SF INT’L ‘07 | San Francisco Fest Brings Out the Films and Big Names for 50th Anniversary by Dennis Harvey (April 26, 2007)
A scene from Daniel Wu's "Heavenly Kings," which is screening at the 50th San Francisco International Film Festival. Image courtesy of the San Francisco Film Society.
[San Francisco film critic Dennis Harvey gives his take on the 50th Anniversary of the San Francisco International Film Festival, which opens Thursday. The article first appeared in our sister publication, SF360. Visit SF360” for additional coverage from the 50th SFIFF.] A decade might be long enough in dog years, but in film festival terms it takes a bit more time to impress. Berlin goes back to the early ‘50s, Cannes came about just pre- and post WWII, Venice dates to the early ‘30s. But in the U.S., where, since that latter era, Hollywood’s output has dominated world markets? No film festival at all—until 1957. At which point a second-generation local theater owner and dedicated cineaste decided somebody had to step up to the plate—to affirm San Francisco’s “place in the international arts world,” to underline that film could be a true art form as well as entertainment, and simply to bring foreign movies to the city’s ever-hungry intelligentsia. As you might have heard by now, that makes the San Francisco International Film Festival 50 years old this year. And the oldest continually running such event on this half of the globe celebrates its 50th with a whole lotta hoopla and a cherry-picked selection of current worldwide cinema April 26 through May 10. The festival Irving M. “Bud” Levin founded those five decades ago has not, rather remarkably, changed nearly so much as the figurative landscape around it. In 1957 Levin and fellow volunteers programmed an ambitious two-week slate of films from 12 countries (including Nigeria) included works by such emerging masters as Antonioni, Satyajit Ray, Visconti, Kurosawa and Wadja. SFIFF50 finds 54 countries represented by some 200 films (shorts included), with about the same latter number of filmmakers and industry guests expected to attend in conjunction. Naturally the event has expanded geographically as well as numerically—not just to multiple SF venues but Berkeley and Palo Alto as well. Yet the fest’s essence has remained almost shockingly pure all these years: Bringing you the very best in new international cinema, with some retrospective and celebrity-guest elements. SFIFF has always been a great place to absorb artistic (rather than commercial, generally speaking) trends in filmmaking worldwide, particularly those worthwhile but too “challenging” or esoteric to ever achieve U.S. theatrical distribution.
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