Alan Berliner’s WIDE AWAKE is an eye opener. The first-person documentary offers an understanding of insomnia in cinematic terms, inventively tossing and turning through the sleepless nights and bleary days of Berliner’s world while he ruminates on the topic. Nominated for the Sundance Grand Jury Prize, the multi-layered work is a delightful collage of dream interpretation, interviews, quirky arcs of logic, found footage, and pauses for discovery and self-reflection.
During the San Francisco International Film Festival, Susan Tavernetti spoke with Berliner about how WIDE AWAKE transcends the personal to become a fascinating study of social issues and the nature of creativity itself.
Continue reading "WIDE AWAKE WITH ALAN BERLINER" »
San Francisco director Terry Zwigoff and comic book artist-turned-screenwriter Daniel Clowes follow-up their GHOST WORLD success with a less satisfying collaboration. Selecting the art-school experience as their subject, the pair created a sardonic satire with broad brushstrokes, using a very limited color palette. They paint it black. Very, very black.
Continue reading "ART SCHOOL CONFIDENTIAL" »

Sunday, May 7---It's been a few years since I was last in San Francisco. The City by the Bay has always held a personal fascination for me. I remember the first time I came here, in 1973, a college boy from New York City, looking for vestiges of the famed Summer of Love. There were still hippies in 1973, and a feeling of intoxicating freedom in the air. I stayed in a crash pad near the corner of Haight and Ashbury, and being so close to that epicenter of cool made me feel quite groovy.
Continue reading "GREAT CITY, GREAT FESTIVAL" »
Sunday, May 7----If you think the only San Francisco love fest took place during the summer of 1967, think again. No one was wearing flowers in their hair at the Castro Theatre on Thursday's Closing Night of the San Francisco International Film Festival, but a special feeling was certainly in the air.
Continue reading "CLOSING NIGHT: TOMLIN, MADSEN AND ALTMAN'S "A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION" " »

Friday, May 5-----Filmfestivals.com Industry Editor Sandy Mandelberger sat down last week with legendary director Werner Herzog , recipient of the San Francisco Film Society Directing Award at the San Francisco International Film Festival, for a heart-to-heart discussion about what has kept Herzog going in a career that spans 40 years and almost 30 films.
Continue reading "A HEART TO HEART WITH HERZOG" »
Wednesday, May 3----Over a month ago at the press conference kicking off SFIFF 49, Linda Blackaby announced the documentary line-up, adding that these selections were “often some of the most popular films in our festival.” The gifted director of programming for the San Francisco Film Society noted that a dozen of them would compete in the Golden Gate Awards, and 11 more filled the slate of nonfiction features representing 13 countries. There’s not an emperor penguin among them.
Continue reading "THE REVOLUTION, NOW PLAYING (PART TWO)" »

Wednesday, May 3----The parking was impossible. But the weather was gloriously balmy by the bay for the San Francisco International Film Festival’s Golden Gate Awards, held this evening in the Cowell Theater at Fort Mason Center. Appropriately, the Golden Gate Bridge itself could be glimpsed in the distance from the lobby windows.
Continue reading "GOLDEN GATE AWARDS CEREMONY WINNERS" »

Tuesday, May 2----An innovative French film and a wildly anticipated after-hours party are on tap for this Tuesday, as the San Francisco International Film Festival moves into its final days. The film, BACKSTAGE, is directed by Emannuelle Bercot, one of France's most interesting new women directors. The ZOOM! After Hours Party is one of the new innovations created to add a celebratory atmosphere to the Festival events.
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Sunday, April 30----The revolution may not be televised by the major networks or covered by the mainstream press, but it’s certainly playing on screens large and small somewhere near you. On Saturday afternoon at the San Francisco International Film Festival, Susan Gerhard, the editor/bureau chief of the newly launched web film magazine SF360 (www.SF360.org), moderated a panel tagged “The Revolution Now Playing: Film as a Tool for Social and Political Change.”
Continue reading "THE REVOLUTION, NOW PLAYING (PART ONE)" »
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