Aug 22, 2022
Artist Development
$450,000 in Grants Awarded to 18 Narrative Feature Projects in Various Stages of Production
San Francisco, CA – August 22, 2022 – SFFILM, in partnership with the Kenneth Rainin Foundation, announced today the projects that will receive a total of $450,000 in funding and artist development services in the latest round of the SFFILM Rainin Grant program. Eighteen filmmaking teams were granted funding to support the next stage of their creative process, in screenwriting and development. SFFILM Rainin Grants are awarded annually to filmmakers whose narrative feature films meaningfully explore pressing social issues and/or have significant economic or professional impact on the Bay Area filmmaking community.
The program is open to filmmakers in the US and internationally who can commit to spending time developing the film in San Francisco. Since 2009, the SFFILM Rainin Filmmaking Grants program has funded more than 175 film projects, including Fernando Frias’s I’m No Longer Here, Channing Godfrey Peoples’ Miss Juneteenth, Antoneta Kastrati’s
The next application period for SFFILM Rainin Grants opens Spring 2023; for more information visit sffilm.org/makers.
The jury panelists who reviewed the finalists’ submissions are Raven Jackson, filmmaker and SFFILM Rainin Grantee in 2018; Laura Wagner, filmmaker and SFFILM Rainin Grantee in 2015; Ted Russell, Director, Arts Strategy & Ventures, Kenneth Rainin Foundation; Masashi Niwano, Director of Artist Development, SFFILM; Rosa Morales, Artist Development Associate Manager: Narrative Film, SFFILM.
The jury noted in a statement: “The jury was impressed and inspired by this talented slate of filmmakers and their bold approaches to storytelling in front and behind the camera. The diversity in stories and filmmakers reflect the enduring vitality and spirit of independent cinema. From transgenerational stories to films that center historically excluded characters and communities, we are thrilled to support these projects and help them get one step closer to the big screen.”
2022 SFFILM Rainin Grantees
1791
Stefani Saintonge, writer/director/producer; Sebastien Denis, writer/director/producer—$25,000 for development
It’s August 1791 in French-owned Saint-Domingue– the most profitable colony in the world. A collective of enslaved workers meet in secret to plot a revolt. As the yoke of slavery takes its toll, a coerced confession reveals their plan, forcing everyone into action. This sparks the Haitian revolution and the beginning of the end of slavery.
Cousins
Adrian Burrell, writer/director; Alex Bledsoe, producer; Sue-Ellen Chitunya, producer; Saeed Crumpler, co-writer—$25,000 for development
Three kids from the ghettos of East Oakland are sent on a wild adventure after their favorite cousin escapes house arrest.
Dìdi (弟弟)
Sean Wang, writer/director/producer; Carlos López Estrada, producer; Kelly Marie Tran, producer—$25,000 for development
Fremont, CA. 2008. In the last month of summer before high school begins, an impressionable 13-year-old Taiwanese American boy learns what his family can’t teach him: how to skate, how to flirt and how to love your mom.
Dreaming of Lions
Paolo Marinou-Blanco, writer/director—$25,000 for screenwriting
A dark surreal & satirical comedy about euthanasia. Gilda and Amadeu meet at an underground organisation that claims to help the terminally ill kill themselves painlessly for a fee, as they try to bypass the fact euthanasia is illegal. But when they discover the workshop is just a money-making scam, they take matters into their own hands and go on a wild surreal adventure to finalize their plans, falling in love along the way.
From Honey to Ashes
Emily Cohen Ibañez, writer—$25,000 for screenwriting
In this psychological drama, an act of gun violence strikes a married couple in California’s Central Valley, resulting in a ripple effect involving a widow, a nanny, an unhoused woman, a high school senior, and a young gang member. The microcosm of these women’s intersecting lives play out against the backdrop of a dying monarch population, an unprecedented heat wave, and a magical force that binds them in a world on the brink of collapse.
In My Father’s House
Abbesi Akhamie, writer/director—$25,000 for screenwriting
In My Father’s House follows Anna (nee Anike), a disillusioned millennial battling grief after the unexpected loss of her mother. She arrives in Lagos, Nigeria from the United States determined to escape the remnants of her former life but her efforts are futile as she discovers new life and purpose in the homeland of her estranged father.
Joyride
Edwin Alexis Gómez, writer/director; Evelyn Angelica Martinez, producer—$25,000 for screenwriting
Teenage sisters are enlisted by their abuelita to break her out of her senior living facility for a joyride to the Grand Canyon. On the journey, their grandmother reveals some unfinished business while newly unearthed family secrets take things to telenovela proportions.
Late Spring
Yuan Yuan, writer/director—$25,000 for screenwriting
A Chinese factory worker travels to New York for her daughter’s eagerly anticipated college graduation, only to be thrust into a desperate search in unfamiliar territory when she learns the girl is missing.
Rowdy By Nature
Morningstar Angeline, writer/director—$25,000 for screenwriting
After a mother disappears without a trace, her troubled daughter spirals in her search, unaware a vampire will save them both.
Ruby: Portrait of a Black Teen in an American Suburb
Raven Johnson, writer/director—$25,000 for screenwriting
A coming-of-age tale set during the height of Covid-19 and racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd. RUBY: PORTRAIT OF A BLACK TEEN IN AN AMERICAN SUBURB follows the story of Ruby, a fifteen-year-old, Liberian-American teenager and a wannabe Tik Tok star, as she deals with the sudden breakup of her closest friendship after her best friend, Kiki, begins dating a much older man.
Santa Anita
David Liu, writer/director; Xin Li, producer—$25,000 for screenwriting
As the summer of 2004 begins, a series of strange events transform the lives of three generations of Asian-Americans living in the Southern California foothills — an aging heiress and art collector haunted by visions of her dead mother, an aspiring young female novelist running a neighborhood video game arcade, and a trio of teenage musicians caught in an increasingly tense dispute between two local gangs.
Signs Preceding the End of the World
Joie Estrella Horwitz, writer/director; Luis Gutiérrez Arias, writer/director; Kindred Spirit, producer; Bahìa Colectiva, producer—$25,000 for screenwriting
Across borders and into the Aztec underworld, Signs Preceding the End of the World is the story of a journey with no return. Adapted from the namesake novel by Yuri Herrera, the film follows Makina as she travels across the U.S./Mexico borderlands to find her estranged brother. Along the way, she faces the apocalyptic reality of her changing world as we are confronted with the signs that announce the end of ours.
The President’s Cake
Hasan Hadi, writer/director—$25,000 for screenwriting
While people struggle daily to survive under sanctions in Saddam’s Iraq, nine-year-old Saeed must use his wits to gather ingredients for the mandatory cake to celebrate President Saddam Hussein’s birthday or face the consequences – prison or death.
The Stud
Matthew Puccini, writer/director—$25,000 for screenwriting
A pair of queer teenagers set off to sneak into the closing night of The Stud, San Francisco’s oldest gay bar.
TOKYO FOREVER
Andres Piñeros, writer/director; Federico Piñeros, producer; John Chaparro, producer—$25,000 for development
Tokyo, a Colombian teenager has to assimilate the death of his brother and his supposed responsibility in his disappearance, confronting his family and questioning our traumas as a community in the context of the Colombian conflict and post conflict.
Uncle Hiep’s Casino
Richard Van, writer/director; Betty Hu, producer—$25,000 for development
Somewhere between his mother’s house and his uncle’s illegal casino, a prisoner finds a new life.
Welcome to Roswell
StormMiguel Florez, writer/director/producer—$25,000 for screenwriting
A middle aged transgender filmmaker returns to his father’s birthplace of Roswell, New Mexico to document coming out to his family. His partner’s obsession with the 1947 UFO crash takes him and his film crew in a very different direction.
Where is the Healer?
Tebogo Malebogo, writer/director/producer; Petrus van Staden, producer—$25,000 for screenwriting
Ayanda gets caught in the tangle of people’s lives as she attempts to cast the remake of a forgotten B-movie.
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About SFFILM Makers
SFFILM Makers programs have granted over $8.5 million to more than 300 independent filmmakers worldwide since 2009. Through its partnerships with the Kenneth Rainin Foundation, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Jenerosity Foundation, and more, SFFILM Makers provides sustained creative resources, fellowships, residencies, and advisory services. In addition to premiering at marquee festivals around the world, SFFILM supported films are showcased annually at the San Francisco International Film Festival and Doc Stories documentary series.
About SFFILM
SFFILM is a nonprofit organization whose mission ensures independent voices in film are welcomed, heard, and given the resources to thrive. SFFILM inspires and connects audiences, students and teachers, and filmmakers through film exhibition, youth education, and artist development programs. Annual public film programs include the SFFILM Festival which is the longest running film festival in the Americas, Doc Stories documentary series, special events with the best and brightest in contemporary film, and family programming. SFFILM Education serves more than 15,000 students and educators with learning opportunities designed to cultivate media literacy, global citizenship, and a lifelong love of movies. SFFILM Makers supports the careers of independent filmmakers from the Bay Area and beyond with grants, residencies, and other creative development services.
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Learn more about the Kenneth Rainin Foundation
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For further information and press inquiries, please contact Justine Hebron, Director of External Relations at SFFILM.
Justine Hebron
jhebron@sffilm.org