning filmmaker Peter Nicks delivers a searing documentary illuminating the career of NBA superstar Stephen Curry. Intertwining Curry’s emergence at Davidson College with thrilling footage of the 2021–22 Golden State Warriors season when the team won its fourth championship of the Curry era, Nicks deftly builds a portrait of a man who continually defies expectations. With unique access, heart-pounding edits, and electrifying footage, Stephen Curry: Underrated tells the remarkable story of a local legend. Expected Guests: Director Peter Nicks, and producer Ryan Coogler.
Ticketing Information: Opening Night Film & Party (6:30 pm) — $95 (SFFILM members) | $110 (general public); Second Showing (Screening ONLY; 9:30 pm): $25 (SFFILM members) | $30 (general public)
Centerpiece: “Past Lives”
Celine Song (USA/South Korea 2023, 106 min)
Tuesday, April 18 | 8 pm PT | Castro Theatre
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Playwright Celine Song makes a masterful leap to film with this tenderly wrought relationship drama revolving around long-separated childhood friends’ attempts to define their unusual connection over two reunions set 12 years apart. Drawing from her own life, Song steers the film seamlessly through time and space, exploring the interiority of her characters while confidently unpacking the decisions that determine who they are and who they might have been. Visual rhythms established in the opening prologue immediately inform the viewer of our place in this story. We are here to bear witness and make assumptions, and Song is here to subvert those expectations. Debuting to critical acclaim at Sundance and Berlin, this romantic journey is a dreamy recollection of heartache and reconciliation. Thank you to Festival sponsor Dave Liu & Lauren Wu. Expected Guests: Director Celine Song, and actor Greta Lee.
Ticketing Information: $20 (SFFILM members) | $25 (general public)
Closing Night: “I’m A Virgo”
Boots Riley (USA 2023, 115 min)
Sunday, April 23 | 6 pm PT | CGV 3
Sunday, April 23 | 7:30 pm PT | CGV 2
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
From visionary filmmaker Boots Riley (Sorry to Bother You, Festival 2018), I’m A Virgo is a darkly comedic fantastical coming-of-age joyride about Cootie (Jharrel Jerome, When They See Us), a 13-foot-tall young Black man in Oakland, CA. Having grown up hidden away, passing time on a diet of comic books and TV shows, he escapes to experience the beauty and contradictions of the real world. He forms friendships, finds love, navigates awkward situations, and encounters his idol, the real-life superhero named The Hero, played by Walton Goggins (The Hateful Eight, The Righteous Gemstones, and 2023 Festival selection Dreamin’ Wild). I’m A Virgo is a mythical odyssey that questions the purpose of the mythical odyssey. Additional cast members include Brett Gray, Kara Young, Allius Barnes, Olivia Washington,Carmen Ejogo, and Mike Epps. Riley will be in attendance at this special screening of the first four episodes of I’m A Virgo, which will be followed by a Q&A, presented by Prime Video. Expected Guests: Creator, Co-Showrunner, Executive Producer, Writer, Director, Boots Riley.
Ticketing Information: $30 (SFFILM members) | $35 (general public)
A Tribute to Mary Harron + “Dalíland”
Mary Harron (USA/UK 2022, 103 min)
Friday, April 14 | 8:30 pm PT | CGV 3
US PREMIERE
A Canadian by birth and raised in London, Mary Harron was a journalist before she became a filmmaker, writing for Punk, where among her scoops was getting the first interview with The Sex Pistols for an American magazine. In time, she would become a presenter and director of the BBC arts series The Late Show. Her first feature, I Shot Andy Warhol (1996), was nominated for a Film Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature, and captured the zeitgeist of the 1960s and of the artist’s legendary studio, The Factory. Her next film was equally striking—a stylish, edgy adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis’ bestselling novel American Psycho (2000), followed by her glorious evocation of the pin-up era, The Notorious Bettie Page (2005).
For television, she examined the life of a notorious model with the biopic Anna Nicole (2013) and directed the miniseries adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace (2017), a story that explores the life of a 19th-century murderess and which was penned for the screen by Sarah Polley, winner of the 2022 SFFILM Award for Storytelling. More recently, she explored the motivations of Manson Family members in Charlie Says (2018). Harron continues her empathetic, adventurous exploration of lives lived on the edge with Dalíland, turning her lens to the marriage of surrealist artist Salvador Dalí (Ben Kingsley) and wife Gala (Barbara Sukowa). Join us as we pay tribute to Mary Harron with a conversation, followed by a screening of Dalíland.
Ticketing Information: $20 (SFFILM members) | $25 (general public)
Community Screening: “Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret.”
Kelly Fremon Craig (USA 2023, 105 min)
Sunday, April 23 | 12 pm PT | CGV 3
Margaret Simon, the 11-year-old New Jersey tween experiencing the first pangs of adolescence comes to vivid life on the big screen in this fresh, funny adaptation of Judy Blume’s classic 1970 novel. Abby Ryder Fortson gives a star-making performance as young Margaret, coping not only with the onset of puberty but also grappling with her religious identity. Writer/director Kelly Fremon Craig (The Edge of Seventeen), faithfully captures the book’s defining moments while also freshening the material with new touches. Brilliant in support of Forston are Rachel McAdams and Benny Safdie as Margaret’s loving, complicated parents, and a heartwarming and hilarious Kathy Bates as her grandmother Sylvia. Margaret’s story of longing and self-discovery has resonated with generations of readers. With this luminous adaptation, she stands poised to repeat the feat and capture the hearts of filmgoers. Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. will be offered as a community screening and is free and open to the public. Attendees must RSVP for tickets at sffilm.org.
AWARDS
Persistence of Vision Award: Mark Cousins
“The March on Rome” (“Marcia su Roma”) + “My Name Is Alfred Hitchcock”
Thursday, April 20 | 7 pm PT | BAMPFA
Documentary filmmaker and writer Mark Cousins has made features about the writer D.H. Lawrence (6 Desires: D.H. Lawrence and Sardinia), his hometown (My Belfast), and the bombing of Hiroshima (Atomic: Living in Dread and Promise). But it is in his work devoted to cinema that he has made his biggest impact. He is the director of the 15-hour documentary The Story of Film: An Odyssey; its sequel, The Story of Film: A New Generation; The Eyes of Orson Welles; The Storms of Jeremy Thomas, about the Oscar®-winning producer; and many other works that display his vast knowledge of film. Among this year’s Festival offerings is his witty survey of the work of the Master of Suspense, My Name Is Alfred Hitchcock. We dedicate this year’s POV presentation to the late Tom Luddy, whom Cousins calls “one of the most influential film people of the second half of the 20th century.” The POV presentation, dedicated to Tom Luddy, includes Mark Cousins in conversation, followed by a screening of The March on Rome.
My Name Is Alfred Hitchcock will screen separately on Friday, April 21; see DOCUMENTARIES: INTERNATIONAL below for more information.
About “The March on Rome” (“Marcia su Roma”)
Aiming for a coup, fascist Black Shirts marched from Naples to Rome in 1922, the demonstration leading to the ascension of Benito Mussolini as Italy’s dictator. Mark Cousins explores this pivotal moment that presaged worldwide horrors to come in this commanding documentary that weaves together world and cinema history. Actor Alba Rohrwacher appears as a witness to Il Duce’s regime but most of the film is culled from archival footage. Cousins’ centerpiece is Umberto Paradisi’s record of the march, A Noi!, propaganda the filmmaker dissects, exposing a foundational myth of Italian fascism and demonstrating the power of lies to alter history. With modern black shirts on the rise, Cousins masterfully connects the past to the present in a film that makes manifest the adage that those ignorant of history are doomed to repeat it. This film is screening as part of the Persistence of Vision Award, dedicated to Tom Luddy, and awarded to Mark Cousins. Expected Guest: Director Mark Cousins.
Mel Novikoff Award: Firelight Media + “The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution”
Stanley Nelson (USA 2015, 115 min)
Saturday, April 15 | 3:15 pm PT | CGV 2
For over 30 years, the SFFILM Mel Novikoff Award has been given to an individual or institution whose work has enhanced the film-going public’s appreciation of world cinema. Award-winning filmmakers Stanley Nelson and Marcia Smith founded Firelight Media in 1998 as a nonprofit documentary production company with a focus on telling stories seldom broached in mainstream media. Ten years later, the company adjusted its focus to concentrate on backing filmmakers of color, while Nelson led a new, for-profit documentary production house, Firelight Films. With labs, fellowships, and film funds, Firelight Media supports artists around the world. Their cohort includes 2022–2024 Firelight Documentary Fellows Silvia Del Carmen Castaños and Estefanía “Beba” Contreras, whose debut feature, Hummingbirds, screens at this year’s Festival. Join SFFILM as the Novikoff Award returns to the festival and we celebrate Firelight Media for their enormous impact upon the independent film community. A conversation with Smith and Nelson will be followed by a screening of Nelson’s The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution (Festival 2015). Expected Guests: Stanley Nelson, Marcia Smith, and moderator Amber Love.
About “The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution”
Stanley Nelson charts the Black Panther Party’s meteoric rise in the 1960s and its disintegration several years later. Fed up with racial discrimination, poverty, and police brutality, Oakland’s urban Black youth were ready for radical change. For them, the BPP was the vehicle. Nelson’s film offers candid accounts by lesser known rank-and-file members—many of them women—who did the Black Panthers’ daily work. Packed with anecdotes and new revelations, the documentary captures the excitement of a time filled with idealism, internationalism, and impatience. Beyond explicating the party’s compelling political program, archival footage also reveals the members’ swaggering image and seductive style. With police brutality, the militarization of police departments, and government surveillance once again at the forefront of the American conversation, The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution remains profoundly resonant. — Cornelius Moore, Festival 2015
Sloan Science on Screen Award: “BlackBerry”
Matt Johnson (USA 2023, 123 min)
Monday, April 17 | 7:30 pm PT | Premier Theater
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
“The person who puts a computer inside a phone will change the world,” avers company founder Mike Lazaridis (impeccably played by Jay Baruchel) in Matt Johnson’s exuberant depiction of the rise and fall of BlackBerry. The film begins in 1996 with the founding of a small Canadian company focused on using quantum science to provide secure communications and mobile productivity resulting in the launch of a handheld device that soon took the world by storm … until competitors took the technology one step further. Johnson’s film perfectly captures the heady creative period of the mid-’90s as groups of nerdy engineers and innovators gorging on snacks and sci-fi flicks intersect with the high-powered and demanding world of financiers and venture capitalists. The terrific supporting cast includes Cary Elwes, Michael Ironside, and Rich Sommer. Expected Guests: Director Matt Johnson, screenwriter Matthew Miller, and panelist Joel Moore.
BlackBerry is the SFFILM Festival recipient of the Sloan Science on Screen Award, a recognition that celebrates the compelling depiction of science in a narrative feature film. Presented through a partnership between SFFILM and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the prize is part of SFFILM’s Sloan Science in Cinema initiative. Also part of the Sloan Science on Screen Initiative is the screening of The Pod Generation.
Ticketing Information: $20 (SFFILM members) | $25 (general public)
Sloan Science on Screen: “The Pod Generation”
Sophie Barthes (Belgium/France 2023, 109 min)
Wednesday, April 19 | 7:30 pm PT | Dolby Cinema
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Rachel (Emilia Clarke) and Alvy (Chiwetel Ejiofor) live a comfortable lifestyle in New York City in this satiric blend of sci-fi and social commentary set in the near future. While Rachel has a corporate job at a company that makes AI assistants, Alvy works from their upscale apartment studying plants as a botanist. The couple want to have a child but pregnancy might impede Rachel’s prospects for promotion. Her employer has a solution to the dilemma in a new biotech breakthrough, a portable artificial womb in which the fetus can incubate. Experiencing impending parenthood at a remove tests the relationship between husband and wife as well as their connection to their “pod baby.” Writer/director Sophie Barthes presents a striking, darkly funny critique of the effects of capitalism and technology on the family. Expected Guests: Director Sophia Barthes, and moderator Glenn Kiser.
Ticketing Information: $30 (SFFILM members) | $35 (general public)
DOCUMENTARIES: INTERNATIONAL
Against the Tide
Sarvnik Kaur (India 2023, 97 min)
Thursday, April 20 | 6 pm PT | CGV 3
Saturday, April 22 | 5:30 pm PT | BAMPFA
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
As the Arabian Sea’s fish population dwindles, two fishermen from Mumbai’s Koli community endeavor to change their fortunes. United by a shared ambition, their friendship is tested when each man chooses different technology. While Rakesh adheres to ancient practices handed down through generations of ancestors, Ganesh seeks modern methods that in the short-term promise a bigger catch but contribute to overfishing, dooming both men’s long-term prospects. Ultimately powerless against the raging waters and growing mountains of debt, Rakesh and Ganesh sway along the waves of life, trying their best to keep their heads above the water that threatens to engulf them. Bookending it all, amidst centuries-old songs of valor and courage, is the customary hum of fishing boats and their promise of hope. Against the Tide won a special jury prize for vérité filmmaking at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival and is an SFFILM Documentary Film Fund recipient.
La Bonga
Sebastián Pinzón Silva + Canela Reyes (Colombia/USA 2023, 77 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Saturday, April 15 | 12:30 pm PT | CGV 3
With Colombia’s right-wing paramilitary forces closing in, the Afro-Colombian inhabitants of La Bonga fled their farming community, leaving the jungle to reclaim it. Sebastian Pinzón Silva and Canela Reyes’s lyrical debut navigates the sticky terrains of memory, history, and home as it documents the Bongueros’ return 20 years later to what was once their village. Guided by a strong matriarch, the erstwhile townspeople and their descendants navigate the wilderness, remembering the hamlet and reconstructing it. As the families prepare to celebrate this bittersweet homecoming, they fight being written off by history along with the all-engulfing ferocity of nature.
The Deepest Breath
Laura McGann (UK/Ireland 2023, 108 min)
Saturday, April 15 | 3 pm PT | CGV 3
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Italian Alessia Zecchini is one of the best freedivers in the world, engaging in a breathtaking and perilous sport in which incredible athletes dive without the aid of breathing apparatuses. Laura McGann’s immersive documentary profiles Zecchini, who was drawn to freediving from a very young age, alongside Stephen Keenan, a wandering soul who eventually becomes a safety diver, offering first aid to freedivers like Alessia. Over the course of the film, friends, family members, and experts on the sport all comment on the adventurous spirits of the pair while hypnotic footage of Zecchini’s dives submerges the viewer in a sensorial underworld that demonstrates the allure of such an extreme endeavor. Expected Guests: Director Laura McGann.
The March on Rome (Marcia su Roma)
Mark Cousins (Italy 2023, 98 min)
Thursday, April 20 | 7 pm PT | BAMPFA
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Mariupolis 2
Mantas Kvedaravičius (Lithuania/France/Germany 2023, 112 min)
Friday, April 14 | 6:15 pm PT | CGV 2
BAY AREA PREMIERE
Seeds of hope thrive amidst great tragedy in this visually remarkable documentary. Shot in March 2022, only weeks after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the film takes place inside and on the grounds of the titular city’s Christian Baptist Evangelical Church. From a woman making soup in the church’s backyard to men sweeping debris from the parking lot to the constant noise of shelling and the rising smoke of multiple fires, this extraordinary record reveals, without comment or voiceover, citizens valiantly trying to survive the daily terrors of war. That sense of tragedy and hope marks the story of the film itself: Russian soldiers captured and killed director Mantas Kvedaravičius, a Lithuanian filmmaker and anthropologist, in April 2022, leaving his partner Hanna Bilbrova to complete this vital account of a city (and country) besieged. Kvedaravičius’s tenderly framed moments of humanity during an unfolding global crisis gain fresh poignancy a year into the war.
Milisuthando
Milisuthando Bongela (South Africa/Colombia 2023, 128 min)
Friday, April 21 | 8:45 pm PT | CGV 3
Saturday, April 22 | 2:30 pm PT | BAMPFA
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Director Milisuthando Bongela grew up in South Africa during apartheid unaware that the country’s racist segregation policy existed. She was born in Transkei, a state formed for Black people in 1976. When apartheid ended in 1994, Transkei dissolved, leading Bongela to a reckoning with her place in society. Using striking archival and vérité footage of her family along with deeply personal interviews, Bongela bravely constructs this personal essay about what it meant to grow up in Transkei during apartheid and her continuing process of coming to terms with the aftermath. In her poetic examination of her relationships with her friends, family, and even the film’s crew, she invites us into a realm of necessary questions for which there are no easy answers. Expected Guest: Director Milisuthando Bongela.
My Name Is Alfred Hitchcock
Mark Cousins (UK 2022, 120 min)
Friday, April 21 | 4 pm PT | BAMPFA
BAY AREA PREMIERE
Mark Cousins dives into the oeuvre of the Master of Suspense in this entrancing film in which the long-dead Alfred Hitchcock delivers from beyond the grave a lively lecture on his work. Actor Alistair McGowan masterfully embodies that famous voice but it is Cousins’ words that really nail the impression. Whether explaining the importance of camera movement, delighting in Strangers on a Train’s runaway carousel climax, or taking the measure of James Stewart’s desire for Grace Kelly in Rear Window, Cousins reveals a work of deep scholarship yet one that is often humorous and playful. Populated by clips from Hitchcock’s entire career, from his early English period to his final picture, the San Francisco-shot Family Plot, My Name Is Alfred Hitchcock amuses and educates as it celebrates the auteur and his films. Expected Guest: Director Mark Cousins.
Smoke Sauna Sisterhood
Anna Hints (Estonia/France/Iceland 2023, 89 min)
Sunday, April 23 | 2:15 pm PT | CGV 2
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
The healing powers of sisterhood take on a new meaning in this luxuriant portrait by Anna Hints. Following a group of Estonian women who gather in a handmade sweat lodge, the film languidly moves through the seasons as bodies gather in the rituals of the sauna. Baring their souls and their flesh, tears are released into the heavy, warm air, and quickly dispelled with laughter as the women nurture one another. The specificity of each individual’s experience weaves a rich tapestry and yet there is a undertow of universal understanding flowing throughout this finely crafted film. Hints immerses us in a space innately known to all humans, suspending viewers in an ephemeral experience of love and acceptance. This debut feature won the Sundance Film Festival’s World Cinema–Documentary directing award. Expected Guest: Director Anna Hints.
DOCUMENTARIES: USA
Bad Press
Rebecca Landsberry-Baker + Joe Peeler (USA 2023, 98 min)
Saturday, April 22 | 6 pm PT | CGV 3
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Assaults on press freedom and independence make reporting challenging worldwide but for First Nations journalists, reporting the news is wildly complicated. Transparency and fact finding are not protected on sovereign tribal lands where the First Amendment does not apply and where local politics are intertwined with newspaper funding. The result is editorial oversight that makes it almost impossible to report on malfeasance. Enter Angel Ellis, a Mvskoke Media journalist in Okmulgee, Oklahoma, fighting for access and accountability in her community while her scrappy colleagues valiantly try to keep the newspaper afloat when press protections are repealed by the National Council. With humor and pathos, these brave muckrakers risk it all to hold those in power accountable in this Sundance Special Jury Award-winning documentary. Expected Guests: Directors Rebecca Landsberry-Baker and Joe Peeler, and film subject Angel Ellis.
Being Mary Tyler Moore
James Adolphus (USA 2023, 120 min)
Sunday, April 16 | 12:30 pm | CGV 3
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
“Who can turn the world on with her smile?” Those theme-song words describing Mary Richards, the TV news producer who broke sitcom ground as a strong, single, independent woman on The Mary Tyler Moore Show, aptly encapsulate the eponymous actor who played her, as James Adolphus’s documentary deftly illustrates. Both a biography of Moore, who knew from the age of three that she was destined for show biz (it was that or jail, her father observed), and a summation of her brilliant career, the film offers an honest portrait of a sometimes-troubled personal life alongside a long string of professional triumphs beginning with her Emmy-winning work on The Dick Van Dyke Show (1961–66). Produced by Lena Waithe, HBO’s Being Mary Tyler Moore is a dazzling look back at an incandescent personality.
The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution
Stanley Nelson (USA 2015, 115 min)
Confessions of a Good Samaritan
Penny Lane (USA 2023, 105 min)
Sunday, April 16 | 5:30 pm | CGV 2
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Am I a good person? What does it mean to be a good person anyway? These are questions at the heart of what might be director Penny Lane’s (Nuts!, Festival 2016) most strikingly personal feature to date. What begins with the filmmaker’s decision to give a kidney to a stranger, a so-called “Good Samaritan” donation, becomes a search into the history of surgical medicine, kidney donation, and what drives altruism. At the intersection of these inquiries is Lane’s own vulnerable introspection. As her surgery date approaches, she wavers between steadfastness and trepidation, wondering all the while both why anyone donates a kidney, and why no one donates a kidney. Infused with Lane’s signature humor, Confessions of a Good Samaritan is an inspiring journey into the world of kidney donation. Expected Guest: Director Penny Lane.
Home Is a Hotel
Kevin Duncan Wong, Tod Sills + Kar Yin Tham (USA 2023, 92 min)
Saturday, April 22 | 12:45 pm PT | CGV 3
WORLD PREMIERE
“You gotta build your whole life in a room,” says one of the protagonists of this memorable documentary focused on residents of San Francisco SROs or single room occupancy housing. Available to people with lower incomes or those trying to get off the streets, the buildings are frequently cramped, often noisy, and sometimes riddled with vermin. The film tellingly reveals inhabitants who are diverse and complicated and have a wide variety of needs that these residences and their staffs are often unable to meet. From a single mother trying to find her missing daughter to an elderly woman who is going blind and facing eviction, to the two ex-addicts co-parenting their son, the film gives voice to the broad range of people struggling to keep a roof over their heads in one of the wealthiest cities in the country. With poignancy and humor, Home Is a Hotel is a must watch for any Bay Area resident. Expected Guests: Directors Kevin Duncan Wong, Tod Sills, and Kar Yin Tham.
Hummingbirds
Estefanía “Beba” Contreras + Silvia Del Carmen Castaños (USA 2023, 78 min)
Sunday, April 16 | 8:30 pm PT | CGV 2
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
During a stifling summer in Laredo, Texas, two adolescents stargaze from a car’s rooftop, share worries that they could be deported, and fret over their futures while rebelling against present circumstances. Directors Estefanía “Beba” Contreras and Silvia Del Carmen Castaños spotlight their own lives, revealing the poetry and passion that fire young spirits in a world that wants to control their bodies and their citizenship. As their state moves towards draconian anti-abortion legislation, Beba and Silvia fight back with their words and their Sharpie pens. Goofy and rebellious in equal amounts, the film tenderly centers this soulful friendship as the pair acknowledge their feelings for one another in poems, songs, and the headlong sense of adventure their bond brings to daily living. Hummingbirds is the recipient of an SFFILM Rainin Grant. Expected Guests: Director Estefanía “Beba” Contreras, and Producer Jillian Schlesinger.
Invisible Beauty
Bethann Hardison + Frédéric Tcheng (USA 2022, 116 min)
Thursday, April 20 | 5:30 pm PT | CGV 2
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Bethann Hardison is the fashion icon and cultural force you didn’t realize you already revered. As one of the first Black supermodels and an outspoken activist, Hardison took the world by storm in the 1970s, sharing the catwalk with Iman, and mentoring Naomi Campbell, Tyra Banks, and Tyson Beckford. Never content with the status quo, Hardison pushed for dialogue on representation and discussed race and diversity years before those issues were part of the cultural conversation. She continues to advocate for change today. Hardison teams up with veteran fashion documentarian Frédéric Tcheng (Halston, Festival 2019) to tell her astonishing life story with lively commentary and salacious behind-the-scenes observations of the fashion elite. This insightful portrait of a remarkable woman also includes commentary from Whoopi Goldberg, Tracee Ellis Ross, and Zendaya.
Joan Baez I Am A Noise
Miri Navasky, Maeve O’Boyle + Karen O’Connor (USA 2023, 109 min)
Tuesday, April 18 | 5 pm PT | Castro Theatre
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
In her 20s, Joan Baez was the undisputed queen of folk music, one of the first people to recognize Bob Dylan’s talent and record his songs (the two would also make another kind of music together for a while), and someone who used her rising celebrity to fight for civil rights and justice and against the war in Vietnam. This entrancing documentary takes a long look back at Baez’s wild ride while following the longtime San Mateo County resident on her 2018/2019 Fare Thee Well Tour. The final Baez standing after the deaths of her two sisters and her parents, Baez gives an account not just of her singular life of art and activism but also spins a complicated family story. Music, archival material, and oral history combine for a stunning glimpse into the voice of a generation. Thank you to Festival sponsor Crisanta de Guzman & Bryce Lee. Expected Guests: The film’s subject, Joan Baez, and directors Miri Navasky, Karen O’Connor, and Maeve O’Boyle.
King Coal
Elaine McMillion Sheldon (USA 2023, 78 min)
Saturday April 22 | 5:45 pm PT | CGV 2
Documentarian Elaine McMillion Sheldon grew up a coal miner’s daughter, identifying with Loretta Lynn’s classic country tune. As she distills this unique version of Americana, Sheldon returns to a community grappling with an industry on the brink of extinction as a major contributor to climate change. Blending vérité and dreamy narration in a film that emphasizes the Appalachian region’s natural beauty, she weaves together a lyrical saga in which the place she grew up—and others like it—celebrate and seek meaning in a storied past. At a time when people the world over struggle with what comes next when the way of life that has sustained them grows obsolescent, Sheldon’s emotional ode offers spirited hope that those fading cultures can survive and thrive once more. Expected Guests: Director Elaine McMillion Sheldon, and Musician Dominic “Shodekeh” Talifero.
This screening is in celebration and recognition of Earth Day.
Rally
Rooth Tang (USA 2023, 119 min)
Friday, April 21 | 5:30 pm PT | CGV 3
Sunday, April 23 | 12 pm PT | BAMPFA
WORLD PREMIERE
A divisive character who dedicated her life to improving conditions in her community, Rose Pak was San Francisco’s atypical kingmaker. An immigrant from China, she started as a journalist and activist but found her greatest success as a controversial power broker who collaborated with Mayors Willie Brown, Gavin Newsom, and Ed Lee. She fought against the closure of the Embarcadero Freeway, a vital link to Chinatown, after the Loma Prieta earthquake, but claimed victory in her fight for the building of the city’s Central Subway, her crowning achievement. Rooth Tang unpacks and holds up to the light the work of a woman who worked tirelessly to bring Chinese American issues to the forefront of discourse in this patient and probing profile of a Bay Area mover and shaker. Expected Guest: Director Rooth Tang.
Stephen Curry: Underrated
Peter Nicks (USA 2023, 110 min)
Thursday, April 13 | 6:30 pm PT | Grand Lake Theatre
Thursday, April 13 | 9:30 pm PT | Grand Lake Theatre
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
STILL: A Michael J. Fox Movie
Davis Guggenheim (USA 2023, 95 min)
Friday, April 21 | 8:30 pm PT | CGV 2
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
More than an icon, Michael J. Fox is a global celebrity who rose to fame in the beloved sitcom Family Ties, starred in the blockbuster Back to the Future trilogy, and smooth talked his way into our hearts on Spin City before shocking the world with his Parkinson’s diagnosis. It could be argued the actor is now more famous for his disease than his performances, something director Davis Guggenheim (Waiting for “Superman”, Festival 2009) is determined to rectify with this uplifting profile of an indomitable spirit. Featuring a treasure trove of clips from Fox’s many roles, this smartly constructed documentary also takes us into Fox’s daily life as he deals with the harsh realities of his illness. Davis thoughtfully balances the unvarnished truth with the explosive charm of a man who must continually redefine success. Expected Guest: Director Davis Guggenheim.
The Tuba Thieves
Alison O’Daniel (USA 2023, 91 min)
Saturday, April 15 | 12 pm PT | BAMPFA
Sunday, April 16 | 2:45 pm PT | CGV 2
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
It’s true that a rash of tuba thefts have plagued Los Angeles high schools, but the mystery behind the loss of the oompah instruments is not the point in this bracing film that blends elements of documentary, narrative, and essay. Instead, the tubas provide one thread as filmmaker Alison O’Daniel creates a visually stunning work that captures life on roads, seas, mountains, forests, and skies, and features a sound design—including sequences of complete silence—so visceral it almost feels textured. Open-captioned and populated by a largely deaf cast, O’Daniel invites the audience both to “hear” the world through the experiences of the deaf and hard of hearing and really listen to the world around us. Expected Guest: Director Alison O’Daniel.
NARRATIVES: INTERNATIONAL
Animalia (Parmi Nous)
Sofia Alaoui (Morocco/Qatar 2023, 90 min)
Thursday, April 20 | 8:30 pm PT | CGV 2
Sunday, April 23 | 8 pm PT | BAMPFA
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
In this wide-ranging debut, mysterious green apparitions above a remote Moroccan lake bring chaos to the world around pregnant Itto. Married into a wealthy family, she feels like an interloper in her in-laws’ grand house but she is alone when the strange celestial event occurs. As army trucks rush in, Itto—determined to save her unborn child—embarks on a dangerous journey to reunite with her husband. Animalia encompasses multiple genres, including road-trip and sci-fi movies, while also diving deeply into themes of faith and class, hitting all its notes with perfect pitch. As Itto, Oumaïma Barid expertly reveals the character’s resolve to digest the enigmas she encounters without letting them deter her from her path.
Daughter of Rage (La Hija de todas las Rabias)
Laura Baumeister (Nicaragua/Mexico/Netherlands 2023, 91 min
Saturday, April 15 | 8:45 pm PT | CGV 3
BAY AREA PREMIERE
“If you want something, you have to fight for it,” 11-year-old Maria’s (Ara Alenjandra Medal) mother Lilibeth tells her in Laura Baumeister’s powerful debut. The pair eke out a living out selling items scavenged from the massive landfill abutting their shack, a unique bond tethering them to one another and an inner wildness. But when one of Lilibeth’s deals goes sideways during a time of social unrest, she leaves Maria in the care of strangers—little realizing how her parenting has resonated with her daughter who pushes against all obstacles in her determination to reunite with her mother. Through striking cinematography, poetic imagery, and Medal’s touching performance, Daughter of Rage follows María as she harnesses the power of her inventive mind in her quest to find some semblance of home.
Ernest & Celestine: A Trip to Gibberitia
Julien Chheng + Jean-Christophe Roger (France/Luxembourg 2022, 82 min)
Sunday, April 23 | 10 am PT | CGV 2
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Best friends Ernest, the bear, and tiny mouse Celestine are back for another lively animated adventure based on Gabrielle Vincent’s beloved children’s books. In this captivating sequel to Ernest & Celestine (Festival 2013), Ernest’s violin is broken, so the duo travel back to his homeland, Gibbertia, for the repair. The country Ernest remembers is an exotic place, home to the best musicians on earth, where joyous music fills the air. To his and Celestine’s dismay, things have changed. Music has been banned! To Ernest and Celestine, a life without music is unthinkable, so they join forces with friends and a mysterious masked outlaw to bring music and happiness back to the land of bears. Recommended for ages 7 and up.
The Gravity (La Gravite)
Cédric Ido (France 2023, 85 min)
Saturday, April 22 | 9 pm PT | CGV 3
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Something is a little off in a housing project in the Parisian suburbs. Up in the sky, the planets are clicking into alignment, while on earth, the forces of gravity make taking steps feel like wading through molasses. No one knows what it means, least of all Daniel and his brother, Joshua. They’re just trying to get by, resorting to selling drugs to make ends meet. Daniel dreams of leaving the projects once and for all, but his careful plans go awry as both life and celestial positions fracture. A new gang of teenage dealers are intent on making changes and imposing their will on the neighborhood by any means necessary. Grounded by the deep relationship depicted between the brothers and capped off with an explosive finale, director Cédric Ido’s second feature is a bold entry in the sci-fi genre.
I Have Electric Dreams (Tengo Sueños Eléctricos)
Valentina Maurel (Belgium/France/Costa Rica 2023, 100 min)
Saturday, April 22 | 3:30 pm PT | CGV 3
Sunday April 23 | 5:30 pm PT | BAMPFA
BAY AREA PREMIERE
Powered by dreamy cinematography, I Have Electric Dreams follows teenage Eva as she grapples with the emotions and realities of her parents’ split. She lives with her mother and younger sister but would rather reside with her estranged artist father. After much angst and rebellion, Eva gets her wish, only to be left largely unsupervised by her distant dad. Through her tumultuous interactions with her neglectful parent and a sexual relationship with one of his friends, Eva comes of age. Newcomer Daniela Marín Navarro makes an indelible debut with her complex portrayal of a young woman who learns many hard lessons on her journey to adulthood.
L’Immensità
Emanuele Crialese (Italy/France 2023, 98 min)
Saturday, April 15 | 5:30 pm PT | BAMPFA
Sunday, April 16 | 6 pm PT | CGV 3
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Emanuele Crialese’s (Golden Door, Festival 2007; Terraferma, Festival 2012) first film in 11 years is a personal portrait of two outsiders trying to escape the confines of their environment. Penelope Cruz commands the screen as Clara, an effusive but slightly manic mother raising three kids in 1970s Rome. She tries to make family life a party amid a loveless marriage while her eldest daughter, Adri, experiences gender dysphoria in an era where the term doesn’t really exist. Cruz conveys desperation under Clara’s playfulness as the character cries while applying makeup or mischievously slides beneath the table at a dinner party to frolic with her kids. Blending intimate scenes of family drama with surreal musical sequences and anchored by Cruz’s multilayered performance, L’Immensità is a tremendous return from a director whose work SFFILM has championed from the very beginning.
Love & Mathematics (Amor y matemáticas)
Claudia Sainte-Luce (Mexico 2023, 82 min)
Saturday, April 15 | 6:45 pm PT | CGV 2
BAY AREA PREMIERE
Once a teen pop star and now in his mid-30s, Billy (Roberto Quijano) has crashed back down to earth, trapped in the velvet cage of a boring, upper-middle-class life. A stay-at-home dad, he spends his days lounging around and caring for his newborn baby while his wife flourishes in a successful corporate career. Change arrives with new neighbor Monica, a mega-fan of Billy’s boy band who had a huge crush on him back in the day. Through the pair’s comedic and awkward exchanges, Billy regains his confidence and dives back into his music, starting with finishing his romantic ballad, “Love and Mathematics.” Quijano won the best actor award for his performance at the Havana Film Festival New York.
Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Antonio Lukich (Ukraine 2023, 106 min)
Friday, April 14 | 9 pm PT | CGV 2
Sunday, April 16 | 7 pm PT | BAMPFA
BAY AREA PREMIERE
With great narrative brio, director Antonio Lukich tells the story of twin brothers, living in central Ukraine, who go on a road trip to find their Yugoslavian father who is rumored to be in Luxembourg. As with most great road movies, the preamble and the journey are more important than the destination as Kolya and Vasya are shown as troublemaking kids who eventually become, respectively, a bus driver and a cop. When darkly funny circumstances find them both at loose ends, they embark on the search for their dad to hopefully get some answers as to why their lives lack meaning and purpose. Lukich has crafted a rollicking and engaging film with a melancholic soul that traverses as much emotional terrain as geographical.
Martinez
Lorena Padilla (Mexico 2023, 93 min)
Friday, April 21 | 7 pm PT | BAMPFA
Sunday, April 23 | 3 pm PT | CGV 3
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
In this satirical take on workplace culture, human resources informs elderly employee Martinez (Francisco Reyes, A Fantastic Woman) that it is time for him to retire—but first he must train his replacement. To add to his troubles, his next-door neighbor passes away, bequeathing him her diary along with other personal items. A Chilean who has lived in Mexico for 40 years, Martinez befriends the young man taking his job, who inspires him to explore life outside himself. As he rummages through his neighbor’s things, Martinez examines his existence and begins to realize that perhaps the end of his career is a new beginning, leading to reinvigoration and joy. Expected Guest: Director Lorena Padilla.
Peafowl (Gong-jak-sae)
Byun Sung-bin (South Korea 2023, 114 min)
Saturday, April 15 | 2:30 pm PT | BAMPFA
Saturday, April 22 | 8:30 pm PT | CGV 2
NORTH AMERICA PREMIERE
After the death of her father, Myung makes a pilgrimage to her hometown to lead her father’s funeral ritual, decades after she left in the face of family and community transphobia. Now a professional Waack dancer, Myung seeks to use her coming inheritance to fund her transition. As part of her homecoming, Myung helps her cousin come out and contend with his homophobic parents. A masterfully shot debut feature, Peafowlfollows Myung as she confronts her relationship with her family and finds her personal style of dancing. Expected Guest: Director Byun Sung-bin.
The Pod Generation
Sophie Barthes (Belgium/France 2023, 109 min)
Wednesday, April 19 | 7:30 pm PT | Dolby Cinema
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Snow and the Bear (Kar ve Ayi)
Selcen Ergun (Turkey 2023, 93 min)
Friday, April 14 | 6 pm PT | CGV 3
Sunday, April 16 | 4:45 pm PT | BAMPFA
BAY AREA PREMIERE
Asli is a nurse wholly committed to her profession even when it means relocating to a remote Turkish town with provincial beliefs and sub-zero temperatures. Though the villagers warn her of bear attacks from the neighboring forest, Asli finds more to fear from some of the men around her. One, a brutish womanizer, objects to Asli prescribing bedrest for his pregnant wife. Another appears kind but arouses Asli’s suspicions that he could be stalking her. When a citizen disappears, rather than take a good look in the mirror to find a culprit, townsfolk point fingers at the bears or Asli. Director Selcen Ergun expertly balances the tension between patriarchal tradition and modernity, crafting a chilly mystery-drama that hones in on the wilderness inside humanity as much as the woods that surround Asli’s new home.
Something You Said Last Night
Luis De Filippis (Canada/Switzerland 2023, 96 min)
Saturday, April 22 | 8:15 pm PT | BAMPFA
Sunday April 23 | 4:30 pm PT | CGV 2
US PREMIERE
Luis De Filippis’s story of a one-week family vacation makes an indelible leap forward in the depiction of trans lives on screen. It also perfectly encapsulates the tensions that can arise from close proximity and overdetermined fun when paired with family dynamics. But above all, the film presents a loving and accepting foursome where Canadian-Italian matriarch Mona’s boisterous energy exasperates her daughters. Renata is older, comfortable with her trans identity amid supportive parents, yet still finding her place in the world while Siena likes a good party with boys. Their dad, Guido, just wants to relax by the lake with a beer or two. Over these seven days, secrets will be aired, tears will be shed, hair will be braided, and hangovers will be endured–small but poignant moments perfectly rendered by De Filippis in her memorable debut.
Stone Turtle
Woo Ming Jin (Malaysia/Indonesia 2023, 91 min)
Saturday, April 15 | 9 pm PT | CGV 2
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Woo Ming Jin (Woman on Fire Looks for Water, Festival 2010) returns to SFFILM with this vivid supernatural mystery set on a nearly deserted island on the Malay Peninsula. There, Zahara lives a clandestine life with her young niece, dealing in precious turtle eggs. The arrival of a mysterious man who claims to be researching leatherback turtles sets the stage for a story of sexual violence and karma that resets a couple of times to give Zahara the chance to finesse the story of her life. Winner of the prestigious FIPRESCI Prize at Locarno and with a sometimes-surreal style and tone that recalls David Lynch or Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Stone Turtle is stunningly visual, from the blinding white sands of the island to the femme-fatale scarlet hues of Zahara’s frequently worn red dress.
Vincenta B.
Carlos Lechuga (Cuba/France/Colombia 2023, 77 min)
Friday, April 14 | 6 pm PT | BAMPFA
Sunday, April 16 | 3:30 pm PT | CGV 3
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Set amongst the vibrant landscape of Cuba, the film follows Vicenta, a gifted clairvoyant who uses her ability to connect to her ancestors to foresee the future. When her beloved son leaves home in search of employment abroad, the heartbreak of their separation drives Vicenta into an identity crisis as she worries about her boy. While she can foretell others’ future, her own remains cloudy as she struggles with her ancestors to understand the journey ahead for her son. She rediscovers her connection to the island and recovers her own sense of well-being as she learns to cope with what she cannot control.
NARRATIVES: US
Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret.
Kelly Fremon Craig (USA 2023, 105 min)
Sunday, April 23 | 12 pm PT | CGV 3
Recommended for ages 10 and up.
BlackBerry
Matthew Johnson (USA 2023, 123 min)
Monday, April 17 | 7:30 pm PT | Premier Theater
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Dalíland
Mary Harron (USA/UK 2023, 103 min)
Saturday, April 15 | 7:45 pm PT | BAMPFA
US PREMIERE
It’s best to depict egomaniacs, even talented ones like Salvador Dalí (Ben Kingsley, gloriously chewing scenery), through the eyes of someone in their orbit but not their headspace. Someone like art-school dropout James (Christopher Briney), a handsome young man working for an NYC gallery in the mid-’70s who is asked to deliver money to Dalí and his wife Gala (an imperious Barbara Sukowa) and is soon swept into their world of parties filled with beautiful people and copious substances. Director Mary Harron is the perfect director for this subject matter, with an unerring eye for period detail and novel ways of looking at real celebrities from various cultural zeitgeists. Newcomer Briney deftly portrays the wide-eyed, game-for-anything James while Kingsley and Sukowa lay bare the roots of an obsessive and dysfunctional marriage between two extraordinary narcissists. Expected Guests: Director Mary Harron, and screenwriter John C. Walsh.
See ticketing information for A Tribute to Mary Harron + “Dalíland” on Friday, April 14 above under the Big Nights + Special Events section.
Dreamin’ Wild
Bill Pohlad (USA 2023, 110 min)
Sunday, April 16 | 8:45 pm PT | CGV 3
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Rediscovery is a blessing and a curse in Bill Pohlad’s drama, based on real events. Thirty years after making an LP that sank without a trace, a record label wants to reissue Don (Casey Affleck) and Joe (Walton Goggins) Emerson’s teenage tracks, rekindling the siblings’ ambitions and competitiveness. Affleck is riveting as a man who traded his dreams for a simpler life, while Beau Bridges brings humanity to his role as the Emersons’ loving father.
Earth Mama
Savanah Leaf (USA 2023, 97 min)
Friday, April 14 | 8 pm PT | BAMPFA
Saturday, April 15 | 6 pm PT | CGV 3
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
A single mother in Oakland navigates the foster care system while making a living at a family portrait studio in this intimate coming-of-age story. Based on lived experiences from SFFILM-supported writer-director Savanah Leaf, the film follows Gia (portrayed by local musician Tia Nomore) who warily sizes up her surroundings and would-be allies, as she prepares for another child. Lush cinematography, assured direction, and humorous performances infuse this film with a shimmering authenticity rarely seen in debuts. In this drama made predominantly with a Bay Area crew, preconceptions of women with children in foster care are carefully examined and discarded, as Leaf presents a tender, textured, and surprisingly funny portrayal of motherhood.
Fremont
Babak Jalali (USA 2023, 91 min)
Saturday, April 22 | 3 pm PT | CGV 2
Sunday, April 23 | 3 pm PT | BAMPFA
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
A former translator for the US military, Donya (Anaita Wali Zada) now lives among the Afghan diaspora who call the eponymous Bay Area suburb home and makes a living writing fortune cookie epigrams in Babak Jalali’s (Radio Dreams, Festival 2015) wry, character-driven drama. Faced with hostility from neighbors who regard her as a traitor and plagued by insomnia, Donya struggles in her new homeland but she’s game for exploration, even agreeing to a blind date in far-off Bakersfield. Newcomer Zada is pitch-perfect and receives excellent support from Gregg Turkington as a Jack London-obsessed psychiatrist and Jeremy Allen White(Shameless, The Bear) as a sweet-natured mechanic. Shot in luminous black and white, Fremont presents a delightfully droll slice of one woman’s life. Expected Guest: Director Babak Jalali.
Past Lives
Celine Song (USA 2023, 106 min)
Tuesday, April 18 | 8 pm PT | Castro Theatre
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
MID-LENGTHS
Each mid-length film will be paired with two shorts.
1000% Me: Growing Up Mixed
W. Kamau Bell (USA 2023, 59 min)
Saturday, April 22 | 12 pm PT | BAMPFA
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Playful and enormously charming, W. Kamau Bell’s latest work profiles the joys and struggles of children growing up mixed-race. Beginning with his own family, Bell speaks with kids and family members throughout the Bay Area as they illuminate the unique experience of defining themselves in a world that seems to prefer hard lines and neat categories. Tender but never shying away from hard questions, the HBO Documentary 1000% Me: Growing Up Mixed is a timely exploration of identity and belonging that challenges our assumptions. Recommended for ages 7 and up.
Shorts
Creating Things
Bryan Simpson (USA 2023, 11 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Through their father’s art and a long-lost interview, two brothers take stock of his legacy.
Southern Afternoon
Tian Lan (China 2023, 16 min)
NORTH AMERICA PREMIERE
A Uyghur father suspects his daughter has received a love-letter but faces a language barrier.
Total runtime: 86 min.
What These Walls Won’t Hold
Adamu Chan (USA 2023, 42 min)
Saturday, April 15 | 12 pm PT | CGV 2
Sunday, April 16 | 2 pm PT | BAMPFA
WORLD PREMIERE
Filmed during the coronavirus pandemic, Adamu Chan’s What These Walls Won’t Hold is not about COVID but about the way the crisis brought into focus and catalyzed ongoing organizing efforts at San Quentin State Prison. Chan, who was incarcerated there, chronicles his journey home, interweaving his account with those of his loved ones both inside and outside the penitentiary walls. What emerges is a tender picture of a community thriving with relationships built on trust, and an indomitable zeal to fight for a brighter and better future for those incarcerated. It creates a blueprint for resistance and liberation that is for all and invites us to imagine the abolitionist utopia that awaits us at the end of our strife.
Shorts
Sol in the Garden
Emily Cohen Ibañez + Débora Souza Silva (USA 2023, 21 min)
WORLD PREMIERE
A formerly incarcerated woman catches the sun as she nourishes a garden with her new community.
How We Get Free
Geeta Gandbhir (USA 2023, 31 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
In Denver, an intrepid activist runs for office with the aim of eliminating cash bail.
Total runtime: 94 min.
The Kidnapping of the Bride
Sophia Mocorrea (Germany 2023, 31 min)
Sunday, April 23 | 12:15 pm PT | CGV 2
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Luisa and Fred are getting married, and all of the in-laws are in town. Love and good humor gets them through the preparations for the ceremony that will bridge Luisa’s Argentinian family and Fred’s German kin, but they can’t escape all of their parents’ expectations–or the Teutonic tradition of the bride’s abduction from her own wedding. This winner of the 2023 Sundance Short Film Jury Award for International Fiction is both a warm and subtle look at the place of tradition.
Shorts
Balikbayan
Rebecca Rajadnya (USA 2022, 19 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
The distance between Cecile and the Philippines grows further with each passing day.
No More Longing
Connor Lee O’Keefe (USA 2022, 16 min)
WORLD PREMIERE
A musician tries to find his voice after moving away from Brazil and starting testosterone.
Total runtime: 66 min.
SHORTS
Shorts 1: Generations
Friday, April 21 | 5:45 pm PT | CGV 2
This collection of shorts explores the enduring impact of family and the complex bonds between generations, portraying the transformative nature of our relationships and the roles they play in shaping our identity. Depicting different cultures, each story is a unique exploration of love, loss, and legacy. From a daughter’s quest for her mother’s history, to a mother’s struggle to break a cycle of trauma, to a heartfelt tribute to grandmothers, these films weave a tapestry of wisdom, strength, and resilience, reminding us of the lasting connections that bind us together across all ages. Total runtime: 100 min.
Nǎi Nai & Wài Pó (Grandma & Grandma)
Sean Wang (USA 2023, 17 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
The director’s ode to his two colorful grandmas is a captivating and bittersweet reflection of life.
Carrion
Yvonne Zhang (USA 2023, 22 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
In the face of a mother’s grief, the fear of loss haunts her little girl.
Mancha
Nicole Mejia (USA 2023, 15 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
A mother seeks to protect her daughter from the stain that curses her family’s women.
Still Waters
Aurora Brachman (USA 2023, 12 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
A daughter’s quest for answers about her mother’s past unearths a memory with a lasting impact.
The melting creatures (Las criaturas que se derriten bajo el sol)
Diego Céspedes (France/Chile 2023, 17 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
In a secluded community hiding from the sun, a trans woman and her daughter visit her ex-lover.
Now I’m in the Kitchen
Yana Pan (USA/China 2023, 5 min)
US PREMIERE
The filmmaker reflects on her mother and her independence while cooking her favorite dish.
Rest Stop
Crystal Kayiza (USA 2023, 12 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
A young Ugandan-American girl embarks on a soul-stirring bus ride with her immigrant mother.
Shorts 2: Traditions
Thursday, April 20 | 8:45 pm PT | CGV 3
Arising from the waves of the world’s waters and the depths of the earth—sometimes accompanied by the distant chirping of birds—come tales intertwined for generations, exploring lives and defying limitations of time and space. These short films tell stories that are ancient and new, acquainting us with people and places that teach us to look around and dig deeper into our own times. These works unearth, over and again, community, joy, knowledge, kinship, and love—all things that are old but shouldn’t die. Total runtime: 102 min.
By Water
Iyabo Kwayana (USA/Singapore 2023, 12 min
BAY AREA PREMIERE
A tender story of siblings lies buried within a pile of voicemail messages.
Sèt Lam
Vincent Fontano (France 2023, 23 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
A fisherman dances with death in this visually arresting, dreamlike story shot on Réunion Island.
After We’re Gone
Ima Iduozee (Finland 2023, 10 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Somewhere between truth and fantasy, the past and future come together to tell the story of the people of Africa.
I Am Home
Kymon Greyhorse (USA 2023, 3 min)
BAY AREA PREMIERE
A retelling of the eternal tale of the ties that bind us all together.
Addresses (Direcciones)
Maria Luisa Santos + Carlo Nasisse (Costa Rica 2023, 14 min)
BAY AREA PREMIERE
In a city with no street addresses, a deep dive into the history of memory and place.
Cloistered
Catherine Finsness (USA 2023, 22 min)
WORLD PREMIERE
This focus on a New Jersey religious community undoes the stereotypes we hold of nuns.
Birdsong
Omi Zola Gupta + Sparsh Ahuja (UK/Laos 2023, 18 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
A meditation on the act of listening and perceiving, guided by the vanishing Hmong tradition of whistling.
Shorts 3: The Body
Sunday, April 16 | 12 pm PT | CGV 2
Bear witness to the human body as a cinematic focal point in five diverse stories. Each tale demonstrates the unshakable potential of our bodies, and all the beauty and madness that they can contain. The body is an intimate place, bound not by one identity. It is an instrument for poetry, its language spoken profoundly through gliding hands. Flowing through water and coalescing with nature, captured by those who can see its true sacredness. Real and unreal, the flesh can suit us as we see fit but devour who we really are beneath our skins. And it is a battleground for a political struggle that has raged for generations. These bodies create stories told with the power unique to cinema. Total runtime: 65 min.
Persona
Moon Su-jin (Republic of Korea 2023, 7 min)
The skin she lives in begins to consume her true self.
How to Carry Water
Sasha Wortzel (USA 2023, 16 min)
NORTH AMERICA PREMIERE
The boundless beauty of bodies in water, seen through the lens of Shoog McDaniel.
And Then I Was Here
Alex Stergiou (USA 2023, 13 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
The intimate final days of pregnancy and birth of a child to a genderqueer parent.
Regard Silence (Mira el silencio)
Santiago Zermeño (México 2023, 29 min)
NORTH AMERICA PREMIERE
Spellbinding stories and poetry unfold through the fluid movements of Mexican Sign Language.
Shorts 4: Family Films
Saturday, April 15 | 10 am PT | CGV 3
Exciting possibilities burst forth on our festival screen as this lively collection of shorts thrillingly demonstrates the unique power of cinema. A flock of rose-colored aquatic avians disrupts the military precision of a massive warship while an adventurous arachnid dreams of a lunar destination just out of web’s reach. A young sapling soaks up the wisdom passed on from the rustling leaves of its wise neighbor as lush cinematography captures Ecuador’s flora and fauna and the cozy streets of suburbia. Collected from many corners of the world, these true, not-so-true, and animated stories are sure to inspire laughter, curiosity, tears, and awe in the youngest filmgoers. Total runtime: 70 min; recommended for ages 5 and up.
New Moon
Jeff Le Bars + Jérémie Balais (France/USA 2023, 12 min)
BAY AREA PREMIERE
A surrealist night shared by a mother and son filled with love, inspiration, and Aretha Franklin.
Pete
Bret Parker (USA 2023, 7 min)
A true story about gender identity, Little League Baseball, and people who accept change.
The Wind and the Trees
Todd Stewart (Canada 2023, 9 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Deep in the boreal forest, a mature pine tree and a seedling begin a conversation.
Kintsugi
Cleto Acosta-McKillop (USA 2023, 8 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
When a flashy neighbor moves next door, a restaurant’s lucky cat is faced with insecurities.
El Moño
Luis Fernando Puente + Lizde Arias (USA 2023, 9 min)
BAY AREA PREMIERE
Andrea learns of generational family magic that helps her find lost objects in unexpected ways.
Swing to the Moon
Marie Bordessoule, Chloé Lauzu, Adriana Bouissié, Vincent Levrero, Nadine De Boer, Solenne Moreau + Elisa Drique (France 2023, 6 min)
Living in the forest, a spider will do anything to reach her lunar dream.
With a Wool Ball (Con un Ovillo de Lana)
Belén Ricardes (Argentina 2023, 5 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Charming stop-motion musical of an Argentinian winter full of ponchos, animal friends, and warm stories.
Dipsas Speaks
Craig Daniel Leon (Ecuador 2023, 6 min)
Wildlife sounds a warning message of deforestation in their fragile Ecuadorian Amazon ecosystem.
Labor of Love
Richard O’Connor (USA 2023, 3 min)
Mary shares memories of her grandmother, a formerly enslaved, life-saving midwife in North Carolina.
Code Rose
Taye Cimon, Pierre Coëz, Julie Groux, Sandra Leydier, Manuarii Morel + Romain Seisson
(France 2023, 5 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Hijinks ensue when flocks of flamingos disrupt operations on an aircraft carrier.
Shorts 5: Youth Works
Saturday, April 22 | 12:30 pm PT | CGV 2
Young directors from as close as the Bay Area and as far away as Spain and Taiwan bring empathy, awareness, and specificity to storytelling. Encompassing emotive composition, breathtaking drone footage, and playfully sleek editing, this collection includes a diverse range of animation, narratives, and documentaries. Experimental movement, dark political humor, and tales varied enough to embrace classroom romance and reflections on growing up and interdependence mark this introduction to an up-and-coming group of cinematic voices carrying us into the next generation of filmmaking. Total runtime: 73 min; recommended for ages 11 and up.
Rational Functions
Esmé Nix (USA 2023, 6 min)
BAY AREA PREMIERE
A lonely girl finds connection in class through understanding math as tragic love stories.
Our Days in Dongshi
Hsiang-Yu Li, Tse-Ling Huang, Po-Wen Yen + Hsin-Yi Hung (Taiwan 2023, 10 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Connect with the charming children of Dongshi, Taiwan, a coastline township famous for its oysters.
The Sound
Cole Willis (USA 2023, 5 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Preparing for an upcoming performance, a young dancer begins to embrace her unrealized potential.
My Sisters in the Stars: The Story of Lee Yong-soo
Ian Kim (USA/South Korea 2023, 10 min)
BAY AREA PREMIERE
Meet one of the last surviving WWII-era Japanese comfort women through this multimedia animation.
Growing up with Memory Loss | A Gift for My 16th Birthday
Keertana Sreekumar (USA 2023, 3 min)
BAY AREA PREMIERE
A young artist with an impaired memory reflects on what it means to grow up.
Parental Orbit
Dara Carneol (USA 2023, 9 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Described as a gruncle dance extravaganza, two family filmmakers discuss life and creativity.
Hop Heel Drop
Sania Bhatia (USA 2023, 3 min)
Tap dancer Sydney Barnas shares her story of encouragement and passion for movement.
An Island in the Middle of the Sea
Alberto Montull (Spain 2023, 5 min)
Students plan a surprise trip for their unwell teacher amongst the striking Galician landscapes.
American Ball Game
Teja Mettu + Krish Mysoor (USA 2023, 9 min)
WORLD PREMIERE
With twisting dark humor, Dan uncomfortably tries to fit in with his friend’s white family.
Shopworn
Athena Cheris (USA 2023, 6 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Stubbornness might be the downfall for an aging boxer unable to let go.
The External-Internal Monologue of an Interdependent Insomniac
Julian Felix Aaronson (USA 2023, 7 min)
CALIFORNIA PREMIERE
Fraught with insecurities over sexuality, self-acceptance, and gender, a sleep-deprived teenager explains various smells.
FAMILY WORKSHOP
“Mushka” + Workshop with Animator Andreas Deja
Saturday, April 15 | 1:30 pm PT | The Walt Disney Family Museum
Mushka
Andreas Deja (USA 2023, 28 min)
WORLD PREMIERE
Disney legend Andreas Deja began perfecting his mastery of hand-drawn animation as a boy in Germany. He first applied to work at Walt Disney Studios at age 10; by age 23, Deja had started his distinguished career, lending his talents to The Black Cauldron (1985). Thanks to his immense talent with pencil and paper, Deja has since brought numerous iconic characters to life, including Mickey Mouse (The Prince and the Pauper, 1990); Gaston (Beauty and the Beast, 1991); Jafar (Aladdin, 1992); Scar (The Lion King, 1994); Lilo (Lilo & Stitch, 2002); Mama Odie and Juju (The Princess and the Frog, 2009); and Tigger (Winnie the Pooh, 2011).
Now, as a first-time writer and director, Annie Awards’ Winsor McCay Award-winning animator presents Mushka, an animated short that tells the beautiful and touching tale of a young girl and the tiger cub she’s raising. Deja will present behind-the-scenes artwork, answer questions, and lead the audience in a drawing activity inspired by his latest creation. Be sure to bring paper and pencils to draw along! Recommended for ages 6 and up.
MEMBER SCREENING
Saturday, April 22 | 10 am PT | CGV 3
Special Events
Now taking RSVPs for our members-only surprise screening at the 66th SFFILM Festival. Join us for a powerhouse drama starring a beloved international actress. The film’s title will be announced on stage the morning of the screening. Hope to see you there! To attend the free surprise screening, please RSVP as soon as possible to claim your spot.
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