• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

SFFILM

The Bay Area's home for the world's finest films and filmmakers.

  • Calendar
  • Festival
  • 2022 Festival
    • Festival Program
      • Calendar
    • Explore
      • Sections + Spotlights
      • Awards + Competition
      • Education
      • About the Festival
      • PDF of Program
    • How-To
      • Tickets + Access
      • Press Center
      • Volunteer
      • Dining + Travel
      • FAQ
  • Join + Give
    • Join UsSFFILM is a community of film lovers and filmmakers dedicated to the art of cinema.
      • Become a Member
      • Become a Patron
      • Make a Gift
      • Volunteer
    • PartnerReach film fans through a customized partnership of the Festival and our many year-round programs!
      • Get Involved
      • Corporate Partners
      • Institutional Partners
      • Community Partners
  • Filmmakers + Education
    • Artist Development
      • Fund Your Film
      • FilmHouse Residency
      • Filmmaker Programming
      • Supported Projects
    • Education
      • Schools at the Festival
      • Family Programming
      • Teaching Tools
      • Video Library
      • See All
  • SIGN IN
Archives for Blog > Row 4

Row 4

Guest Post: FilmHouse Resident Patricia Lee on Career Changes and Creativity

screenshot of a zoom call featuring Patricia Lee

2020 SFFILM FilmHouse residents. Author Patricia Lee in the bottom square.

On Being Like Water by Patricia Lee

“Be like water making its way through cracks. Do not be assertive, but adjust to the object, and you shall find a way around or through it.” — Bruce Lee


I am a filmmaker and current SFFILM FilmHouse resident.
Three years ago I could not have fathomed that sentence applying to me. I had never written a screenplay or worked on any movies. I had only imagined what it might be like to have the energy to write. The luxury of endeavoring into a creative and personal project seemed elusively out of reach, but three years later here I am. Writing a blog post for SFFILM on becoming a filmmaker.

I hope sharing my story of how I began a daunting midlife transition to writing and filmmaking might be helpful to anyone else considering a major change or creative journey. I know in beginning my own transition, I sought out stories of others who had made huge changes in their lives in order to build up the courage to attempt it for myself.
Three years ago I was working in a full-time management role at an architecture and engineering consultancy that I had been with for over twelve years. It was a role that had come to define me in friendships, leisure reading, and the comfort of a regular paycheck. I worked with colleagues that I cared for and respected. Yet, in my mid-thirties, for more reasons than one, I knew it was time to step back and give myself some space to imagine new possibilities. I was expecting a second child and hoped to find something that was a bit more flexible and community oriented. I had little nagging thoughts that this “something else” could be creative work.

When I finally decided to move to a part-time role and take that extra time to sit down and write, I found I didn’t know where to begin. There was no deluge of creativity, no flood of ideas. I had over time been pounded and compressed into a dense, rocklike hardpan. I had become immovable earth — very good at enduring the daily weather of running a small business, but cracking under the pressure of the vast blank page.

The disappointment of not accomplishing enough each day combined with the self applied pressure of having to write something “good” stifled any trickle of creativity hidden within. Panic attacks soon followed. Why had I left a perfectly fine job only to be defeated by a blank computer screen alone in a tiny room? All of those amazing ideas I had before I sat down to write now seemed to lack any substance.

There was work I had to do internally to excavate the hardpan and make room for change before I would be able to create anything.

Finding the Well
It became clear that I needed help if I was going to find any wells of creativity that might be hiding within. I was not going to break down these learned habits or my internalized self critic sitting alone in a room. I began speaking with a therapist to manage the debilitating panic attacks (shout out to my husband for helping me with this — can go on a whole other aside on the importance of proper mental health support!) and enrolled in an online children’s book illustration and writing class. My god how I embraced the structure of that class!

There were deadlines, expectations, assignments! All the familiar approaches of how I had been programmed to get things done in school and at work for the past thirty plus years helped me move past the existential dread of the blank page. I had a little plot of desk I could call my own and made it an inviting place to sit and think. The writing started to trickle out, a little zine about sentient protozoa, the plucky adventures of a young seal, a teenage magician constantly getting into hi-jinx with her guinea pig sidekick. I was writing. By no means were these stories great, or even good, but that was not the point. The dread of the blank page started to turn into the excitement of what idea may (or may not) present itself that day.

Everyday was an exploration into the unknown. For me it required more of the blind faith of dowsing rather than the scientific rigor of a geotechnical survey in search of water. One day might be a day of reflection, another day might be reading and research, and another might involve actually writing (and then likely rewriting it all later). There were no KPIs (key performance indicators) to measure or daily goals to meet. I had to learn to follow the story and the characters and the ideas. I had to be okay with not knowing exactly where it was all leading. When I started to loosen up without overthinking or criticizing myself before I even began, the ideas finally started to flow. I had found an entry point into the creative waters flowing below the dry earth and I was finally pumping some of it up and into my writing.

The online children’s book class also made me realize the value of community in the creative process. I found that my fellow classmates offered the encouragement, critiques and inspiration that I lacked sitting alone in a room. It was fascinating to see how different everyone’s style and approaches were to writing when given the same assignment. It helped remove some of the doubt I had on whether I had any stories important enough or interesting enough or novel enough. Being in community with others made it ever more clear that we each had our own stories to tell and each of our voices were unique.

This exploration took energy. I would end the day exhausted, having used every brain cell I had to imagine a world and story and characters. I was spent in ways that an office job had never taxed me before. I realized I could only sit and write for about four hours at a time if I was to be a functional human and mother to my children afterwards. I also found that while some learned habits had to go to make way for the creative process, other skills I had gained in the decades I spent working in an office were invaluable to the process.

Through my time doing corporate office work I gained a hard earned confidence I did not have when I started off in the professional world. I began my office job barely able to send a benign professional email without being wracked with doubt on if I had used the right words. Should I use “Best” or “Sincerely”? Start with a personal greeting or get straight to the point? Over twelve years I had grown from an anxiety prone entry level assistant into a manager who could go toe-to-toe with chauvinist mansplainers and ruthless real estate tycoons. I had learned focus, confidence, and the importance of a good team. I had grown accustomed to taking two steps forward and one step back in working towards long term goals. This perspective gave me the courage and energy to keep going even when I would end a day disheartened about my projects or when it came time to scrap everything that I had written or when I decided to pull together an application to a film residency — cue SFFILM FilmHouse!

A Confluence of Streams
When I got word that I was a finalist for the SFFILM FilmHouse Residency I was in shock. Could they truly be so open-minded to find a story about an elderly, first generation immigrant, divorcee worth supporting? By a first time screenplay writer no less?

Just before the pandemic hit us in 2020 I had begun meeting a few folks in the film industry who had been incredibly supportive and generous with their time. They offered connections to other filmmakers, advice on process, and generally were excited to meet someone else also trying to make films. One particularly generous and experienced mentor put together a rough budget for my film and introduced me to the person who is now producing my short film, “Hannah’s Biography.”

I was amazed by the welcoming community of filmmakers I was meeting in the Bay Area. Many of them suggested I look to SFFILM as an organization with great programs supporting new filmmakers. Upon reviewing the different programs at SFFILM I decided to apply to the residency program. At minimum, I thought, the structure of an application deadline would be motivation to fine tune the script for my short film. The application process turned out to be much more than that. It was the first time I was asked to write about myself as a filmmaker, my artistic process and my motivations. The application process itself was a journey and required a rigor that I had not placed on this new craft before. It helped me distill the story for “Hannah’s Biography” and my reasons for telling it.

Now about seven months into the residency I can only say how grateful I am to be a part of this cohort. I have been able to form friendships (even through Zoom meetings) and expand the community of amazing artists and mentors in my orbit. The inspiration continues, the projects are fascinating and to see how others approach their craft and their stories is eye opening. I like to call it my own independent study film school. The access to industry members and resources has been invaluable and gave me the boost I needed to get my project ready for production. I know I am still very early on in this journey and have much more to learn and experience, but for now the waters are flowing towards making this film, strengthened by the overflowing reservoir of SFFILM.

I am a filmmaker and current SFFILM FilmHouse resident. If I can say it, maybe someday you can too.

The FilmHouse Residency application deadline is Friday, August 13.

Meet the 2021 SFFILM Rainin Finalists

gif of rainin award finalist headshots

SFFILM and the Kenneth Rainin Foundation are excited to announce the finalists for the 2021 SFFILM Rainin Grant, the flagship artist development program offered by SFFILM Makers. Thirty filmmaking teams have been shortlisted as contenders to receive funding for their narrative projects in various stages of production.

The SFFILM Rainin Grant program is the largest granting body for independent narrative feature films in the US, and supports films that address social justice issues — the distribution of wealth, opportunities, and privileges — in a positive and meaningful way through plot, character, theme, or setting. In a shift from previous years, awards will be made to multiple projects once a year, for screenwriting, development, and post-production. In addition to a cash grant of up to $50,000, recipients are offered a two-month residency at FilmHouse and benefit from SFFILM’s comprehensive and dynamic artist development programs.

The program is open to filmmakers from anywhere in the world who can commit to spending time developing the film in San Francisco. Applications will reopen in the Spring of 2022.


A Rodeo Film

A black bull-rider must choose between a life of crime with his cattle rustling brother or a career in rodeo.

Darius Dawson — Director

person with arms crossed wearing a cowboy hat smiling

Darius Dawson

Ale and the Boxer

Ale (21, Brazilian-American) and Samuel (25, Venezuelan-American), employees at a Bay Area working-class Latinx nightclub, form a powerful bond over shared trauma and embark on an intense relationship that shatters personal boundaries in this semi-autobiographical story of love, loss, addiction, and recovery.

Alexandre Moratto — Writer, Director, Producer
Ramin Bahrani — Producer

person with dark hair and beard

Alexandre Moratto

Apetown

A talented but impulsive graffiti artist makes the connection between his art and ancient San rockart forms still alive in his hometown. On the journey, he takes up the calling to explore a deeper magic that exists to renew a culture made a crime. In the end, he must learn that realizing his full purpose means accepting the ultimate fate in a city designed to kill him.

Kurt Orderson — Director

person with red, yellow, green, and black crocheted hat in front of bookshelf

Kurt Orderson

Broken Bird

A daughter and father, torn apart by addiction, find their way back to each other through mixtapes and memories, and challenge their label of “broken.”

Rachel Harrison Gordon—Director, Producer

person with curly hair sitting holding knee

Rachel Harrison Gordon

Cotton Queen

Fifteen-year-old Nafisa lives in a cotton-farming village in Sudan. She finds herself in the center of a power play between her mother and grandmother: accept an arranged marriage or be circumcised. Her final choice will change the village forever.

Suzannah Mirghani — Writer, Director

person with hair up smiling

Suzannah Mirghani

Coyote Boys

A stream of days that make up the life and journey of a young train-hopping graffiti writer, Coyote Boys is a contemporary odyssey through fringe communities, centered on rootless youth experiencing loss and loneliness — trying to find alternative ways of surviving 21st century America.

Haley Elizabeth Anderson — Director

person with dark hair

Haley Elizabeth Anderson

Currency

In West Oakland a young woman finds herself without a place to call home, timed out foster care, and a survivor of sexual exploitation. Without a roof over her head, and caught in a system that would rather forget her, she must not only find a way to survive, but discover who she truly is. But can she find a way forward without confronting her past?

Lucretia Stinnette — Director; Mel Jones — Producer; Darren Colston — Producer

person with long hair wearing earrings

Lucretia Stinnette

Dear Wizard

Set in the 80s. When spunky eight-year-old Shelly Chan and her parents move to rural Virginia, they are bullied for being Asian. The family also starts receiving letters from a mysterious KKK “wizard.” Believing that a wizard must be good, Shelly writes him back and tries to be his friend. Inspired by true events.

Christy Chan — Director, Producer, Writer

person with long brown hair wearing a red shirt smiling

Christy Chan

Dìdi (弟弟)

Fremont, CA. 2008. In the last month of summer before high school begins, an impressionable Taiwanese-American boy learns what his family can’t teach him: how to skate, how to flirt, and how to love your mom.

Sean Wang — Writer, Director, Producer

person with short hair wearing a t-shirt smiling

Sean Wang

Dottie

Two women; one in the present, the other in the future. They don’t know each other, but their lives are profoundly connected by an entity named Dottie.

Yen Tan — Writer, Director

black and white photo of person with short hair smiling

Yen Tan

Earth Mama

Gia, a young mother reaching the end of her third pregnancy, struggles with the uncertain future of her unborn child, her other two children having already been taken from her by Child Protective Services.

Savanah Leaf — Director, Screenwriter, Producer; Cody Ryder — Producer; Danielle Massie — Producer

person resting on their head on their hand

Savanah Leaf

person with blonde hair smiling

Cody Ryder

person with brown hair standing in front of a mural

Danielle Massie

Escape to Last Man Peak

In a land ravaged by ‘The Sickness’, desolation and despair, 10 orphans find hope and strength in each other, as they attempt the perilous journey to seek refuge at Last Man Peak. In this coming-of-age drama/adventure set in a dystopian Jamaica, the young outcasts battle unfamiliar terrain and a world where adults have become the enemy.

Nile Saulter — Director; Tanya Batson-Savage — Screenwriter / Producer; Analisa Chapman — Producer

person with beard

Nile Saulter

person with glasses standing in front of yellow background

Tanya Batson-Savage

person with ponytail wearing blazer

Analisa Chapman

Fancy Dance

Following the disappearance of her sister, a Native American hustler kidnaps her niece from her white grandparents and sets out for the state powwow in the hopes of keeping what’s left of their family intact.

Erica Tremblay — Screenwriter, Director, Producer; Miciana Alise — Screenwriter

person in black shirt

Erica Tremblay

person with long dark hair

Miciana Alise

God Help the Gayes

As the world awaits a new ruling from the Supreme Court that could effectively reverse marriage equality, a local celebrity couple, Pam and Rosa Gaye, are thrust into the spotlight and hands of a publicity seeking marriage counselor when Rosa announces she wants a divorce.

Huriyyah Muhammad — Writer, Director, Producer

person wearing yellow shirt smiling

Huriyyah Muhammad

Good People

Best friends, Babs Holloway and Nora Lachman can talk about anything: their long-time marriages, sex, even race. Babs is African-American, Nora is white, and their children, having grown up together in one of SF’s wealthiest neighborhoods, also are best friends. But when a neighbor calls the police on their kids, Babs and Nora struggle to preserve their friendship as they discover they’ve made very different assumptions about race, class and the limits of their privilege.

Natalie Baszile — Director

person with short hair smiling

Natalie Baszile

If You Hum at the Right Frequency

The Echo River Art + Memory Center is an experimental residency for artists who have recently lost loved ones. Each Summer, small cohorts of grieving residents are welcomed to a secluded property in Northern California where they can sort through raw emotions while healing through their craft. During their stay, artists are followed by a film crew that captures their creative process as they attempt to generate meaning and beauty from the overwhelming pain that loss brings.

Daniel Freeman — Director, Producer

person with long hair and beard

Daniel Freeman

Laylayon (Cradlesong)

When a retired nurse is forced to relocate her American-born family to her ancestral home in a cursed village buried deep within the Philippine jungle, she discovers that she must face the ghosts of her past or risk losing her children forever.

Nic Yulo — Writer, Director

person with curly hair

Nic Yulo

Magnolia Bloom

Magnolia Bloom is a story of young love and rebellion in 1960s New Orleans.

Phillip Youmans — Writer and Director

person with dark hair and beard outside

Phillip Youmans

Motherhood

Salha, a mother gifted with prophetic dreams, lives in an isolated village in Tunisia. When her eldest son’s sudden return from Syria coincides with a series of strange disappearances in their community, Salha’s maternal love is tested and the family faces how guilt can haunt the human spirit.

Meryam Joobeur — Director, Producer; Maria Gracia Turgeon — Producer; Annick Blanc — Producer ; Nadim Cheikhrouha — Producer; Sarra Ben Hassen — Producer

person with hair up wearing a scarf

Meryam Joobeur

person with curly hair

Maria Gracia Turgeon

black and white photo of a person

Annick Blanc

person with short hair

Nadim Cheikhrouha

person with long hair

Sarra Ben Hassen

Ohijee’s Past Lives

Ohijee Vati-Myers is a comic book artist. One day while in the comic book store, he meets a woman. They hit it off, and spend the rest of the day walking the city. They end up at her apartment where they spend the night together. The next morning, he awakes in his apartment with signs of never having met the woman.

Malik Isasis — Writer, Director, Producer

>person with nose piercing looking into camera</p
Malik Isasis

Pure

For 17-year-old queer Celeste, senior year in her affluent Black community means following family tradition and becoming a debutante… but she longs for a different kind of coming out.

Natalie Jasmine Harris — Writer / Director; Natalie Holley — Producer

person with long dark hair smiling

Natalie Jasmine Harris

Rangoli

An Indian-American drag queen on the verge of stardom returns home to celebrate Diwali with his conservative parents who he hasn’t spoken to in 5 years due to his choice of profession. At this part for Diwali, his life is turned upside down when his parents surprisingly announce they have been divorced for ten years, his mother is gay, and they are selling the childhood home — causing chaos, laughs, and heartfelt drama.

Vishaal Reddy — Producer; Neal Ludevig, Producer; Shravya Kag, Creative Consultant; Raj Trivedi, Creative Consultant

person with dark hair

Vishaal Reddy

Scary Lovely

A middle-aged gay man forges an unlikely friendship with his dead lover’s beneficiary as they’re drawn together by matters of the paranormal.

Johnny Alvarez — Writer, Director, Producer

person with beard

Johnny Alvarez

Since I Laid My Burden Down

DeShawn is living fast and wild in a post-Utopian Oakland. Bathhouses, brawls, and endless hookups have continued well into his thirties. The night his Uncle dies, his hair turns abruptly gray, and he returns to his childhood home of Alabama for answers. DeShawn must confront the ghosts of his past, the dead men who seduced and failed him, and the firebrand women who made him in order to find peace, and finally lay his burden down.

Ro Haber — Director; Savannah Knoop — Writer; Brontez Purnell — Producer

person standing in front of paint-splattered background

Ro Haber

person with short hair wearing tank top

Savannah Knoop

person with tattoos standing in front of pink background

Brontez Purnell

The Macrobiotic Toker

Living in a mommune, balancing her alternative lifestyle and separation from her partner, Sula’s life is plunged into potential chaos by an unplanned pregnancy. After discovering how to procure abortion pills online, she travels an unexpected path to become an underground supplier, an accidental pro-choice activist, and ultimately, a convicted felon. Inspired by true events.

Tracy Droz Tragos — Writer, Producer, Director

person with light hair smiling

Tracy Droz Tragos

The President’s Cake

Despite severe sanctions on Iraq, 9-year-old Saeed must use his wits to make the mandatory cake to celebrate President Saddam Hussein’s birthday or his family will be imprisoned.

Hasan Hadi—Writer/Director

person with short hair

Hasan Hadi

The Return

In an attempt to escape her current life rut, a young Black American woman, finds herself foreign in Ghana caring for an older animatic Ghanaian woman with early-onset Alzheimer’s who’s planning her own funeral.

Mary Ann Anane—Writer/Director

person with dark hair smiling

Mary Ann Anane

Tokyo Forever

In Colombia, in a road on the slopes of an abyss in the Chicamocha canyon, Tokyo, a fourteen-year-old boy forced to work as a road mechanic, must face his conscience and responsibility for the disappearance of his younger brother, to confess to his parents the whereabouts of his corpse.

Andrés Piñeros — Writer / Director; Federico Piñeros — Producer

person with dark hair

Federico Piñeros

Untitled Texas Latina Project

Five Mexican-American women across various cities in Texas attempt to forge connections in familiar spaces while their identities are challenged.

Chelsea Hernandez, Sharon Arteaga, Lizette Barrera, Jazmin Diaz, and Iliana Sosa—Directors

Wishes Sink in Man Made Lakes

Two trans teens secretly living in an old movie theater spend a summer trying anything and everything to get on hormones.

Faye Ruiz — Director

person standing in doorway

Faye Ruiz

 

 

Dispatch from SFFILM Education: Partnering with Pixar to Assist Pandemic Parenting

three children stand next to Monsters Inc. Pixar character

The SFFILM Education team has wrapped a strange-but-still-quite-busy spring and summer of programming for Bay Area students and families, and we asked them to give us a quick recap of what’s been on their minds. They took the opportunity to share some appreciation for one of our most valued local collaborators in developing world-class educational content for kids. Learn more about what SFFILM Education is up to at sffilm.org/education.

Well, we are fully into the fall semester and Bay Area schools remain mostly shuttered. Somehow, through it all, superhero teachers continue to push ahead with remote learning to provide their students great educational opportunities. Families have also experienced a whole new set of challenges in their households, with parents suddenly entering a new level of involvement in assisting with their children’s schoolwork. Being trapped inside has also tested the patience of both parents and children alike. Families long for the days of going out and doing fun and enriching activities together.

teacher standing in front of classroom speaking to children

SFFILM Education would normally be engaging with teachers, students, and families directly in classrooms and theaters around the Bay Area. Since March, we’ve pivoted to the world of virtual programming with SFFILM at Home. While we would definitely prefer to see everyone in person, we’re pleased to be able to continue programming interactive film experiences that allow our youth audiences to engage with talented storytellers, filmmakers, and industry professionals from around the world. Thus, we are able to continue providing valuable resources to help develop media literacy and critical thinking skills, illuminate diverse world cultures, and inspire a lifelong appreciation of cinema in our kids.

screenshot of a zoom call featuring three people

We’re also fortunate to have deep working relationships with some of the most renowned film studios and artists in the world who gladly give their time to assist us in our work. Recently we had two fantastic programs with our neighbors right across the Bay, Pixar Animation Studios. In September we spoke with Pixar’s Chief Creative Officer Pete Docter and Senior VP of Production (and SFFILM Board member) Jonas Rivera. The creative partnership of this award-winning team has produced the beloved films Up and Inside Out. Our discussion focused on the Pixar storytelling process and how personal aspects of the filmmaking team’s lives are often examined and utilized to discover the emotional core of their films. We also hoped the program would help kids process the complex feelings that they’ve been experiencing during the pandemic, and inspire them to think about creative outlets they can explore to express themselves.

Then on October 4, we gave families the opportunity to get out of the house and experience something only the parents might have done before during their own childhoods. While we didn’t make it back into the theater, we did the next best thing by screening Inside Out during our SFFILM at the Drive-In series at Fort Mason Flix. It was a particularly fitting film with its San Francisco setting, and it gave our team much joy to see families cozied up in blankets in the backs of their cars, munching on popcorn and delighting in the emotional storytelling displayed on the big screen.

person standing on stage with Coco title screen in background

We are truly lucky to have such a strong ongoing partnership with Pixar — for over ten years they have worked closely with us to provide our audiences once-in-a-lifetime educational events. We’ve been able to hold sneak-peek screenings of their newest feature film releases, sometimes even within the walls of the studio. Talented directors, writers, and animators have been brought directly into classrooms to discuss their creative process, giving students guidance and inspiration they need to help them on their way toward fulfilling their dreams of growing up to be artists. Teachers have been provided with valuable STEAM learning tools which have allowed them to think outside the box and engage their kids in new ways around math and science. We’ve also held hands-on workshops where kids have learned how to tell stories using visual imagery, sculpted original characters out of clay, made stop-motion animation with everyday objects, and drawn beloved Pixar characters.

We can’t think of a better partner in our mission to educate and entertain Bay Area teachers, students, and families. We look forward to at least ten more years of partnership — indeed, to infinity and beyond!

Learn more about SFFILM Education at sffilm.org/education.

Visit

  • Tickets
  • FAQ
  • Code of Conduct
  • Accessibility

Films

  • Year-Round
  • Doc Stories
  • Festival

Press

  • Press Center
  • Accreditation
  • Press Releases
  • Press Materials

About

  • Contact
  • About SFFILM
  • Careers
  • Blog

Stay in Touch

© 2020 SFFILM  | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy  

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Manage SFFILM Account
  • Tickets
  • My Membership
  • Help
  • Sign Out
  • Upcoming Events
  • Manage SFFILM Account
  • Cart
My Account
  • Contact Info
  • Password
  • Upcoming Events
  • My Membership
  • Order History
  • Sign OUT