NEWS

  • SFFS: SF International closes its 51st

    Press release: "The San Francisco Film Society wrapped its 51st San Francisco International Film Festival (April 24 – May 8) with 292 screenings, 150 filmmaker guests and more than 70... more

SEEN

  • Up a river

    Golden Gate Award winner for Best Documentary Feature Yung Chang poses with his uncles—Wilson and Howard—who he thanked from the stage at the California Culinary Academy Wednesday night.

BLOGS

  • Bright Lights. 60.
    "The 20th anniversary of the publication of [Roger] Ebert's Two Weeks in the Midday Sun: A Cannes Notebook - perhaps the best book ever written about experiencing the Cannes Film Festival - gives us an excellent occas...
    [From The Latest from GreenCine Daily]

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CALENDAR

Rich text: Critic B. Ruby Rich questions the questioner, Errol Morris, about "Standard Operating Procedure" during SFIFF51. The film plays the Bay Area this week. (Photo by Tommy Lau, courtesy SFFS)

Review

"Standard Operating Procedure" and the stories we tell

SF360 asked Bay Area writers and fans to comment on the films of SFIFF51. Stephen Elliott reports from the April 29 Persistence of Vision screening of Errol Morris’s Standard Operating Procedure, opening May 9. The screening was preceded by an onstage conversation between B. Ruby Rich and Morris. This story appeared originally in SF360.org on April 30.

He calls it the "Interrotron." The way Errol Morris interviews a subject is to speak into a camera. His image is then projected on a screen and the interviewee responds into the camera. It’s like a teleprompter that allows the game show host or newscaster to speak directly to you while reading her lines. And that’s the feeling of Morris’ films of the last 15 years, particularly The Fog Of War, featuring former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara: that the subject is speaking directly to the audience. And that’s the feeling of Standard Operating Procedure. The interviewees, primarily the low level military police on duty at Abu Ghraib prison who participated in and photographed the torture of Iraqi prisoners deep inside the war zone, are talking to you.

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Perfect pitch: The New Directors Award went to Israeli film "Vasermil" at San Francisco International's Golden Gate Awards party. (Photo courtesy SFFS)

Report

SF International's Golden Gate Awards: Alive and cooking

By Susan Gerhard

Food scents and film sensibilities mingled at a Golden Gate Awards evening that saw the San Francisco International moving away from a stage-presentation format into a pungent party atmosphere at the California Culinary Academy Wednesday night. With kitchen scenes as backdrop, filmmakers received and celebrated awards in a variety of categories while taste-testing from a broad buffet.

Yung Chang, with Up the Yangtze, won the Golden Gate Award for Best Documentary Feature, presented by storied documentarian Rob Epstein (The Times of Harvey Milk). He got the opportunity to thank two of his uncles, Wilson and Howard, who were present at the party, and asked the audience to not forget the 4 million people who’ve been relocated by the Three Gorges Dam Project. His involvement with the people he filmed has continued after shooting, and he told SF360.org that, after showing the film to one of his subjects, she said she "saw her fate" and decided to leave the quite possibly dead-end cruise-boat job she’d been working and go back to high school. The filmmakers are now helping her family financially.

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Go dog go: Abel Ferrara's "Go Go Tales" has a lot going for it. (Photo courtesy SFFS)

Diary

Capelle on Composers: Back to Back

By Marc Capelle

Back to music.

I have some friends that were in a Sub Pop band that pre-dated Nirvana. They were known as the Dwarves. Their music is and was a snotty suburban unholy mixture of the Sonics, the Orlons, the Stooges and a vat of amphetamines. Their record covers usually featured midgets and half-naked woman covered in either blood or some sort of Nestle syrup of some sort. Here is one of their lines.

[Editor’s note: For the San Francisco International’s 51st edition, SF360.org has asked Bay Area musician/composer/cineaste Marc Capelle to blog his thoughts on movies, music, and the films showing in the Festival. This is the third of three installments.]

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Closing thoughts: Alex Gibney's "Gonzo" reflects on American politics and American character. (Photo courtesy SFFS)

Q&A

Gibney going "Gonzo," part two

By Cathleen Rountree

Editor’s note: This is the 2nd of two installments of Cathleen Rountree’s interview with Alex Gibney about Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, which closes the San Francisco International Film Festival Thursday.

SF360.org: Do you think Thompson has a lasting legacy? I mean in the sense that there aren’t many people practicing his art form now.

Gibney: The thing for any writer is that you have to find your own voice. So people imitate Hunter Thompson at their peril, because that was Hunter’s voice, not Writer X’s voice. You know, there’s a little bit of Hunter Thompson in someone like Matt Taibbi at Rolling Stone. But there’s a legacy to Hunter Thompson, or to me the legacy should be: what’s wrong with breaking the rules? We need a few more people who break the rules, but to break them carefully. What did Bob Dylan say: "To live outside the law you must be honest." Because sometimes the people in power don’t play within the rules and, worse, they manipulate the rules against those who are trying to speak truth to power.

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Gonzo, but not forgotten: Alex Gibney talks about his new doc and the legacy of Hunter S. Thompson in two parts for SF360.org. (Photo courtesy SFFS)

Q&A

Alex Gibney, going "Gonzo"

By Cathleen Rountree

It’s a good time to be Alex Gibney.

We met this year over egg rolls at a small upstairs bistro on Main Street in Park City during the Sundance Film Festival, where Gibney’s bio-doc Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson premiered. It was Tuesday, in late-January. That morning Gibney, whose Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room (SFIFF 2005) earned an Oscar nomination for Best Documentary in 2006, had learned that Taxi to the Darkside, his documentary murder mystery that examines the death of an Afghan taxi driver at Bagram Air Base, had been nominated for an Academy Award. (It eventually won.) Another documentary he’d executive produced, No End in Sight, directed by Charles Ferguson, had also been nominated for Best Doc.

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