Indies Invade the SFIFF: Snapshots from the Left Coast
by indieWIRE (May 4, 1998)
by Carl Russo From the city's hilltop aristocrats who buy tickets in bulk to the Russian cab driver attending one film from his native Georgia, the 41st San Francisco International Film Festival is drawing crowds as diverse as its programming. It is midway through a two-week run (which wraps May 7) and the only people who haven't turned up are the requisite industry suits at this decidedly non-market, film lovers' festival. Positioned at a cultural crossroads on the Pacific Rim, the festival is an important venue for smaller, less commercial foreign films to make the leap to the states. This year's program includes a whopping 130 films from 44 countries, in addition to 67 U.S. projects. Theaters around the bay are carrying the program, including the Kabuki (main HQ), the Castro and the Pacific Film Archive at UC Berkeley. Public enthusiasm has run high, whether for a grainy Pixelvision short (Michael Almereyda's "The Rocking Horse Winner") or Hollywood star vehicles (Brian Gilbert's "Wilde" and Wayne Wang's "Chinese Box," the fest's bookend galas). But amid the pomp of such high-brow fare and edgy experimentalism, was a place saved for those young, tireless American D.I.Y.ers hoping their showings would make a splash. Would locals get a taste of a few off-beat, new features before either Sony gobbles them or they vanish without a trace? In San Francisco, the answer is yes. indieWIRE offers the following snapshots of filmmakers on the hustle. Christopher Nolan arrived at the Kabuki with a print fresh from a local lab. His debut feature, "Following," is a realist-tinged, noirish story about a young writer in London who has taken to following strangers until he is caught by one. Nolan's film is in competition for the festival's Skyy Prize. While brimming with excitement at his world premiere, Nolan was anxious to view the film with an audience of more than five. "It really felt complete for the first time," said the 27-year-old Nolan, a former Londoner now living in Los Angeles. "People let out a gasp at the parts I gasp at!" Another gasp resounded at the post-screening Q&A when he told the audience that he completed the film for $6,000 (before film transfer). Borrowing gear from his college on weekends and "calling in a lot of favors," his only real cost was film stock. "People brought their own lunch," he added with a laugh. Now Nolan pays the bills as a script reader while he plots strategies for "Following." When asked how he would spend the $10,000 Skyy Prize should he win, he replied, "Pay my girlfriend some rent!"
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