Nov 22, 2024
Since its launch in 2011, the SFFILM Documentary Film Fund (DFF) has supported feature-length documentaries in post-production that are distinguished by compelling stories, intriguing characters, and an innovative visual approach. DFF has distributed nearly $1 million to advance new work by filmmakers worldwide, many of whom go on to premiere at festivals like Sundance, our own San Francisco International Film Festival, Tribeca and more, as well as collect dozens of nominations and awards including the Oscars.
Previous DFF winners include Sarvnik Kaur’s Against the Tide, winner of the Sundance 2023 Vérité Filmmaking Prize; Alejandra Vasquez and Sam Osborne’s Going Varsity in Mariachi, winner of the Sundance 2023 Jonathan Oppenheim Editing Award; Rintu Thomas and Sushmit Ghosh’s Writing With Fire, which won Audience and Special Jury Awards at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival; Ljubo Stefanov and Tamara Kotevska’s Honeyland, which won a record number of juried awards at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival and was nominated for Academy Awards for both Best Documentary Feature and Best Foreign Language Film; RaMell Ross’ Hale County This Morning, This Evening, which won a Special Jury Prize at Sundance 2018 and was nominated for the 2019 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, and many others.
The 2024 Documentary Film Fund is made possible thanks to support from Jennifer Hymes Battat and the Jenerosity Foundation along with Katie Hall and Tom Knutsen.
Meet the 2024 Documentary Film Fund Finalists
TheyDream
William D. Caballero Director/Producer
After an unexpected death in the family, a Puerto Rican-American filmmaker/animator teams up with his grieving mother to tell their stories of familial love and loss.
Jenin & the Nakba Between Us
Serene Husni, Director; Rula Nasser, Producer; Marc Serpa Francoeur, Producer
A diasporic Palestinian filmmaker struggles to make a contemporary portrait of Jenin, the city her parents fled following the 1967 Israeli occupation of the West Bank, when her footage takes on radically new meaning in the wake of October 7th.
Shifted Landscapes
Jamie Meltzer, Director; Annie Marr, Producer
“Shifted Landscapes” examines the pervasive effects of the climate crisis on the environmental, cultural and psychological landscapes of California. Weaving together a series of observational vignettes, the film visually articulates a larger system of climate change within the state.
To Use a Mountain
Casey Carter, Director; Colleen Cassingham, Producer; Jonna McKone, Producer
Physics, geology, and democracy collide across the expansive American interior, in a series of vignettes from six candidate sites for a sacrificial nuclear dumping ground.
Issa’s House
Tomer Heymann, Director/Producer; Leigh Heiman, Producer; Estelle Fialon, Producer; Ahmad Amro, Producer; Ido Mizrahy, Producer
Issa Amro and his group of non-violent activists have dedicated their lives to protecting a Palestinian-owned home in Hebron. Filmmaker Tomer Heymann set out to give voice to their stories nearly 2 years ago and continues to chronicle their struggle after October 7th— bearing witness to their seemingly insurmountable goal of peace and equal rights, now more crucial than ever.
Somebody’s Gone
Cyrus Moussavi, Director; Hubert Taylor, Director; Brittany Nugent, Producer
Brother Theotis Taylor harvested turpentine, preached sermons, and sang spirituals in a sublime falsetto that made him the pride of South Georgia. Driven by a divine vision, his son, Hubert, filmed it all. Forty years later, Somebody’s Gone completes the story of a great artist through the archive of his prodigal son.
Coach Emily (working title)
Pallavi Somusetty, Director; Debra Wilson Cary, Producer; Jen Gilomen, Producer; Pallavi Somusetty, Producer
Emily Taylor, an Oakland-based queer Black climbing coach, trains a group of BIPOC kids to conquer the pervasive discrimination they face in the great outdoors. As they claim their place in nature, Emily embarks on a profound journey of self-care, while working to dismantle an industry rife with systemic racism.
Curse of the Mutant Heirloom
Debra Schaffner, Director; Julie Wyman, Producer
A daughter excavates decades of estrangement from her Holocaust-survivor mother, fueled by a less visible predator: the BRCA gene mutation. Robots and aliens join their human counterparts in this hybrid-documentary about family, forgiveness, and female body parts.
Barbara Forever
Brydie O’Connor, Director; Elijah Stevens, Producer
A time-bending, archival-driven examination of the iconic life, work, & legacy of Barbara Hammer reveals this pioneering lesbian experimental filmmaker’s unconventional attempts to live on forever.
The Last Nomads
Biljana Tutorov, Director; Petar Glomazić, Director; Biljana Tutorov, Producer; Quentin Laurent, Co-producer; Rok Biček, Co-producer
In the pristine mountains of Montenegro, a semi-nomadic mother and daughter defend their herding tradition and their land from becoming a NATO military training ground. A gripping family and environmental drama unfolds, as the story of violence against women echoes that of violence against nature.
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