May 9, 2007

Robin Williams at Castro Theatre
Photo by Brian Brooks (May 9, 2007)
San Francisco author
Armistead Maupin took to the stage at the ornate Castro Theatre to host an onstage interview with his friend
Robin Williams, who received the
San Francisco International Film Festival's Peter J. Owens Award for acting. Maupin joked that handling Williams, who famously goes off on his comedic trances, was like "hearding cats." When not leaving the jammed theater in stitches of laughter, Williams praised San Francisco for giving him inspiration... "and I can walk the streets here and be a normal person" he said.
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Lucas Takes His Award in SF
Photo by Brian Brooks (May 9, 2007)
SFIFF 50:
George Lucas took to the stage at the St. Francis Hotel to accept his one-time only Irving M. Levin Award from the
San Francisco Film Society (named after the
San Francisco International Film Festival's founder) at a splashy party, which also honored
Robin Williams,
Spike Lee and writer
Peter Morgan. "I am out of the mainstream and I can do things that aren't too smart," said Lucas to laughs.
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SF INT'L '07 | "The Violin" and "Souvenirs" Among Top Golden Gate Award Winners at SFIFF 50
by Brian Brooks (May 9, 2007)
Mexican director
Francisco Vargas Quevedo's "
The Violin" (El violin) won the
San Francisco International Film Festival's Skyy Prize, while Israeli duo
Shahar Cohen and
Halil Efrat's "
Souvenirs" took best documentary feature (West Coast premiere), capping the Golden Gate Awards ceremony Wednesday evening for the festival's landmark 50th edition. SFIFF's golden year closes Thursday May 10th with
Olivier Dahan's
Edith Piaf biopic, "
La vie en rose."
Picturehouse will release the feature beginning June 8.
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May 4, 2007
DISPATCH FROM SAN FRANCISCO | George Lucas, Robin Williams, and More Honored as SF Int'l Fest Celebrates 50 Years
by Brian Brooks (May 4, 2007)
Celebrating its 50th anniversary, the
San Francisco International Film Festival welcomed about 600 of the city's well-heeled residents to the Westin St. Francis Hotel in Union Square last night for the annual Film Society Awards night. Hollywood glitterati also made their way in for the big party, including Bay Area natives
George Lucas and
Robin Williams as well as director
Spike Lee, recent Oscar-winning screenwriter
Peter Morgan, and director
Ron Howard.
San Francisco Film Society executive director
Graham Leggat greeted the crowd, taking the stage in the cavernous ballroom saying gleefully, "This is the longest running festival in the Americas..."
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May 3, 2007

Spike Lee at SFIFF 50
Photo by Brian Brooks (May 3, 2007)
Director
Spike Lee may have seemed a bit out of energy Wednesday night in San Francisco where he received the
San Francisco Film Society's annual Directing Award, but we can empathize. iW happened to be on the same early morning flight from New York, which was delayed by over four hours because a bird had gotten caught in the engine of the plane, so there was quite a delay due to equipment change. But anyway, once in SF, it was right to the city's ornate Castro Theater where Lee was honored and participated in an onstage with
Boston Globe critic
Wesley Morris. After screen highlights of Lee's roster of features, Morris interviewed the director followed by some lively questions from the audience. "When you do something you love, it's not really work," Lee said of his job. He moved onto subjects ranging from Hurricane Katrina (excerpts of "When the Levees Broke" screened after the Q&A) as well as the current debate of using derogatory terms in hip hop ("constant use of this language doesn't elevate us"). But he returned to pleading for the Gulf Coast. "Please don't leave this theater thinking everything is OK in New Orleans. Things are still bad there and people feel abandoned by their government."
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May 2, 2007
SF INT'L '07 | Picturing Politics at SFIFF50
by Robert Avila (May 2, 2007)
A shot in veteran filmmaker
Jon Else's documentary "
Wonders Are Many" -- a behind the scenes look at composer
John Adams and director-librettist
Peter Sellars' opera
Doctor Atomic -- makes visual reference to Picasso's "Guernica" as apt shorthand for art's awesome charge to speak for the voiceless in the age of total war and total exploitation. For an opera about the Manhattan Project and the birth of the atomic age, the Picasso quote is fitting enough. But Else's documentary, which screens this year as part of the 50th
San Francisco International Film Festival, not only broaches pressing questions about art's role in a time of threat and crisis; its very appearance here helps highlight the place of film festivals themselves as forums for political debate and discourse.
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April 29, 2007
PEOPLE: Daniel Wu, "Heavenly King"
by Jennifer Young (April 29, 2007)
[This interview first appeared in indieWIRE's sister publication covering film in the Bay Area, SF360. For additional coverage of the San Francisco International Film Festival, visit
the SF360 website.]
For years a joke has been circulating online that a Chinese law exists requiring
Daniel Wu to be featured in every Hong Kong film. Currently one of Hong Kong's most prolific actors, Wu has starred in an astounding 40 films since his impressive 1998 debut as an uneasy gay policeman in
Yonfan's terrific arthouse film "
Bishonen." The 32 year-old came back to the San Francisco Bay Area, where he grew up, to show off his directorial debut, "
The Heavenly Kings," a Cantopop boy band mockumentary, at this year's 50th
San Francisco International Film Festival. Just before the film's premiere Friday, SF360 caught up with Daniel Wu and the rest of his fictitious boy band, Alive (
Andrew Lin,
Terence Yin, and
Conroy Chan), at the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in San Francisco.
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April 26, 2007
SF INT'L '07 | San Francisco Fest Brings Out the Films and Big Names for 50th Anniversary
by Dennis Harvey (April 26, 2007)
[San Francisco film critic Dennis Harvey gives his take on the 50th Anniversary of the San Francisco International Film Festival, which opens Thursday. The article first appeared in our sister publication, SF360. Visit
SF360" for additional coverage from the 50th SFIFF.]
A decade might be long enough in dog years, but in film festival terms it takes a bit more time to impress.
Berlin goes back to the early '50s,
Cannes came about just pre- and post WWII,
Venice dates to the early '30s. But in the U.S., where, since that latter era, Hollywood's output has dominated world markets? No film festival at all -- until 1957. At which point a second-generation local theater owner and dedicated cineaste decided somebody had to step up to the plate -- to affirm San Francisco's "place in the international arts world," to underline that film could be a true art form as well as entertainment, and simply to bring foreign movies to the city's ever-hungry intelligentsia. As you might have heard by now, that makes the
San Francisco International Film Festival 50 years old this year. And the oldest continually running such event on this half of the globe celebrates its 50th with a whole lotta hoopla and a cherry-picked selection of current worldwide cinema April 26 through May 10.
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SF INT'L '07 | Looking Back at 50 Years of San Francisco International Film Festival History--And Going Forward
by B. Rubly Rich (April 26, 2007)
[Editor's note: SF360.org, where this article first appeared, is copublished by the SF Film Society and indieWIRE. B. Ruby Rich gave the 2004 State of Cinema address to the SF International Film Festival. Visit
SF360 for additional coverage of the 50th SFIFF.]
Is there anyone who doesn't know that the
San Francisco International Film Festival (SFIFF) is turning 50 this month? The drumbeat in the Bay Area has been celebratory, from the
Pacific Film Archive tribute program of films drawn from its history to the daily bulletins in the
San Francisco Chronicle, where Ruthe Stein has been publishing 50 items over 50 days, all drawn from the festival's archive. Instead of focusing on the usual festival squibs, forecasts, and must-sees, then, this writer headed over to the fabled Presidio on an unusually sunny day to talk to the festival staff about the past. And of course, as the past always is a lens for the present, to think about what festivals mean in the current moment -- and, okay, what this one has that's special.
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April 3, 2007
"Golden Door" Opens a Golden San Francisco International Film Festival
by Susan Gerhard (April 3, 2007)
The
San Francisco International Film Festival announced a robust lineup for the festival's 50th edition during a press conference Tuesday at the Westin St. Francis Hotel, with 200 films on the roster from 54 countries, and awards in more than 13 categories showing at a variety of locations, but centered at the new
Sundance Cinemas Kabuki. As described by
San Francisco Film Society executive director
Graham Leggat, director of programming
Linda Blackaby, and programming associates
Sean Uyehara and
Rod Armstrong, the festival kicks off April 26th with a screening of
Emanuele Crialese's
Venice award-winning "
Golden Door," followed by a party in San Francisco's City Hall.
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May 4, 2006
"Workingman's Death" and "Half Nelson" Among San Francisco International Film Festival Winners
by Brian Brooks/indieWIRE (May 4, 2006)
The 49th
San Francisco International Film Festival, North America's oldest event of its kind, announced its winners Thursday, with Austrian director
Michael Glawogger's "
Workingman's Death" receiving the fest's Golden Gate Award for Documentary Feature, while Chinese director
Ying Liang received the Skyy Prize - First Narrative Feature award for "
Taking Father Home." Also receiving kudos this year is lauded
Sundance '06 competition feature, "
Half Nelson," by
Ryan Fleck, which won the FIPRESCI Prize. SFIFF's audience award winners will be announced soon. SFIFF is organized by the
San Francisco Film Society.
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SF Film Fest: Starstudded Tributes, "Brothers of the Head," "Half Nelson," and "The Bridge"
by Cheryl Eddy/SF360.org (May 4, 2006)
The second week of the 49th
San Francisco International Film Festival was packed with tributes and special events, luring crowds diverse enough to be equally starstruck by
Werner Herzog and
Ed Harris. (Not as diverse, alas: all of the honorees -- not to mention their on-stage interviewers -- were middle-aged white guys.) Still, all the kudos were well-deserved. April 25, the Persistence of Vision Award, previously given to the likes of
Kenneth Anger and
Faith Hubley, went to wildly creative Canadian
Guy Maddin, who sheepishly accepted his award with an anecdote recalling his first visit to SFIFF back in 1989 (punch line: "You don't get a hangover from Stoli!") In between screenings of several Maddin shorts, including the remarkable "
Heart of the World" and the self-explanatory "
Sissy Boy Slap Party," the director discussed his fascination with "lost films," his beloved Winnipeg, how to best direct a herd of nervous ostriches, and ideas for future projects ("I'd like to make a horror movie, but with lots of dancing.")
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April 26, 2006
From here to Iberia, the San Francisco International Film Festival
by Cheryl Eddy/SF360.org (Apr 25, 2006)
Heroic firefighters, the eeriest simian costumes since "Planet of the Apes," a "Baywatch" star-as-activist, fierce flamenco dancers, and a rushing tide of watermelon juice: Welcome to the first four days of the 49th annual
San Francisco International Film Festival.
Opening night (Thurs/20), after introductory remarks by
San Francisco Film Society executive director
Graham Leggat, SF mayor Gavin Newsom took the Castro Theatre stage to usher in "the longest-running film festival in the world" (uh, sorry, Venice; SFIFF is the longest running film fest in the Americas, however). Newsom also awarded the key to the city to the mayor of Paris, France while the packed house surreptitiously rifled through their swag bags, admiring the Hong Kong Tourism Board tchotchkes (chip clips, baseball caps) and looking for edibles (breadsticks, cookies).
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March 30, 2006
49th SF Int'l Fest Opening with "Love," Closing With "Prairie"
by Susan Gerhard/SF360.org (March 30, 2006)
The
San Francisco International Film Festival unveiled its program of 97 features and 130 shorts from 41 countries Tuesday, March 28th at the Westin St. Francis Hotel today. Under new leadership from Executive Director
Graham Leggat, the festival is moving toward its 50th anniversary with themes of innovation and democratization. Leggat, along with Director of Programming
Linda Blackaby and Programming Associate
Sean Uyehara announced a varied lineup for the festival, which opens with
Peter Ho-Sun Chan's "
Perhaps Love," a musical by the maker of "
Comrades, Almost a Love Story," and closes with Robert Altman's "
A Prairie Home Companion."
[ read more in On The Scene ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Festival News, Lead Story, SFIFF ]
March 13, 2006
"Perhaps Love" and "A Prairie Home Companion" to Bookend 49th San Francisco International Film Festival
by Brian Brooks (March 10, 2006)
Peter Chan's "
Perhaps Love" will open the 49th
San Francisco International Film Festival, the
San Francisco Film Society, organizers of the event, revealed this week. Chan will attend the event at the historic
Castro Theatre along with San Francisco mayor
Gavin Newsom and visiting Paris mayor
Bertrand Delanoe. Seen through a series of flashbacks and "film-within-a-film numbers," "Perhaps Love" is described by the event as a "lavish and heartfelt romantic triangle set in Shanghai and Beijing," starring
Jacky Cheung ("
July Rhapsody"),
Zhou Xun ("
Suzhou River"),
Takeshi Kaneshiro ("
House of Flying Daggers") and
Jee Jin-hee ("
If You Were Me"). The film was Hong Kong's official entry for best foreign-language consideration for the 78th
Academy Awards.
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January 24, 2006

San Francisco Film Society Comes Out
Park City coverage sponsored by BE KIND REWIND.
photo by Brian Brooks (January 25, 2006)
Stephanie Coyote, executive director of the
San Francisco Film Commission and
San Francisco Film Society executive director
Graham Leggat at a fab afternoon party hosted by the Society. The group announced it will launch a new inititative called
SF360, a multi-part project designed to promote the San Francisco film and media scene.
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October 10, 2005

A Farewell to Graham
photo by Brian Brooks/indieWIRE (October 10, 2005)
Graham Leggat (left) at his final NYFF event before leaving the
Film Society of Lincoln Center and moving west to head the
San Francisco Film Society. This weekend he will move to the Bay Area and will begin his new job on Monday in California. He is pictured with
Ryan Werner who recently left
Wellspring to join
IFC Films.
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September 1, 2005
Graham Leggat Named New Executive Director of the San Francisco Film Society
by Brian Brooks (September 1, 2005)
Graham Leggat, who currently serves as director of communications at the
Film Society of Lincoln Center, has been appointed the new executive director of the
San Francisco Film Society effective October 17th, the organization announced Wednesday. Leggat replaces
Roxanne Messina Captor, who departed from the position following the 48th
San Francisco International Film Festival in May. The group organizes the annual festival, which will be held April 20 - May 4 in 2006.
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