An Evening with Ritesh Batra + The Lunchbox
Premier Theater at One Letterman 1 Letterman Dr # B, San Francisco
Sound and Cinema Showcase
San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM) 200 Van Ness Ave, San Francisco
Week of Events
Monday, April 27, 2026
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April 27, 2026 –Give Me the Ball!
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April 27, 2026 –Figaro Up, Figaro Down
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April 27, 2026 –Who Moves America
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April 27, 2026 –An Evening with Ritesh Batra + The Lunchbox
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April 27, 2026 –Sound and Cinema Showcase
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April 27, 2026 –First They Came for My College
Give Me the Ball!
Billie Jean King changed the game of tennis — on the court and across sports culture. Liz Garbus and Elizabeth Wolff’s documentary presents the legend in full, combining rare archival […]
Figaro Up, Figaro Down
A Juilliard-trained baritone, Tim Blevins performed on the world’s most prestigious opera stages, tackling challenging roles with skill and power. A rare Black presence in a white-dominated art form, he […]
Who Moves America
Who Moves America explores the lives of UPS Teamsters facing long hours, unsafe conditions, and relentless physical demands. The film reveals the pressures on delivery drivers and logistics workers who […]
An Evening with Ritesh Batra + The Lunchbox
Ritesh Batra’s The Lunchbox unfolds as a quietly radiant tale of connection amid the everyday bustle of Mumbai. Ila (Nimrat Kaur) prepares daily meals for her husband, but a mistaken […]
Sound and Cinema Showcase
The 2nd annual Sound and Cinema Showcase celebrates our partnership with the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, our filmmaking fellows, and student composers. After the films screen, there will be […]
First They Came for My College
Echoing the reality of schools across the country, Sarasota’s New College is caught in the middle of a war on “woke.” With an ambition to “reclaim” the liberal arts institution, […]
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
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April 28, 2026 –Figaro Up, Figaro Down
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April 28, 2026 –Centerpiece: I Love Boosters
Figaro Up, Figaro Down
A Juilliard-trained baritone, Tim Blevins performed on the world’s most prestigious opera stages, tackling challenging roles with skill and power. A rare Black presence in a white-dominated art form, he […]
Centerpiece: I Love Boosters
A fearless crew of inventive young women turns shoplifting into a radical act of defiance. Led by Corvette (Keke Palmer), they move across Oakland, boosting coveted goods as both survival […]
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
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April 29, 2026 –Enough Is Enough
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April 29, 2026 –Those Who Whistle After Dark
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April 29, 2026 –Shorts Block 4: Shades of Menace
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April 29, 2026 –The Fall of Sir Douglas Weatherford
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April 29, 2026 –POV Award: Lynne Sachs + Every Contact Leaves a Trace
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April 29, 2026 –Blue Heron
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April 29, 2026 –Cronos
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April 29, 2026 –Lost Land
Enough Is Enough
Arriving fresh from it’s World Premiere at Berlinale, this documentary is a rare window into the Kivu War. Enough Is Enough follows Congolese filmmaker Elisé Sawasawa, whose displacement and refugee […]
Those Who Whistle After Dark
In Pinar Yorgancıoğlu’s atmospheric and darkly humorous tale, recently retired Melih struggles to find purpose in his post-career life. He jostles for his family’s attention while slowly preparing his late […]
Shorts Block 4: Shades of Menace
In the absence of love, menace takes shape. Six sinister stories invite viewers on a journey from the familiar corners of homes and highways to darker and more treacherous places […]
The Fall of Sir Douglas Weatherford
In a windswept Scottish village, widower Kenneth (Peter Mullan) takes pride in his role as the local history guide, donning period costume to honor his claimed ancestor, Sir Douglas Weatherford, […]
POV Award: Lynne Sachs + Every Contact Leaves a Trace
In forensic science, “trace” is the material left behind at crime scenes: fibers, gunshot residue, and other evidence that detectives use as they develop suspects and leads. SFFILM Persistence of […]
Blue Heron
A masterful debut, this depiction of a young girl whose family is contending with a challenging older sibling weaves autobiographical and documentary elements seamlessly into a singularly poignant package. Sasha’s […]
Cronos
Cronos is a vampire movie with a Latin American twist as director/writer Guillermo del Toro gets to the heart of the eternal myth in Mexican style. The tale begins in […]
Lost Land
Nine-year-old Somira and her younger brother Shafi are the focus of this moving drama that follows the Rohingya siblings as they journey from a refugee camp in Bangladesh to a […]
Thursday, April 30, 2026
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April 30, 2026 –Sloan Science on Screen Award: Silent Friend
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April 30, 2026 –The Arch
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April 30, 2026 –The Son and the Sea
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April 30, 2026 –Mel Novikoff Award: Michelle Satter + Beasts of the Southern Wild
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April 30, 2026 –Elder Son
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April 30, 2026 –Still Playing + The Curfew + Nava
Sloan Science on Screen Award: Silent Friend
On the cusp of the Covid-19 pandemic, Tony (Tony Leung Chiu-wai), a Hong Kong neuroscientist conducting research at a German university, observes a botanical garden’s ancient gingko tree one lonesome […]
The Arch
The Arch is reminiscent of a classical story in the Ibsen or Jamesian mode—in an 18th-century village, a proud widow, Madam Tung, has allowed herself to be treated almost as […]
The Son and the Sea
British writer/director Stroma Cairns makes a resonant feature debut with this coming-of-age drama focused on a young man trying to find his place in the world. The film is a […]
Mel Novikoff Award: Michelle Satter + Beasts of the Southern Wild
Below the levee, the Bathtub exists as a tightknit community unto itself, practically a separate nation from Louisiana and the rest of the United States. There, six-year-old Hushpuppy (Oscar® Best […]
Elder Son
“Where are you from?” That question asked of native-born Argentinian teenager Lila (Anita B. Queen), whose parents immigrated from Korea, hovers over Cecilia Kang’s remarkable drama inspired by her own […]
Still Playing + The Curfew + Nava
Three protagonists and their quietly courageous gestures of resilience weave together a cinematic journey across the world. Documenting a father’s struggle in Palestine, a woman’s fateful return to Iran, and […]
Friday, May 1, 2026
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May 1, 2026 –Salvation
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May 1, 2026 –How to Clean a House in 10 Easy Steps
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May 1, 2026 –Shorts Block 2: Under Pressure
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May 1, 2026 –Memory of Princess Mumbi
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May 1, 2026 –Filipiñana
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May 1, 2026 –The Fox King
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May 1, 2026 –American Doctor
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May 1, 2026 –Hot Water
Salvation
Winner of the Berlinale’s Silver Bear, Emin Alper’s (Frenzy, Festival 2016) electrifying drama of power struggles in a Turkish mountain village exposes the chaos that erupts when territorialism takes root. […]
How to Clean a House in 10 Easy Steps
Family separation defined the childhood of filmmaker Carolina Gonzalez Valencia, whose mother Beatriz moved to the US from Colombia to provide for her children by working as a domestic house […]
Shorts Block 2: Under Pressure
Pressure builds quietly before it breaks. Across cultures, five individuals confront the forces pressing in on their lives, reflecting the fault lines shaping women’s place in the world today. A […]
Memory of Princess Mumbi
With Memory of Princess Mumbi, Swiss-Kenyan filmmaker Damien Hauser delivers a dazzling film set in the future but pertinent to today. A war fought over addictive technology leads to its outlawing in many parts of the world by 2093. Despite this, AI remains in use to create worlds and alter actors’ facial expressions. Aspiring filmmaker […]
Filipiñana
Isabel is a newly hired ball girl at a pristine golf course on Manila’s outskirts. An Ilokana from rural northern Philippines, she immediately feels out of place among the high-status guests. Motivated by the sweltering heat and her insatiable curiosity, Isabel slips away from her duties on the driving range. Over a languid afternoon, Isabel […]
The Fox King
Amir and Ali are twins reeling from their mother’s death in childbirth. Plus, their deadbeat dad won’t let the boys stay with him, so they work for the owner of a fishing business who gives them rudimentary shelter. Amir speaks rarely, only using the names of animals to communicate, but his passion for reading creates […]
American Doctor
In American Doctor, filmmaker Poh Si Teng follows three US physicians—Palestinian, Jewish, and Zoroastrian—striving to alleviate suffering in Gaza as the war shatters its medical infrastructure. What begins as an urgent mission of care becomes a searing confrontation with the limits of neutrality. The doctors shoulder impossible choices, witnessing profound suffering while navigating the dangers […]
Hot Water
Ramzi Bashour’s poignant road movie depicts an anxious mother transporting her delinquent son from Indiana to California, highlighting the glories of the American Midwest while unpacking the dynamics of parenting and letting go. Layal (Lubna Azabal, radiant) is a tightly wound Lebanese American who teaches Arabic to hapless students. While listening to a meditation program, […]
Saturday, May 2, 2026
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May 2, 2026 –Teen Filmmaking Workshop: Collaboration & Creativity
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May 2, 2026 –One in a Million
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May 2, 2026 –Hair, Paper, Water…
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May 2, 2026 –Jaripeo + Born at Night
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May 2, 2026 –Shorts Block 1: Human Flow
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May 2, 2026 –Mysterious Bird with Musical Performance by Gabriela Quintero featuring Daniel Ho
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May 2, 2026 –Amílcar
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May 2, 2026 –Salvation
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May 2, 2026 –To Hold a Mountain
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May 2, 2026 –Milk Teeth
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May 2, 2026 –Scenes from the Divide + The Baddest Speechwriter of All + La Tierra del Valor (The Home of the Brave)
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May 2, 2026 –Inside Amir
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May 2, 2026 –Yo (Love is a Rebellious Bird)
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May 2, 2026 –If We Don’t Burn, How Do We Light Up the Night
Teen Filmmaking Workshop: Collaboration & Creativity
Join director duo and multi-disciplinary artists Jess X. Snow (Roots That Reach Toward the Sky, Festival 2025) and Ashima Shiraishi, for a filmmaking workshop for teens focused on collaboration and creativity through multiple mediums. Recently named one of Filmmaker Magazine’s “25 New Faces of Independent Film,” Jess has written and directed four short films currently […]
One in a Million
Change unfolds swiftly and powerfully in this intimate, decade-spanning portrait of Syrian refugee Israa and her family as they navigate life across multiple countries. In 2015, directors Itab Azzam and […]
Hair, Paper, Water…
Cao Thị Hậu and her family live in Vietnam surrounded by rolling green hills enveloped in mist. Here, she sits with her grandchildren tending to their pains and spinning stories […]
Jaripeo + Born at Night
Within the world of bucking broncos and bull rides of the Michoacán jaripeo lurks a partially obscured world where queerness, masculinity, and desire churn together in a generative friction. This […]
Shorts Block 1: Human Flow
Traverse cityscapes, valleys, highways, and borders through films by an international ensemble of storytellers. In these vivid portraits of gathering and return, the dialogue between people and land is as […]
Mysterious Bird with Musical Performance by Gabriela Quintero featuring Daniel Ho
Music + Film returns to the Festival with the Grammy-winning guitarist Gabriela Quintero, stepping into her first solo spotlight. Beth Aala’s intimate new documentary follows Gaby as she creates her […]
Amílcar
Agricultural engineer Amilcar Cabral (1924–1973) dreamed of freedom for Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde in West Africa and set about making that liberation happen. In this impressionistic documentary, the life of […]
Salvation
Winner of the Berlinale’s Silver Bear, Emin Alper’s (Frenzy, Festival 2016) electrifying drama of power struggles in a Turkish mountain village exposes the chaos that erupts when territorialism takes root. […]
To Hold a Mountain
At first glance, Gara is a simple farmer, tending her crops and animals, making cheese, and caring for adolescent Nada. But there is far more to this woman who lives […]
Milk Teeth
Maria’s older sister Alina vanishes without a trace, last seen by Maria cutting through the schoolyard to take out the trash. That image haunts her as Alina remains missing and […]
Scenes from the Divide + The Baddest Speechwriter of All + La Tierra del Valor (The Home of the Brave)
A trio of documentaries survey the American political landscape, both past and present. Featuring Martin Luther King Jr. speechwriter Clarence B. Jones (in Stephen Curry’s directorial debut); rising voice Nezza, […]
Inside Amir
While he awaits the approval of a visa to join his girlfriend, Tara, abroad in Italy, Amir inhabits an existence in limbo. He spends his days biking through Tehran, delivering […]
Yo (Love is a Rebellious Bird)
One of director Anna Fitch’s closest friends, Yo was adventurous, self-assured, and headstrong. Before Yo passed away in 2013, Fitch spent countless hours capturing memories and anecdotes of Yo’s colorful […]
If We Don’t Burn, How Do We Light Up the Night
The placid surface of a rural Costa Rican town hides a mystery in Kim Torres’s striking debut feature. A newcomer to the village, teenaged Laura (Lara Yuja Mora) takes wary […]
Sunday, May 3, 2026
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May 3, 2026 –Space Cadet
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May 3, 2026 –Special Screening: The Kidnapping of Arabella
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May 3, 2026 –The Son and the Sea
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May 3, 2026 –Broken English
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May 3, 2026 –Amílcar
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May 3, 2026 –A Child of My Own
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May 3, 2026 –Shorts Block 3: Shapes of Love
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May 3, 2026 –Beau Travail
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May 3, 2026 –Special Screening: Power Ballad
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May 3, 2026 –The Arch
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May 3, 2026 –Renoir
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May 3, 2026 –Enough Is Enough
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May 3, 2026 –Those Who Whistle After Dark
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May 3, 2026 –Filipiñana
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May 3, 2026 –Rose of Nevada
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May 3, 2026 –Ungrateful Beings
Space Cadet
Canadian DJ and multihyphenated artist Kid Koala brings his unique gift for storytelling to a new medium as he makes his directorial debut with this delightful, animated adaptation of his […]
Special Screening: The Kidnapping of Arabella
Seven-year-old Arabella (Lucrezia Guglielmino) only wants to go Taco King, not listen to her boring father give a speech (Chris Pine, speaking flawless Italian). Given no choice in the matter, […]
The Son and the Sea
British writer/director Stroma Cairns makes a resonant feature debut with this coming-of-age drama focused on a young man trying to find his place in the world. The film is a […]
Broken English
I never saw myself as a pop singer,” says Marianne Faithfull in this wonderfully imaginative portrait of the iconic chanteuse that includes her last recorded performance. She’s speaking about her […]
Amílcar
Agricultural engineer Amilcar Cabral (1924–1973) dreamed of freedom for Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde in West Africa and set about making that liberation happen. In this impressionistic documentary, the life of […]
A Child of My Own
Based on a true story, A Child of My Own follows a woman so desperate to become a mother that she steals an infant. Director Maite Alberdi returns with a bold, inventive documentary that fuses dramatized sequences and first-person interviews to examine identity, ambition, and the weight of family pressures. At its center is Alejandra, […]
Shorts Block 3: Shapes of Love
In stories of queer love, intergenerational love, self-love, and love across borders, filmmakers deftly mediate between intimacy and universality. Seven films weave a fabric of love in many languages: phone calls, imagined conversations, home videos, handwritten letters, and stolen glances. Puppeteer Zach Dorn considers CGI-mediated closure in The Sopranos, while Mars Verrone assembles a portrait […]
Beau Travail
Claire Denis adds a new visual dimension to her work with this lyrical adaptation of Herman Melville’s allegorical Billy Budd, which shifts from the battling British navy of 1797 to the superfluous French Foreign Legion of 1999. On the African coast, in a nameless country of paradisiacal beauty and hellish poverty, a detachment of legionnaires—all […]
Special Screening: Power Ballad
An unexpected night spent with former boy-band sensation Danny (Nick Jonas) upends the world of wedding singer Rick (Paul Rudd), an American transplant who traded his rock-star ambitions for a quiet life in Ireland. When Danny later adapts a song Rick wrote without permission and it becomes a massive global hit, Rick struggles to convince […]
The Arch
The Arch is reminiscent of a classical story in the Ibsen or Jamesian mode—in an 18th-century village, a proud widow, Madam Tung, has allowed herself to be treated almost as a deity because of her virtuous behavior. When a troop of soldiers arrive to protect the farmers from bandits, the villagers believe this is a […]
Renoir
Set in late-80s suburban Tokyo, 11-year-old Fuki is thrust into adolescence by the harsh realities surrounding her parents. Her father Kenji (Lily Franky) is suffering from a terminal illness, and her mother Utako (Hikari Ishida) is overburdened by the consequences. For Fuki (Yui Suzuki), the specter of death begins manifesting in various corners of her […]
Enough Is Enough
Arriving fresh from it’s World Premiere at Berlinale, this documentary is a rare window into the Kivu War. Enough Is Enough follows Congolese filmmaker Elisé Sawasawa, whose displacement and refugee […]
Those Who Whistle After Dark
In Pinar Yorgancıoğlu’s atmospheric and darkly humorous tale, recently retired Melih struggles to find purpose in his post-career life. He jostles for his family’s attention while slowly preparing his late […]
Filipiñana
Isabel is a newly hired ball girl at a pristine golf course on Manila’s outskirts. An Ilokana from rural northern Philippines, she immediately feels out of place among the high-status […]
Rose of Nevada
George MacKay (1917) and Callum Turner (Masters of Air) star in this eerie drama as Cornish villagers who go to sea on the titular fishing vessel that recently reappeared in […]
Ungrateful Beings
David brings his two children on a summer vacation to the Croatian coast in hopes that the rustic camping and sparkling Adriatic Sea will bring his family closer together in […]