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‘The Invite,’ ‘Late Fame,’ and Many More Movies Lead SFFILM Festival Lineup

By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy. We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. SFFILM‘s 69th edition of the San Francisco International Film Festival returns to the Bay Area April 24 -May 4 for 11 days of globe-spanning cinema and conversations. The lineup includes 79 programs from 40 countries featuring talent such as Tilda Swinton, Danielle Brooks, Irrfan Khan, Dale Dickey, Dustin Hoffman, Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Paul Rudd, Lubna Azabal, Don Cheadle, Jamie Lee Curtis, Charlotte Rampling, and Demi Moore. This year’s festival also marks a return to storied venues, including the Castro Theatre (which reopened this year) and the Grand Lake (celebrating its 100th anniversary this year). Director of programming Jessie Fairbanks said in an official statement, “This is the sixth festival I’ve curated at SFFILM, and it remains a joy to collaborate with the team to shape a slate of distinctive, authentic stories. Alongside special programs, juried competitions, and marquee events — including our return to the Castro Theatre and Grand Lake — I wanted to honor our organization’s roots as we look ahead to our 70th anniversary next year. We’re especially thrilled to introduce a legacy retrospective from SFFILM’s archives that will become a new festival staple. Films from the Vault opens up a rich new layer of cinematic discovery and celebrates a history that continues to shape what comes next at SFFILM.” The festival’s opening night at the Castro offers a double bill of Kent Jones’ “Late Fame” before it opens in theaters later this year, and starring Willem Dafoe and Greta Lee, who will be there in person. That’s followed by Olivia Wilde’s post-Sundance premiere of “The Invite,” with the filmmaker in person to show this San Francisco-set film on 35mm. Previously announced are the centerpiece screening of Boots Riley’s “I Love Boosters” and the closing night program on May 4, aka Star Wars Day, featuring “The Empire Strikes Back” and a conversation with C-3PO actor Anthony Daniels and Lucasfilm veteran and SFFILM board VP Howard Roffman. See the full lineup below, with language courtesy of the festival. Opening Night: The Invite Director: Olivia Wilde, Producers: David Permut, Ben Browning, Megan Ellison (USA 2026, 107 min) Nothing is off limits in Olivia Wilde’s (Booksmart, Festival 2019) taboo-smashing third feature where two San Francisco couples meet for a casual get-to-know-one-another dinner but instead find themselves traversing surprising boundaries of intimacy and relationships. Penelope Cruz, Olivia Wilde, Edward Norton, and Seth Rogen star. Opening Night: Late Fame Director: Kent Jones, Producers: Pam Koffler, Christine Vachon, Mason Plotts, Danny Roberts, H.S. Naji, Jackie Langelier, Ethan Lazar, Taylor Shung (USA 2025, 96 min) When a retired poet’s forgotten writings capture the attention of a vibrant NYC group, admiration, longing, and desire stir in this heartfelt, witty meditation on ambition and second chances. Willem Dafoe and Greta Lee star. Centerpiece: I Love Boosters Director: Boots Riley, Producers: Aaron Ryder, Andrew Swett, Allison Rose Carter, Jon Read, Boots Riley (USA 2026, 106 min) A fearless crew of young women led by Corvette (Keke Palmer) shoplift designer clothes across the Bay Area and sell them at deep discounts. When fashion mogul Christie Smith (Demi Moore) takes notice, their rivalry escalates—sparking a bold plan for one final heist. Closing Night: Star Wars: Episode V—The Empire Strikes Back Director: Irvin Kershner, Producer: Gary Kurtz (USA 1980, 124 min) After the Rebellion’s defeat on the ice planet Hoth, Luke journeys to the planet Dagobah to train with Jedi Master Yoda. Darth Vader attempts to convert Luke to the dark side. A mistaken lunchbox delivery through the famed dabbawala network sparks an unexpected connection between a lonely office worker and a thoughtful homemaker in Mumbai. This year’s Persistence of Vision Award celebrates experimental filmmaker and poet Lynne Sachs. Following a moderated conversation, there will be a screening of Lynne’s new film Every Contact Leaves a Trace, a rumination of memory and assumptions using as inspiration a stack of business cards collected over 40 years. The 2026 Mel Novikoff Award honors Michelle Satter, Founding Senior Director of Sundance Institute’s Artist Programs, who has championed independent filmmakers there since 1981. She will be joined in conversation by Bay Area filmmaker Peter Nicks. Followed by a screening of the celebrated 2012 film Beasts of the Southern Wild, a project supported by both Sundance and SFFILM. Grammy-winning guitarist Gabriela Quintero steps into her first solo spotlight in Beth Aala’s intimate film, blending music, advocacy, and personal discovery, with a live performance and conversation to follow. After former boy-band star Danny (Nick Jonas) turns a song stolen from wedding singer Rick (Paul Rudd) into a global hit, the two musicians clash in a hilarious, heartfelt, and chaotic battle over creativity and credit. Precocious seven-year-old Arabella convinces a troubled young woman to take her on a road trip, accidentally faking her own kidnapping—and leaving her father, played by Chris Pine, in a panic. Hot Water Director: Ramzi Bashour, Producers: Jesse Hope, Max Walker-Silverman, Josh Peters (USA 2026, 97 min) Ramzi Bashour’s poignant road movie depicts an anxious mother transporting her delinquent son from Indiana to California and highlights the glories of the American Midwest while unpacking the dynamics of parenting and letting go. With Lubna Azabal and Dale Dickey If I Go Will They Miss Me Director: Walter Thompson-HernĂĄndez, Producers: Josh Peters, Saba Zerehi, Ben Stillman (USA 2026, 89 min) Set in South Los Angeles, this coming-of-age story blends social and magical realism, Greek mythology, and vĂ©ritĂ© observation, crafting a poetic yet grounded portrait of family, legacy, and the realities of growing up. With Danielle Brooks. Sender Director: Russell Goldman, Producers: Jamie Lee Curtis, Molly Hallam, Jake Katofsky (USA 2025, 94 min) Severance’s Britt Lower stars as a young woman whose online shopping habit turns terrifying when mysterious packages containing eerily personal items begin arriving. With Rhea Seehorn and Jamie Lee Curtis. Tuner Director: Daniel Roher, Producers: JoAnne Sellar, Lila Yacoub, Teddy Schwarzman, Michael Heimler (USA 2024, 109 min) When a piano tuner’s extraordinary hearing reveals a knack for cracking safes, his quiet New York routine gives way to a risky life of crime—just as the possibility of love suggests another future. Dustin Hoffman and Leo Woodall star. The Arch Director: T’ang Shushuen, Producer: Paul Lee (Hong Kong 1968, 98 min) Presented at the 1968 Festival and little-seen since then, The Arch focuses on a proud widow who has allowed herself to be treated almost as a deity because of her virtuous behavior. The original black-and-white 35mm negatives of the film have been lost. The restoration was made using extant materials from 1968, including a 35mm release print preserved at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film archive and a 35mm release print preserved and scanned at the BFI National Archive. The digital restoration was undertaken at Silver Salt Restoration. Special thanks to the descendants of Paul Lee; Les Blank Films; and the Hong Kong Film Archive, Leisure and Cultural Services Department. The Arch is one of the films under M+ Restored, an initiative supported by CHANEL. The Arch is presented in support by Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office of San Francisco. Bad Blood Director: Leos Carax, Producer: Alain Dahan (France 1986, 105 min) This noir-ish drama involving a robbery and a doomed love triangle earned director Leos Carax comparisons to David Lynch and Martin Scorsese when it screened at the 1987 Festival. Juliette Binoche stars. Beau Travail Director: Claire Denis, Producers: Patrick Grandperret, Eric Zaouali (France 1999, 93 min) Claire Denis, who attended the Festival with the film in 2000, presents her hypnotic adaptation of Herman Melville’s Billy Budd, transposing the tale to the French Foreign Legion of 1999 and exploring obsession, discipline, and desire. Blue Heron Director: Sophy Romvari, Producers: Ryan Bobkin, Sara Wylie, Sophy Romvari, GĂĄbor OsvĂĄth (Canada, Hungary 2025, 90 min) Depicting a young girl whose family is contending with a challenging older sibling, this masterful debut weaves autobiographical and documentary elements to capture the sights and sounds of adolescence impeccably. Cronos Director: Guillermo del Toro, Producers: Arthur Gorson, Bertha Navarro (Mexico 1993, 93 min) Guillermo del Toro made his arresting debut with this vampire movie with a Latin-American twist that screened with the director in attendance at the 1994 Festival. Elder Son Director: Cecilia Kang, Producers: Juan Pablo Miller, Louise Bellicaud, Claire Charles-Gervais (Argentina, France 2025, 118 min) An Argentinian teenager and her Korean immigrant father navigate family, memory, and identity across three generations, as past and present collide in a beautifully photographed drama inspired by the filmmaker’s own family. The Fall of Sir Douglas Weatherford Director: SeĂĄn Robert Dunn, Producers: Scott Macaulay, Alex Polunin, Jennifer Monks (UK, Scotland 2026, 103 min) Peter Mullan stars as a widower and devoted local history guide whose orderly life unravels when a flamboyant fantasy TV production descends on his Scottish village, sparking chaos and upheaval. Filipiñana Director: Rafael Manuel, Producers: Jeremy Chua, Alex Polunin, Bianca Balbuena, Bradley Liew, Nadia Turincev, Omar El Kadi, Rafael Manuel (Singapore, UK, Philippines, France, Netherlands 2025, 100 min) In this auspicious debut feature, a new hire arrives for work at a luxurious golf course on the outskirts of Manila, where she discovers something sinister hiding beneath its pristine surface. The Fox King Director: Woo Ming Jin, Producers: Yulia Evina Bhara, Woo Ming Jin, Edmund Yeo, Chua Jing Xuan (Malaysia, Indonesia 2025, 94 min) Malaysian filmmaker Woo Ming Jin returns to SFFILM with this fable-like story about twin brothers trying to make a life for themselves with scant resources as they reel from their mother’s death. Ghost School Director: Seemab Gul, Producer: Seemab Gul (Pakistan, Germany, Saudi Arabia 2025, 88 min) When her school in rural Pakistan shuts down, Rabia is told it’s the work of a spirit. Undeterred, she embarks on an adventure to investigate the tales the adults tell her. If We Don’t Burn, How Do We Light Up the Night Director: Kim Torres, Producer: Alejandra Vargas Carballo (Costa Rica, Mexico, France 2025, 90 min) In rural Costa Rica, Laura steps out of girlhood and into the world of adults. As she navigates teenage angst and messy emotions, a quiet and foreboding unease seeps into her life. Inside Amir Director: Amir Azizi, Producers: Amir Azizi, Ali Azizi, Elham Azizi (Iran 2025, 104v) A young man hovers on the precipice of a major life change, biking through his beloved Tehran as he awaits a visa approval. This evocative tale explores the uncertainty of leaving home, even if departing means rejoining a cherished relationship. It Would Be Night in Caracas Directors: Mariana RondĂłn, MaritĂ© UgĂĄs, Producers: Stacy Perksie, Edgar Ramirez, Stephanie Correa, Jill Littman (Mexico, Venezuela 2025, 97 min) The lawlessness afoot in Venezuela’s capital city is vibrantly captured in this gripping adaptation of Karina Sainz Borgo’s novel from the filmmaking team behind Bad Hair (Festival 2014). Lost Land Director: Akio Fujimoto, Producer: Kazutaka Watanabe (Japan, France, Malaysia 2026, 99 min) Nine-year-old Somira and her younger brother Shafi are the focus of this moving drama that follows the Rohingya siblings as they journey from a refugee camp in Bangladesh to join relatives in Malaysia. Memory of Princess Mumbi Director: Damien Hauser, Producers: Damien Hauser, Kaleem Aftab, Shandra Apondi (Kenya, Switzerland, Saudi Arabia 2025, 79 min) In this futuristic sci-fi mockumentary, a filmmaker repurposes footage shot in the African nation of Umata as a love letter to the life of Princess Mumbi. Milk Teeth Director: Mihai Mincan, Producers: Radu Stancu, Ioana Lascăr, Cyriac Auriol, Monica Hellström, Kostantinos Vassilaros, Poli Angelova, Nikolay Todorov (Romania 2025, 104 min) With deftly nuanced performances and atmospheric cinematography, this riveting drama unfolds as a story of innocence lost when young Maria’s sister goes missing without a trace. Renoir Director: Chie Hayakawa, Producers: Eiko Mizuno Gray, Jason Gray, Fran Borgia, Christophe Bruncher, Keisuke Konishi (Japan, France, Singapore, Philippines, Indonesia, Qatar, USA 2025, 118 min) In 1987 suburban Tokyo, an 11-year-old girl’s irrepressible imagination transforms everyday life into a vivid, inventive, and deeply moving adventure. Risa and The Wind Phone Director: Juan Cabral, Producer: Flora FernĂĄndez Marengo (Argentina 2025, 94 min) In a small town where the dead call from an abandoned phone booth, a young girl discovers she alone can hear them, setting off a whimsical quest to help spirits—and find her father. Recommended for ages 10 and up. Rose of Nevada Director: Mark Jenkin, Producer: Denzil Monk (UK 2025, 114 min) Two Cornish villagers crew on a fishing boat that was previously lost at sea and return to a world both familiar and utterly changed in this eerie, enigmatic drama. Callum Turner and George MacKay star. A Sad and Beautiful World Director: Cyril Aris, Producers: Georges Schoucair, Jennifer Goyne Blake, April Shih, Georg Neubert, Jasper Wiedhöft (Lebanon, USA, Germany, Saudi Arabia, Qatar 2025, 110 min) Ambitious and emotionally potent, this dynamic drama explores one couple’s romantic travails with three tumultuous decades of Lebanese history as the backdrop. Salvation Director: Emin Alper, Producers: Nadir Öperli, Ersan Çongar, Laurent LavolĂ©, MilĂ©na Poylo, Gilles Sacuto, Stienette Bosklopper, Maarten Swart, Yorgos Tsourgiannis, İrem Akbal (Turkey, France, Netherlands, Greece, Sweden, Saudi Arabia 2026, 120 min) Winner of the Berlinale’s Silver Bear, Emin Alper’s tense, visually striking drama explores the explosive consequences when territorial rivalries ignite in a remote Turkish mountain village. Silent Friend Director: IldikĂł Enyedi, Producers: Reinhard Brundig, Monika MĂ©cs, Nicolas Elghozi, Morgane Olivier, Meng Xie (Germany, Hungary, France 2025, 147 min) An ancient ginkgo tree enchants longing souls across more than a century in this spellbinding cinematic triptych starring Tony Leung Chiu-wai and LĂ©a Seydoux. The Son and the Sea Director: Stroma Cairns, Producers: Imogen West, Kelly Peck (UK 2025, 102 min) A restless young man leaves London for the Scottish coast in search of purpose. Along the way, unexpected friendships force him to confront who he is—and who he might become. Space Cadet Director: Kid Koala, Producer: Ginette Petit (Canada 2025, 86 min) A young astronaut embarks on her first mission, leaving her caretaker robot behind in this music-driven, animated adventure that spans the universe. A crafting hour for families with guest Lillian Chan following the screening and Q&A. Recommended for ages 7 and up. Those Who Whistle After Dark Director: Pınar Yorgancıoğlu, Producers: Bekir Yusuf Aciksoz, Dilde Mahalli, Furkan Besli, Pınar Yorgancıoğlu, Zeynep Ekmekci, Vanya Rainova, Victoria Mitreva, Sandra MĂŒller, Michael Eckelt, Kanat Doğramacı (Turkey, Bulgaria, Germany 2025, 108 min) Retired Melih drifts through life as his wife and daughter pursue risky professional schemes. When ghostly figures appear, domestic absurdity spirals in this offbeat, comic, and charming portrait of family life. Two Pianos Director: Arnaud Desplechin, Producer: Pascal Caucheteux (France 2025, 115 min) Arnaud Desplechin’s high-pitched drama follows a tempestuous pianist reconnecting with his mentor Elena (Charlotte Rampling, at her diva best) for one final duet before her retirement. Ungrateful Beings Director: Olmo Omerzu, Producer: Jiƙí KonečnĂœ (Czech Republic, Slovenia, Poland, Slovakia, Croatia, France 2025, 110 min) What begins as a summer crush evolves into a snowballing disaster in this darkly comedic family drama that sees a recently separated father desperately try to reconnect with his kids. Vagabond Director: AgnĂšs Varda, Producer: Oury Milshtein (France 1985, 105 min) AgnĂšs Varda’s Golden Lion winner starring Sandrine Bonnaire as a young drop-out roaming a wintery South of France returns to the Festival for the first time since 1986. The Wages of Fear Director: Henri-Georges Clouzot, Producer: Raymond Borderie, Henri-Georges Clouzot (France 1953, 152 min) Four men risk their lives driving rickety trucks loaded with nitroglycerine in Henri-Georges Clouzot’s classic thriller that last played the Festival in 1978 as part of a tribute to star Yves Montand. The World of Love Director: Yoon Ga-eun, Producers: Kim Se-hun, Jenna Ku (South Korea 2025, 119 min) Boisterous and unshakable, a young girl’s harmonious world unravels after a public clash and anonymous letters force her to confront long-buried truths, testing her sense of self and resilience. American Doctor Director: Poh Si Teng, Producers: Poh Si Teng, Kirstine Barfod, Reem Haddad (USA, Palestine, Malaysia, Qatar, Denmark 2026, 93 min) Three U.S. doctors—Palestinian, Jewish, and Zoroastrian—strive to alleviate suffering in Gaza as war devastates its hospitals, confronting impossible choices, human suffering, and moral peril. Cookie Queens Director: Alysa Nahmias, Producers: Michael Dweck, Gregory Kershaw, Alysa Nahmias, Jennifer Sims (USA 2026, 91 min) Four young Girl Scouts race to sell as many cookies as possible over the course of a season in this charming and warm-hearted crowd pleaser. Recommended for film for ages 7 and up. Figaro Up, Figaro Down Director: Javid Soriano, Producers: Javid Soriano, Rob Richert (USA 2026, 75 min) Tim Blevins trained at Juilliard, enthralling opera fans with his baritone before losing it all to addiction and landing on the streets of San Francisco. But then he pulled off a stunning comeback. First They Came for My College Director: Patrick Bresnan, Producers: Holly Herrick, Patrick Bresnan (USA 2026, 105 min) As the threat of a conservative curriculum takeover looms over Florida’s New College, a group of students and their professor come together to resist and push back. Give Me the Ball! Directors: Liz Garbus, Elizabeth Wolff, Producers: Liz Garbus, Elizabeth Wolff, Dominic Crossley-Holland, Dan Cogan, Chris James, Gentry Kirby (USA 2026, 102 min) Through rare archival footage and candid interviews in this vivid and electrifying documentary, Billie Jean King recalls the victories, struggles, and sacrifices behind her trailblazing career. How to Clean a House in 10 Easy Steps Director: Carolina GonzĂĄlez Valencia, Producers: Brenda Ávila-Hanna, Olga Segura-Gall (USA, Colombia, Mexico 2026, 80 min) Filmmaker Carolina GonzĂĄlez Valencia and her immigrant mother celebrate generational joy in a striking directorial debut that brings a dose of magic and a sense of honor to domestic labor. Joybubbles Director: Rachael Morrison, Producers: Sarah Winshall, Will Butler, Annie Marr (USA 2026, 79 min) Born blind and longing for connection, Joe Engressia—later known as Joybubbles—discovers he can hack the analog telephone network with whistles, transforming curiosity into connection and sparking the phone-phreak movement. Presented with open audio description and open captions. Nuisance Bear Directors: Gabriela Osio Vanden, Jack Weisman, Producers: Michael Code, Teddy Leifer, Will N. Miller (USA, Canada, UK 2025, 90 min) A yearling polar bear embodies his species in this immersive, poetic Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner, revealing the tense, fraught balance between humans and nature’s apex predator. The Oldest Person in the World + Paper Trail Director: Sam Green, Producers: Alison Byrne Fields, Josh Penn (USA 2025, 87 min) Director Sam Green makes his triumphant return to SFFILM with a deeply personal, lovingly crafted film documenting the world’s oldest people, as recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records. This film will be preceded by the short film Paper Trail, directed by Don Hertzfeldt (USA 2026, 14 min). Time and Water Director: Sara Dosa, Producers: Shane Boris, Elijah Stevens, Jameka Autry, Sara Dosa (USA, Iceland 2026, 90 min) Writer Andri SnĂŠr Magnason reckons with the death of Okjökull, the first glacier lost to climate change, as Sara Dosa’s striking documentary blends vanishing ice, family memory, and urgent witness. Yo (Love Is a Rebellious Bird) Directors: Anna Fitch, Banker White, Producers: Sara Dosa, Hannah Roodman, Anna Fitch, Banker White (USA 2026, 78 min) Through beautifully constructed miniature sets and puppets, directors Anna Fitch and Banker White craft an elegy to the life and times of Anna’s beloved friend, Yo. AmĂ­lcar Director: Miguel Eek, Producers: Marie Dumoulin, Luis Correia , Mario Adamson, Natacha Ceuninck (France, Portugal 2025, 87 min) The life of AmĂ­lcar Cabral, revolutionary leader of Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde, unfolds in this essayistic documentary, weaving letters, photographs, music, and archival footage into a vivid, striking portrait of a singular political voice. Black Is Beautiful: The Kwame Brathwaite Story Director: Yemi Bamiro, Producers: Joanna Boateng, Lizzie Gillett, Ian BonhĂŽte, Andrew Calof (USA, UK 2025, 98 min) Yemi Bamiro’s enthralling documentary celebrates photographer and activist Kwame Brathwaite, whose monumental work chronicled the joy, beauty, and glory of Black lives and experiences. A Child of My Own Director: Maite Alberdi, Producers: Sandra GodĂ­nez, Carla GonzĂĄlez Vargas, Maximiliano Sanguine (Mexico 2026, 90 min) Director Maite Alberdi employs reenactments to tell the fascinating story of a woman who fabricates a pregnancy to fulfill her dream of motherhood, triggering a months-long charade that is gripping and morally fraught. Daughters of the Forest: Mycelium Chronicles Director: Otilia Portillo Padua, Producers: Paula Arroio, Elena Fortes, Otilia Portillo (Mexico 2026, 87 min) The mushrooms speak in this inventive sci-fi documentary that follows indigenous female mycologists as they document and preserve the intricate bonds between humans and fungi. Enough Is Enough Director: ElisĂ© Sawasawa, Producers: Marianne Dumoulin, Jacques Bidou, Christian Bitwaiki (Democratic Republic of the Congo, France 2025, 65 min) Displaced Congolese filmmaker ElisĂ© Sawasawa chronicles life amid the Kivu War, capturing shocking attacks, refugee struggles, and frontline chaos in a fearless, urgent, and unflinching documentary about resilience. Hair, Paper, Water
 Directors: Nicolas Graux, TrÆ°ÆĄng Minh QuĂœ, Producers: Julie Freres, Thomas Hakim, Julien Graff (Belgium, France, Vietnam 2025, 71 min) A woman regales her grandchildren with her wisdom and stories, a gift of language with which they can navigate life. Jaripeo + Born at Night Directors: EfraĂ­n Mojica, Rebecca Zweig, Producer: Sarah Strunin (Mexico, USA, France 2026, 71 min) Questions of masculinity, sexuality, and belonging swirl in this vivid documentary that explores MichoacĂĄn’s signature “jaripeos,” rural rodeos that also serve as a somewhat secret space for queer cowboys. This film will be preceded by the short film Born at Night, directed by Alba Cros PellisĂš (Spain 2025, 18). One in a Million Directors: Itab Azzam, Jack MacInnes, Producers: Itab Azzam, Jack MacInnes, Andrew Palmer, James (UK 2026, 102 min) Change unfolds swiftly and powerfully in this intimate, decade-spanning portrait of Syrian refugee Israa and her family as they navigate life across multiple countries. The Queen and the Smokehouse Director: Iga Lis, Producers: Jerzy Kapuscinski, Magdalena Tomanek (Poland 2025, 65 min) The queen of the Polish town of Ɓeba does not wear a crown or sit on a throne. Instead, her kingdom is a smokehouse from which she feeds mackerel and cod to thousands. To Hold a Mountain Directors: Biljana Tutorov, Petar Glomazić, Producers: Biljana Tutorov, Petar Glomazić, Quentin Laurent, Rok Biček (Serbia, France, Montenegro, Slovenia, Croatia 2026, 105 min) Armed with lessons learned from a painful past, women put up a quiet but resilient fight to preserve the dignity of their lives and home in the breathtaking Montenegrin highlands. The Baddest Speechwriter of All + La Tierra del Valor (The Home of the Brave) + Scenes from the Divide Total Runtime: 84 min A trio of documentaries survey the American political landscape, both past and present. Featuring MLK Jr. speechwriter Clarence B. Jones (in Stephen Curry’s directorial debut); Rising voice Nezza, who sings an anthem of hope at an LA Dodger game; and the supporters and opponents of Zohran Mamdani within NYC’s Jewish community. Scenes from the Divide Director: Alison Klayman, Producer: Arielle Angel, Daniel May, Alison Klayman, Courtney Powell (USA 2026, 32 min) Zohran Mamdani’s campaign for New York City mayor exposes divisions within the city’s Jewish communities, reflecting broader national debates on Palestine. The Baddest Speechwriter of All Directors: Ben Proudfoot, Stephen Curry, Producers: Ben Proudfoot, Rachel Greenwald, Erick Peyton, Stephen Curry (USA 2026, 29 min) Stephen Curry’s directorial debut, co-directed with SFFILM alumni Ben Proudfoot, follows Clarence B. Jones, Martin Luther King Jr.’s speechwriter, blending storytelling and playful animated sequences to celebrate his life and impact. La Tierra del Valor (The Home of the Brave) Director: Cristina Costantini, Producers: Eugen BrĂ€unig, Joanna BrĂ€unig, Cristina Costantini, Alfie Koetter (USA 2026, 23 min) Nezza (Vanessa Hernandez) defies orders at a Dodgers game, singing the US national anthem in Spanish, honoring the 1945 “El PendĂłn Estrellado,” and inspiring hope in her community. Still Playing + The Curfew + Nava Total Runtime: 72 min Three protagonists and their quietly courageous gestures of resilience weave together a cinematic journey across the world. Documenting a father’s struggle in Palestine, a woman’s fateful return to Iran, and the quotidian experiences of Pakistani diaspora, this trio of films raises essential questions about proximity to cruelty, colonialism’s lasting impacts, and what it means to show love and devotion under harrowing circumstances. Still Playing Directors: Mohamed Mesbah, Producer: Yannick Beauquis, Quentin Brayer (France 2025, 37 min) Palestinian video game creator Rasheed Abueideh raises two sons in the West Bank, where Israeli army raids are as common as his children’s robotics competitions. The Curfew Director: Shehrezad Maher, Producers: Lindsay Blair Goeldner, Meetra Javed (USA 2025, 19 min) As Pakistani American Ayaan moves into a new apartment and becomes the caretaker for his grandmother, he hears intergenerational echoes of language and history. Nava Director: Dena Rassam, Producers: Hadi Babaeifar, Mehrnaz Davanipour (Iran 2025, 25 min) Iranian singer Nava has 24 hours to spend with her father before she must leave the country. Shorts 1: Human Flow Total Runtime: 84 min Traverse cityscapes, valleys, highways, and borders through films by an international ensemble of storytellers. Conversations between people and land are as alive as human dialogue in these earnest portrayals of gathering and return. Films are in alphabetical order rather than order of play. Shorts 2: Under Pressure Total Runtime: 90 min Across cultures, five women confront the forces pressing in on their lives, tracing the moments when endurance gives way to reckoning and reclaiming one’s voice becomes both risk and necessity. Films are in alphabetical order rather than order of play. Shorts 3: Shapes of Love Total Runtime: 95 min In stories of queer love, intergenerational love, self-love, and love across borders, filmmakers deftly mediate between intimacy and universality. From before greetings to after goodbyes, these films trace love’s ever-evolving shapes. Films are in alphabetical order rather than order of play. Shorts 4: Shapes of Menace Total Runtime: 89 min Six sinister stories shine a piercing spotlight on every shade of menace, originating from the darkest depths of our psyches and leading to new heights of depravity. Films are in alphabetical order rather than order of play. Shorts 5: Family Films Total Runtime: 64 min From intergalactic cardboard adventures to magical whales, stubborn staircases, and unexpected animal mishaps, this delightful collection of short films celebrates imagination, resilience, and the connections that bring us together. Recommended for ages 5 and up. Films are in alphabetical order rather than order of play. Total runtime 58 min Shorts 6: Youth Works Total Runtime: 74 min Young filmmakers from across the globe showcase their daring creativity and craft in this collection of films that address the complexity of growing up and the innocence of youth. Recommended for ages 11 and up. Films are in alphabetical order rather than order of play. Total runtime 74 min Sound and Cinema Showcase Total Runtime: 90 min The second annual Sound and Cinema Showcase celebrates our partnership with the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, our filmmaking fellows, and student composers. After the films screen, there will be a Q&A with the participants. Films are in alphabetical order rather than order of play. Teen Filmmaking Workshop: Collaboration & Creativity Join director duo and multi-disciplinary artists Jess X. Snow and Ashima Shiraishi, for a filmmaking workshop for teens focused on collaboration and creativity through multiple mediums. This workshop will delve into the process behind their narrative shorts as well as their latest collaborative experimental documentary, Tamashi (part of the Festival’s Shorts 1: Human Flow program), co-directed with artist and world record-breaking rock climber Ashima Shiraishi. By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy. We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

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