PRESS RELEASES › 2026 Honorees of the Sloan Science in Cinema Initiative

SFFILM Announces the 2026 Honorees of the Sloan Science in Cinema Initiative

The innovative program will present the Sloan Science on Screen Award to Ildikó Enyedi’s SILENT FRIEND and honor filmmakers with cash grants totaling $115K to support films in early development.

Top: Tony Leung Chiu-wai in SILENT FRIEND. Photo courtesy 1-2 Special. Bottom, L to R: Destiny Macon, Justin Kim WooSŏk, 

Lane Unsworth, Sid Gopinath, Aditya Joshi. Photos courtesy of the subjects. 

San Francisco, CA—April 25, 2026—Today, SFFILM announced $115,000 in awards and grants for the Sloan Science in Cinema Initiative at the 69th San Francisco International Film Festival, which runs April 24 to May 4. In partnership with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, SFFILM will also present the Sloan Science on Screen Award and $5,000 to Ildikó Enyedi’s spellbinding cinematic triptych, Silent Friend, starring Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Léa Seydoux, and Luna Wedler as souls connected across a century through an ancient ginkgo tree. The award presentation and screening will take place on Sunday, April 26, at 7 pm at the Premier Theater at One Letterman. The program, which is featured as part of the Festival’s Narratives: International selections, will be accompanied by an onstage conversation between award-winning director Ildikó Enyedi and Benjamin Blackman, an associate professor in the Departments of Plant & Microbial Biology and Integrative Biology at UC Berkeley, moderated by SFFILM’s Director of Programming Jessie Fairbanks.

SFFILM’s Executive Director, Anne Lai, expanded on this unique partnership, which is also responsible for supporting filmmakers at the screenwriting and development stages. “When we launched this initiative with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation in 2015, the premise was simple and also ambitious: bringing science and cinema together would elevate and spotlight both mediums in a complimentary way, helping audiences connect to and better understand the world we all share. Ten years later, with 40 supported artists and growing, that theory has proven to be true. This year’s fellows and grantees are at the very beginning of that journey—developing screenplays where real scientific discovery and processes shape the story from the ground up. And with the Sloan Science on Screen Award, we celebrate a film at a pivotal moment when it is given over to the audience. We see time and again that when audiences get to learn about the process behind a work like Ildikó Enyedi’s Silent Friend, with the filmmaker in conversation with actual scientists, people come away with something they never knew before. That is the impact filmmakers and scientists share.”

“We are thrilled to celebrate Ildikó Enyedi’s Silent Friend as the 2026 Sloan Science on Screen Award winner as well as the five original screenwriters selected for the Sloan Science in Cinema Fellowship and Sloan Stories of Science Development Fund at SFFILM,” said Doron Weber, Vice President and Program Director at the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. “These award-winning filmmakers join a nationwide program that has supported over 850 science and film projects and has honored outstanding directors such as Guillermo del Toro, Christopher Nolan, and Lee Isaac Chung.”

Masashi Niwano, the Director of Artist Development at SFFILM, works directly with the Fellows and Development Fund Grantees, pairing them with science advisors at the screenwriting stage while guiding their projects with targeted support. “What excites me about the Sloan Science in Cinema Initiative is that we’re getting to support a filmmaker at the screenplay stage while the story is being shaped. They become part of a global ecosystem of SFFILM-supported filmmakers, which builds their network of filmmakers, industry professionals, and future collaborators. Our mission is to help support the representation of science and technology more accurately, but also to pave the way for creative discovery by the filmmaker. You can see it across this year’s projects, whether it is a sound ecologist exploring how we experience a politically inaccessible wilderness, a Black engineer confronting gentrification in her neighborhood, or the ethical and communications machinery of a NASA first-contact announcement becoming the emotional spine of a story. We are thrilled to welcome Destiny, Justin, Lane, Sid, and Aditya to this year’s Festival to celebrate this honor and inspire their work throughout the year.”

THE SLOAN INITIATIVE HONOREES

2026 Sloan Science on Screen Award

Silent Friend

Director: Ildikó Enyedi, Producers: Reinhard Brundig, Monika Mécs, Nicolas Elghozi, Morgane Olivier, Meng Xie

(Germany, Hungary, France 2025, 147 min)

An ancient ginkgo tree enchants longing souls across more than a century in this spellbinding cinematic triptych starring Tony Leung Chiu-wai and Léa Seydoux.

2025 Sloan Science in Cinema Fellowship Recipients

The Sloan Science in Cinema Filmmaker Fellowship is presented in partnership with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation as part of their mission to champion films and projects that explore scientific or technological themes or characters. Awards are made to two projects once a year, at the screenwriting phase of development. Recipients of the Sloan Science in Cinema Filmmaker Fellowship will receive a $35,000 cash grant and access to the FilmHouse, SFFILM’s creative hub for local and visiting independent filmmakers.

Talk Black 

Writer/Director: Destiny Macon

A timid engineer develops an audacious split personality to help her stand up to the boys’ club at work and prevent “urban renewal” in the historically black neighborhood where she grew up.

The Green Corridor 

Writer/Director: Justin Kim WooSŏk

Joseph Yoon, a Korean-American anthropologist, returns to his homeland on a Fulbright grant, drawn by rumors of a tiger’s reappearance in the DMZ—a creature long thought extinct on the peninsula. As he partners with a sound ecologist working along the border’s edge, their pursuit transforms into a confrontation with colonial ghosts, personal grief, and the limitations of human perception.

2025 Sloan Stories of Science Development Fund Recipients

The SFFILM Sloan Stories of Science Development Fund is presented in partnership with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation as part of their mission to champion films that explore scientific or technological themes. SFFILM will award up to $20,000 grants to filmmakers in the early stages of writing screenplays inspired by discoveries from the Stories of Science Sourcebook. The Stories of Science Sourcebook is composed of significant scientific and technological discoveries made in recent years as a source of inspiration to filmmakers interested in telling fictionalized stories that explore the discovery’s underlying themes or characters, and dramatize the impact of these breakthroughs on members of the broader public. 

Hello Neighbor

Writer: Lane Unsworth

With humanity on the cusp of potentially finding life on Jupiter’s moon, Europa, a lonely and retired child science entertainer gets recruited to the NASA public relations team to help answer the question: if we do find life, how do we tell everyone?

One Inch From Earth

Writers: Sid Gopinath, Aditya Joshi

A group of plucky scientists must overcome NASA leadership, rival teams, the specter of Mars, and the US government to launch a mission that proves life exists on a distant moon of Jupiter.

SFFILM’s 69th San Francisco International Film Festival program aims to be a celebration of global cinema, the filmmakers who create it, and the audiences who come to watch movies. The organization is extremely proud to welcome everyone to this year’s Festival.

SUPPORTERS + SPONSORS

Support for this program is made possible through a partnership with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

Support for SFFILM’s year-round programming is made possible by our Board of Directors, whose leadership and generosity empower artists, audiences, and the future of independent film.

TICKETS + MEMBER BENEFITS

Tickets are on sale for Silent Friend at sffilm.org. Ticket prices for General Admission are $20, and $16 for SFFILM Members. Senior, student, and ADA are $19. All tickets are subject to a $1.50 service fee. 

ACCESSIBILITY

SFFILM is committed to providing accessible experiences at all events, whether in-person or online. Event pages will be updated with accessibility information as it becomes available, which may be after tickets go on sale.

All venues are ADA accessible. All public screening venues are equipped with individual closed captioning, audio description, and assisted listening devices. To request a closed caption, audio description, or assisted listening device, contact ada@sffilm.org.

For more information about accessibility at specific venues or programs, please visit sffilm.org/accessibility or contact ada@sffilm.org.

About The San Francisco International Film Festival

Since 1957, SFFILM has brought global and independent film to the Bay Area in a gathering of curious and dedicated audiences, filmmakers, and partners at the San Francisco International Film Festival. As the longest-running film festival in the Americas, the program uniquely represents the endurance, and the future of film. At its heart are 11 days of expertly hand-selected films, world-class talent, premieres, early sneak peeks, and captivating talks. The Festival cultivates a vibrant Bay Area film culture with programs including a film industry summit, college days, and a schools program exclusively for local students and educators all focused on the next generation of filmmakers and film lovers. The 69th San Francisco International Film Festival will take place April 24–May 4, 2026.

ABOUT SFFILM

For nearly 70 years, SFFILM has been transforming the world through the creativity and inspiration of film. As the Bay Area’s premier film institution since 1957, SFFILM cultivates an enduring and vibrant film culture, expertly connecting singular storytellers with passionate audiences. With world-class festivals, accessible youth programs, and robust filmmaker support, SFFILM champions cinema as a force for connection, creativity, and change. Our annual film festivals include the San Francisco International Film Festival and Doc Stories. The SFFILM Presents series and Family programming give Bay Area audiences early, exclusive access to film events all year. SFFILM’s youth Education program empowers over 15,000 local students and educators with learning opportunities that foster media literacy, global citizenship, and a lifelong love of movies. And, SFFILM propels the careers of independent filmmakers from the Bay Area and beyond through vital grants, residencies, and diverse creative development services in our Artist Development initiative.

For more information visit sffilm.org 

This press release is available online at sffilm.org/press/releases

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ABOUT THE ALFRED P. SLOAN FOUNDATION

The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation is a New York based, philanthropic institution that makes grants for research in science, technology, and economics; quality and diversity of scientific institutions; and public engagement with science. Sloan’s program in Public Understanding of Science and Technology, directed by Doron Weber, supports books, radio & podcasts, film, television, theater, YouTube & TikTok, and new media to bridge the two cultures of science and the humanities. The program also supports special initiatives that strengthen science as a social good. The Foundation works with about 20 film school and film festival partners and has supported over 900 film projects, including over 30 feature films. For more information visit sloan.org or follow @SloanPublic on Instagram or Facebook.

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