Release me: Barry Jenkins' "Medicine for Melancholy" is a yet-to-receive-wide-release San Francisco-made fan favorite. (Photo courtesy SFFS)
The Year in Film, 2008: Top unreleased films
By Susan Gerhard
Today’s feature collects the best films yet to fully arrive at a theater near you. It’s the second of our five-part Year-in-Film series, for which SF360.org polled filmmakers, critics and other industry professionals on the films of 2008. Some of today’s choices are from far-flung festivals, others were seen via one-off screenings. A few are films that already have distribution in place for 2009. All are worthy films clearly meriting more of our attention.
SF360.org’s Top 10 survey, 2008: Best unreleased
Jeffrey M. Anderson
Critic, Cinematical, Combustible Celluloid
1. You, the Living (Roy Andersson, Sweden/Germany/France/Denmark/Norway)
2. The Man from London (Béla Tarr, France/Germany/Hungary)
3. Go Go Tales (Abel Ferrara, Italy/USA)
4. Fados (Carlos Saura, Portugal/Spain)
5. Medicine for Melancholy (Barry Jenkins, USA)
Rod Armstrong
Programmer, San Francisco Film Society
1. Silent Light (Carlos Reygadas, Mexico/France/Netherlands/Germany)
2. Wendy and Lucy (Kelly Reichardt, USA)
3. The Class (Laurent Cantet, France)
4. Waltz With Bashir (Ari Folman, Israel/Germany/France/USA)
5. 35 Shots of Rum (Claire Denis, France/Germany)
Linda Blackaby
Director of Programming, San Francisco Film Society
34 Shots of Rum (Claire Denis, France/Germany)
Silent Light (Carlos Reygadas, Mexico/France/Netherlands/Germany)
Peter Canavese
Critic, Groucho Reviews
9@Night (Rob Nilsson, USA) (screened in full at Roxie and Smith Rafael, but not circulated widely)
Brian Darr
Critic, Hell on Frisco Bay
1. Easter Morning (Bruce Conner, USA)
2. Observando El Cielo (Jeanne Liotta, TK)
3. Secret Sunshine (Lee Chang-dong, South Korea)
4. The Anthem (Apichatpong Weerasethakul, TK)
5. *Casting a Glance (James Benning, USA)
Michael Fox
Critic, SF360.org, SFWeekly, J.
1. In the City of Sylvia (José Luis Guerín, Spain)
2. Che (Steven Soderbergh, Spain/France/USA)
3. Waltz With Bashir (Ari Folman, Israel/Germany/France/USA) With Bashir
Susan Gerhard
Editor, SF360.org
1. Three Monkeys (Nuri Bilge Ceylon, Turkey)
2. Sugar (Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, USA)
3. Sleep Dealer (Alex Rivera, USA.)
4. The Art Star and the Sudanese Twins (Pietra Brettkelly, New Zealand)
5. 24 City (Jia Zhang-ke, China)
6. Lads and Jockeys (Benjamin Marquet, France)
7. Sita Sings the Blues (Nina Paley, USA)
8. Vasermil (Mushon Salmona, Israel)
9. Medicine for Melancholy (Barry Jenkins)
10. Touching Home (Logan and Noah Miller)
Max Goldberg
Critic, SF360.org, Flavorpill, S.F. Bay Guardian
(In alphabetical order)
Actresses (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, France)
Foster Child (Brillante Mendoza, Philippines)
Go Go Tales (Abel Ferrara, Italy/USA)
In the City of Sylvia (José Luis Guerín, Spain)
*Profit Motive and the Whispering Wind (Brillante Mendoza, USA)
Pam Grady
Critic, Boxoffice Magazine, Filmstew, and Reel.com
1. Pontypool (Bruce McDonald, Canada)
2. Anvil! The Story of Anvil (Sacha Gervasi, USA)
3. Edison and Leo (Neil Burns, Canada)
4. Lady Jane (Robert Guédiguian, France)
5. Who Do You Love (Jerry Zaks, USA)
Hilary Hart
Director of Publicity, SF Film Society
1. Wendy and Lucy (Kelly Reichardt, USA)
2. The Class (Laurent Cantet, France)
3. Gomorrah (Matteo Garrone, Italy)
4. Waltz With Bashir (Ari Folman, Israel/Germany/France/USA)
5. Medicine for Melancholy (Barry Jenkins, USA)
Dennis Harvey
Critic, Variety, SF360.org, SF Bay Guardian
1. Sugar (Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, USA)
2. A Complete History of My Sexual Failures (Chris Waitt, U.K.)
3. All Around Us (Ryosuke Hashiguchi, Japan)
4. Not Quite Hollywood: The Wild Untold Story of Ozploitation (Mark Hartley, Australia/USA)
5. La Memoire des Anges (Luc Bourdon, Canada)
6. Sounds Like Teen Spirit: A Popumentary (Jamie Jay Johnson, U.K.)
7. Pachamama(Toshifumi Matsushita, Bolivia/Japan/USA)
8. The Necessities of Life (Benoit Pilon, Canada)
9. En Plein Coeur (Stéphane Gehami, Canada)
10. For A Moment, Freedom (Arash T. Riahi, Austria/France)
Michael Hawley
Critic, Film-415, The Evening Class
1. Solitary Fragments (Jaime Rosales, Spain)
2. Jar City (Baltasar Kormákur, Iceland/Germany/Denmark)
3. I’m a Cyborg But That’s OK (Park Chan-wook, South Korea)
4. Slingshot (Brillante Mendoza, Philippines)
5. Nightwatching (Peter Greenaway, Canada/France/Germany/Poland/Netherlands/U.K.)
6. Secret of the Grain (Abdel Kechiche, France)
James T. Hong
Filmmaker, A Portrait of a Sino-American Friendship
1. Colossal Youth (Pedro Costa, France/Portugal/Switzerland) 2. Short videos by Artur Żmijewski (Poland)
Marcus Hu
Co-President, Strand Releasing
1. Of Time and the City (Terence Davies, U.K.)
We adored this Terence Davies’ film and picked it up for US distribution.
2. 35 Shots of Rum (Claire Denis, France/Germany)
3. Sügisball (Veiko Õunpuu, Estonia)
4. Treeless Mountain (So Yong Kim, USA/South Korea)
Steven Jenkins
Director of Finance and Administration, San Francisco Film Society
1. Continental: A Film Without Guns (Stéphane Lafleur, Canada)
2. Lads & Jockeys (Benjamin Marquet, Switzerland/France)
3. The Class (Laurent Cantet, France)
4. Gomorrah (Matteo Garrone, Italy)
5. Sita Sings The Blues (Nina Paley, USA)
Mick LaSalle
Critic, San Francisco Chronicle
1. L’Autre (Patrick-Mario Bernard and Pierre Trividic, France)
French film about a woman who dumps her boyfriend and becomes schizoid when he gets another girlfriend.
2. The Feelings Factory (Jean-Marc Moutout, France)
Elsa Zylberstein doing speed dating
3. Shall We Kiss (Emmanuel Mouret, France)
Virginie Ledoyen film that starts out fluffy and turns dark
4. Un Giorno Perfetto (Ferzan Ozpetek, Italy)
About a woman being stalked by a crazy husband, told in the aftermath of some unspecified violence.
Graham Leggat
Executive Director, San Francisco Film Society
1. Cochochi (Israel Cárdenas and Laura Amelia Guzmán, Mexico/U.K./Canada)
2. Mutum (Sandra Kogut, Brazil/France)
3. Wonderful Town (Aditya Assarat, Thailand)
4. Flower in the Pocket (Liew Seng Tat, Malaysia)
5. Slingshot (Brillante Mendoza, Philippines)
Chris Metzler
Filmmaker, Plagues and Pleasures of the Salton Sea
1. Audience of One (Mike Jacobs, USA)
2. Bunnyland (Brett Hanover, USA)
3. Dear Zachary (Kurt Kuenne, USA)
Gary Meyer
Co-Director, Telluride Film Festival, owner, Balboa Theatre
The Class (Laurent Cantet, France)
Everlasting Moments (Jan Troell, Denmark/Finland/Norway/Sweden/Germany)
Flame & Citron (Ole Christian Madsen, Denmark/Czech Republic/Germany)
Gomorrah (Matteo Garrone, Italy)
The Good, the Bad, the Weird (Ji-woon Kim, South Korea)
Hunger (Steve McQueen, U.K/Ireland)
Kisses (Lance Daly, Ireland/Sweden)
O’Horten (Bent Hamer, Norway/Germany/France)
Prodigal Sons (Kimberly Reed, USA)
Revanche (Götz Spielmann, Austria)
Secret of the Grain (Abdel Kechiche, France)
Tulpan (Sergei Dvortsevoy, Germany/Kazakhstan/Poland/Russia/Switzerland)
Waltz With Bashir (Ari Folman, Israel/Germany/France/USA)
With a Little Help from Myself (François Dupeyron, France)
Jenni Olson
Filmmaker, The Joy of Life and Director, E-Commerce & Consumer Marketing, Wolfe Releasing
25 Cent Preview (Cyrus Amini, USA)
Okay, this film was actually on the film festival circuit in 2007 and has yet to be released. It was the most original (and sexually explicit) gay film of the year with its portrayal of a pair of street hustlers in the Tenderloin who find friendship and more amidst the gritty realities of life on the streets. An astounding film that deserves to be seen more widely if anyone has the courage to release it.
B. Ruby Rich
Critic, author, and professor and chair of Community Studies at UC Santa Cruz
Sleep Dealer (Alex Rivera, USA/Mexico)
Calavera Highway (Renee Tajima-Pena, USA)
George Rush
Attorney, SF360.org columnist
1. Medicine for Melancholy (Barry Jenkins, USA)
Actually think this was a pretty bad year for independent films. Most things I enjoyed eventually got distribution.
Matt Sussman
Critic, Flavorpill, SF360.org, SF Bay Guardian
1. In the City of Sylvia (José Luis Guerín, Spain)
2. Silent Light (Carlos Reygadas, Mexico/France/Netherlands/Germany)
3. Full Battle Rattle (Tony Gerber and Jesse Moss, USA)
4. Go Go Tales (Abel Ferrara, Italy/USA)
5. Brenda Dickinson parodies (Deven Green, Youtube)
Chris Wiggum
Director of Public Relations and Business Development, Global Film Initiative
1. In the City of Sylvia (José Luis Guerín, Spain)
2. Paranormal Activity (Oren Peli, USA)
3. Pop Skull (Adam Wingard, USA)
4. Om Shanti Om (Farah Khan, India)
5. Slingshot (Brillante Mendoza, Philippines)
6. West 32nd (Michael Kang, South Korea/USA)
Anonymous
Gomorrah (Matteo Garrone, Italy)
Anonymous
1. Cowboy Angels (Kim Massee, France)
2. Frank Dead Souls (Rob Nilsson, USA)
Anonymous
Pig Hunt (James Isaac, USA)
Anonymous
Around the Bay (Alejandro Adams, USA)
The one that really comes to mind is Around the Bay, the Cinequest film fest debut by San Jose’s Alejandro Adams. The story of a tetchy reunion between a Los Gatos high-tech businessman and his estranged daughter, this great movie got praise from New York’s Philip Lopate, but was promptly ignored by most of the area’s press.
topics: actors, bay area, critics, critics year end polls, directors, distribution, independent film
12.30.2008

I may sound biased (and snobish) but it turns out I only have 3 American films in the top ten list, and all my yet undistributed movies are from Latin America. It’s to emphasize the need of more foreign releases in our country. In order of preference,
Top ten:
1. HUNGER
2. SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE
3. THE WRESTLER
4. MAN ON WIRE
5. HAPPY-GO-LUCKY
6. IN THE CITY OF SYLVIA
7. SAVAGE GRACE
8. THE CLASS
9. ALICE’S HOUSE
10.BALLAST
Ten As Yet Undistributed:
1. LINHA DE PASSE
2. PARQUE VIA
3. TONY MANERO
4. NOME PROPRIO
5. LOS BASTARDOS
6. ESTOMAGO
7. LA ZONA
8. HEADLESS WOMAN
9. COCHOCHI
10.KILL THEM ALL.
Sandro Fiorin,
FiGa Films.
—Sandro · Dec 31, 12:46 PM · share
Thank you, Anonymous, for plugging Around the Bay! We’re very flattered to be in such great company. I do want to mention that we were very honored by area press coverage of the film when it premiered at Cinequest last year. Thank you all for your support, and look for Alejandro’s second film, Canary, at this year’s Cinequest festival!
Marya Murphy, Producer of Around the Bay, Canary and Babnik.
—Marya Murphy · Dec 31, 01:42 PM · share
I couldn’t resist putting MY list up here. Since I spend most of my time in Europe these days, I don’t see so many US films, and none of my favorites remain undistributed. Here, though, are my top ten fiction films. :
1- Still Light – Carlos Reygadas, Mexico
2- United Red Army – Koji Wakamatsu, Japan 3- Night Train – Yinan Diao, China
4- Still Walking – Hirokazu Kore-Eda, Japan
5- Everlasting Moments – Jan Troell, Dk etc
6- Mid-August Lunch (Pranzo di Ferragosto) – Gianni di Gregorio, Italy
7- Parque Via – Enrique Rivera, Mexico
8- Lemon Tree – Eran Riklis, Israel
9- Esther’s Inheritance – Joseph Sipos, Hungary
10- As Simple As That – Reza Mir-Karimi, Iran
My four favorite documentaries, in on special order:
Citizen Havel – Pavel Koutecký & Miroslav Janek, Czech Republic
Living In Emergency – Mark Hopkins & Bruno Coulais, France, USA
Glass House – Hamid Rahmanian, USA, Iran
Man on Wire – James Marsh, UK, USA
And an animation film not mentioned elsewhere in the lists:
Ponyo on the Cliff By the Sea – Hayao Miyazaki, Japan
Several films on my list that are mentioned in other lists supposedly have been released. They are:
Wonderful Town – Adity Assarat, Thailand (7/18 – says IMDb)
The Class – Laurent Cantet, France (12/19 – Ltd)
Moscow, Belgium – Christophe Rompaey, Belgium (12/19 – NYC)
Wendy and Lucy – Kelly Reichardt, USA (12/10 – Ltd)
And three that would be on the list, but are getting distributed soon:
Gomorrah – Matteo Garrone, Italy (2/2009)
Revanche – Götz Spielmann, Austria (3/2009)
Of Time and the City – Terence Davies, UK (Bravo, Strand!!)
Great lists, though – Easily the most interesting set of year-end film lists I’ve seen – of course they’re Bay Area people!!
Charlie Cockey
Film Programmer, Cinequest
and "Around the World in 14 Films" (in Berlin)
—Charlie Cockey · Jan 6, 06:25 AM · share
the much anticipated Silent Light will open on Feb. 27 at SFFS Screen at the Sundance Kabuki
—Hilary · Jan 6, 06:09 PM · share
Sandro: Intriguing list. Can you say more about Headless Woman? How does it compare to the previous two Martel films?
—Steven Jenkins · Jan 7, 02:21 PM · share
Terence Davies is a living legend. I can’t wait to see On Time And The City. Listen to my interview with Terence on the podcast Andy’s Treasure Trove (www.andystreasuretrove.com). There are also other interviews with filmakers.
—Andy Moore · Jan 23, 12:29 PM · share