San Francisco International Film Festival
The San Francisco International Film Festival, organized by the San Francisco Film Society, is held each spring for two weeks, presenting around 200 films from over 50 countries. The festival highlights current trends in international film and video production with an emphasis on work that has not yet secured U.S. distribution. In 2009, it served around 82,000 patrons, with screenings held in San Francisco and Berkeley.
In March 2014, Noah Cowan, former executive director of the Toronto International Film Festival, became executive director of the SFFS and SFIFF, replacing Ted Hope. Prior to Hope, the festival was briefly headed by Bingham Ray, who served as SFFS executive director until his death after only ten weeks on the job in January 2012. Graham Leggat became the executive director of the San Francisco Film Society on October 17, 2005. The Scottish-born Leggat died on August 25, 2011 from cancer, aged 51.
SFIFF is currently programmed by SFFS Director of Programming Rachel Rosen, Programmer Rod Armstrong, Golden Gate Awards Manager Audrey Chang, and Programming Coordinator Joseph Flores.
The 59th San Francisco International Film Festival took place from April 21 to May 5, 2016, at venues throughout the Bay Area.
The 63rd edition of the festival, originally scheduled for April 2020, was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
History
Founded in 1957 by film exhibitor Irving "Bud" Levin, the SFIFF began as a philanthropic effort to secure San Francisco's place in the international arts scene as well as expose locals to cinema as an art form. The Festival played a major role in introducing foreign films to American audiences. Akira Kurosawa's Throne of Blood and Satyajit Ray's Pather Panchali were among the films that screened at the first festival.One obstacle in the early years was the lack of support from the major Hollywood studios, suggested reasons being the growing threat of international films' appeal and a fear that the festival would draw commercial attention away from the Oscars. It was not until 1959 that a major American film, Henry King's Beloved Infidel, starring Gregory Peck and Deborah Kerr, played at SFIFF.
Honors and Tributes
Irving M. Levin Directing Award
The Festival's directing award is named after SFIFF's founder, Irving Levin. From 2003–2014, the award was known as the Founder's Directing Award. Prior to 2003, the award was known as the Akira Kurosawa Award. Recipients include:- Mira Nair, 2016
- Guillermo del Toro, 2015
- Richard Linklater, 2014
- Philip Kaufman, 2013
- Kenneth Branagh, 2012
- Oliver Stone, 2011
- Walter Salles, 2010
- Francis Ford Coppola, 2009
- Mike Leigh, 2008
- Spike Lee, 2007
- Werner Herzog, 2006
- Taylor Hackford, 2005
- Miloš Forman, 2004
- Robert Altman, 2003
- Warren Beatty, 2002
- Clint Eastwood, 2001
- Abbas Kiarostami, 2000
- Arturo Ripstein, 1999
- Im Kwon-taek, 1998
- Francesco Rosi, 1997
- Arthur Penn, 1996
- Stanley Donen, 1995
- Manoel de Oliveira, 1994
- Ousmane Sembène, 1993
- Satyajit Ray, 1992
- Marcel Carné, 1991
- Jirí Menzel, 1990
- Joseph L. Mankiewicz, 1989
- Robert Bresson, 1988
- Michael Powell, 1987
- Akira Kurosawa, 1986
Peter J. Owens Award
- Ellen Burstyn, 2016
- Richard Gere, 2015
- Jeremy Irons, 2014
- Harrison Ford, 2013
- Judy Davis, 2012
- Terence Stamp, 2011
- Robert Duvall, 2010
- Robert Redford, 2009
- Maria Bello, 2008
- Robin Williams, 2007
- Ed Harris, 2006
- Joan Allen, 2005
- Chris Cooper, 2004
- Dustin Hoffman, 2003
- Kevin Spacey, 2002
- Stockard Channing, 2001
- Winona Ryder, 2000
- Sean Penn, 1999
- Nicolas Cage, 1998
- Annette Bening, 1997
- Harvey Keitel, 1996
Kanbar Award
- Tom McCarthy, 2016
- Paul Schrader, 2015
- Stephen Gaghan, 2014
- Eric Roth, 2013
- David Webb Peoples, 2012
- Frank Pierson, 2011
- James Schamus, 2010
- James Toback, 2009
- Peter Morgan, 2008
- Robert Towne, 2007
- Jean-Claude Carrière, 2006
- Paul Haggis, 2005
Mel Novikoff Award
- Janus Films and The Criterion Collection, 2016
- Lenny Borger, 2015
- David Thomson, 2014
- Peter von Bagh, 2013
- Pierre Rissient, 2012
- Serge Bromberg, 2011
- Roger Ebert, 2010
- Bruce Goldstein, 2009
- James Lewis Hoberman, 2008
- Kevin Brownlow, 2007
- Anita Monga, 2005
- Paolo Cherchi Usai, 2004
- Manny Farber, 2003
- David Francis, 2002
- Cahiers du cinéma, 2001
- San Francisco Cinematheque, 2001
- Donald Krim, 2000
- David Shepard, 2000
Golden Gate Persistence of Vision Award
- Aardman Animations, 2016
- Kim Longinotto, 2015
- Isaac Julien, 2014
- Jem Cohen, 2013
- Barbara Kopple, 2012
- Matthew Barney, 2011
- Don Hertzfeldt, 2010
- Lourdes Portillo, 2009
- Errol Morris, 2008
- Heddy Honigmann, 2007
- Guy Maddin, 2006
- Adam Curtis, 2005
- Jon Else, 2004
- Pat O'Neill, 2003
- Fernando Birri, 2002
- Kenneth Anger, 2001
- Faith Hubley, 2000
- Johan van der Keuken, 1999
- Robert Frank, 1998
- Jan Švankmajer, 1997
George Gund III Craft of Cinema Award
- Peter Coyote, 2016
- Maurice Kanbar, 2015
- John Lasseter, 2014
- Ray Dolby, 2013
Midnight Awards
- Clifton Collins, Jr. and Zoe Saldana, 2011
- Evan Rachel Wood and Elijah Wood, 2009
- Rose McGowan and Jason Lee, 2008
- Rosario Dawson and Sam Rockwell, 2007
60th Anniversary Gala Changes
Awards and Prizes
New Directors Award
This $15,000 cash award supports innovative thinking by independent filmmakers and shines the spotlight on an emerging director. Films in this juried competition must be the director's first narrative feature and are selected for their unique artistic sensibility or vision.Golden Gate Awards
The Golden Gate Awards is the competitive section for documentaries, animation, shorts, experimental film, and video, youth works and works for television. Eligibility requires that entries have a San Francisco Bay Area premiere and be exempt from a previous multiday commercial theatrical run or media broadcast of any kind. The festival currently awards cash prizes in the following categories:- Documentary Feature - prize: $20,000
- Bay Area Documentary Feature - prize: $15,000
- Documentary Short - prize: $5,000
- Narrative Short - prize: $5,000
- Animated Short - prize: $2,000
- Bay Area Short, First Prize - prize: $2,000
- Bay Area Short, Second Prize - prize: $1,500
- New Visions Short - prize: $1,500
- Youth Work - prize: $1,500
- Family Film - prize: $1,500
FIPRESCI Prize
Selected by the International Federation of Film Critics, the FIPRESCI Prize aims to promote film art, to encourage new and young cinema and to help films get better distribution and win greater public attention.State of Cinema Address
Each year, the festival invites a prominent thinker to discuss the intersecting worlds of contemporary cinema, culture and society. Recent speakers include:- Wesley Morris, 2016
- Douglas Trumbull, 2015
- Steven Soderbergh, 2013
- Jonathan Lethem, 2012
- Christine Vachon, 2011
- Walter Murch, 2010
- Mary Ellen Mark, 2009
- Kevin Kelly, 2008
- Peter Sellars, 2007
- Tilda Swinton, 2006
- Brad Bird, 2005
- B. Ruby Rich, 2004
- Michel Ciment, 2003
Live Music & Film
- Scott Amendola, Matthias Bossi, Mike Patton, and William Winant accompanying Waxworks, Directed Paul Leni, 2013
- Merrill Garbus with Buster Keaton short films, 2012
- Tindersticks with the films of Claire Denis, 2011
- Stephin Merritt with 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, 2010
- Dengue Fever with The Lost World, 2009
- Black Francis with The Golem, 2008
- Jonathan Richman with The Phantom Carriage, 2007
- Deerhoof with Heaven and Earth Magic, 2006
- American Music Club with Street Angel, 2005
- Lambchop with, 2003
- Superchunk with A Page of Madness, 2002
- Yo La Tengo with Jean Painlevé short films, 2001
- Tom Verlaine with classic silent short films, 2000