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Cine Latino at the 67th San Francisco International Film Festival


  • Bay Area, San Francico USA (map)

67th Annual San Franciso Film Festival

April 24-28, 2024

The San Francisco Film Festival, the longest-running festival in the Americas, has announced its lineup for its 67th edition. Aiming to welcome, hear, and give resources for independent voices in film to thrive, this Bay Area festival connects and inspires audiences, students and teachers, and filmmakers through film exhibition, youth education, and artist development programs. 

For tickets and more information visit: https://sffilm.org

EUREKA
(Lisandro Alonso, Argentina/France/Portugal/Germany/Mexico, 2023, 146 min. In English, Lakota, Portuguese with English subtitles)

A triptych of stories focused on Indigenous culture in the Americas takes the spotlight in the latest feature from one of international cinema’s most exciting auteurs, Lisandro Alonso. A striking opening sequence revisits and remixes his last film Jauja (Festival 2015), reuniting the director with lead actor Viggo Mortenson, who plays a gunslinger looking for his kidnapped daughter. In an abrupt shift of location, filmmaking style, and gaze, the scenario moves to the Pine Ridge reservation in wintry South Dakota where Native American police officer Alaina searches for another missing young woman. And in the final segment, a shape-shifting bird introduces viewers to a forest-dwelling tribe in the Amazon and a community contending with interpersonal rivalries. Employing different cinematic styles and an increasingly dreamlike narrative, Eureka (which premiered at Cannes) is elusive and pointed in its willingness to abandon traditional storytelling methods in favor of something stranger and more magical.

Thursday, April 25, 2:45pm at the Premier Theatre at One Letterman

HEARTLESS / SEM CORAÇÃO
(Nara Normande and Tião, Brazil/France/Italy, 2024, 90 min. In Portuguese with English subtitles) *Q&A with director

In this drama inspired by co-director Nara Normande’s own life, teenage Tamara spends the summer of 1996 hanging with her group of friends before leaving them behind to study in Brasilia. While restlessly exploring her village on Brazil’s northwest coast, Tamara’s relationships begin to shift. She grows apart from her boyfriend Kinzão while developing an attraction for another girl, nicknamed “Heartless” for the surgical scar on her chest. Dazzling images illustrate this magical realist coming-of-age tale that touches on a young woman’s blossoming sexuality and anxious anticipation of the future. Normande and her co-director Tião elegantly weave poetic sentiments with fantastical elements to spin a strikingly poignant story of the connection between nature, sexuality, and growing up.

Thursday, April 25, 2:45pm at the Premier Theatre at One Letterman

ALEMANIA
(María Zanetti, Argentina/Spain, 2023, 87 min. In Spanish with English subtitles) *Q&A with director

María Zanetti’s vivid debut feature, inspired by her own family’s story, tells the story of Lola, a 16-year-old who dreams of escaping her challenging homelife. Lola struggles with school and driving lessons but the mental illness of her older sister Julieta presents greater challenges. Julieta consumes their parents’ time and money, leaving Lola often ignored, at constant odds with her mother, and dreaming of a different life. Maite Aguilar makes an indelible screen debut as a young woman yearning for refuge and security in this complex drama that drifts between a teen’s inherent need to embark on her own path and the difficulties her parents face in meeting the disparate needs of their daughters. Striking cinematography further enhances this vibrant coming-of-age tale, which won the Best Director and Best Screenplay prizes at Cine Ceará—Ibero-American Film Festival.

Friday, April 26, 8:45pm at the Marina Theatre and Saturday, April 27, 7:15pm at BAMPFA

THE INVENTION OF SPECIES / LA INVENCIÓN DE LAS ESPECIES
(Tania Hermida, Ecuador/Cuba, 2024, 91 min. In Spanish with English subtitles. World premiere)
*Q&A with director

When Carla’s dad drags her to the Galápagos Islands for a convention on conservation and species evolution, she is less than thrilled. On the cusp of womanhood and grappling with the loss of her brother, Carla finds herself adrift on the historic archipelago that led to Charles Darwin’s breakthrough studies on adaptation. Befriending two young boys who become her emotional foils, Carla pretends to be a different version of herself in order to surmount this emotional and physical journey. In this stunningly lensed lyrical debut, Tania Hermida deftly toys with parables while exploring the evolving relationship between man and nature. With Terrence Malick stylings, hints of Agnès Varda observational irony, and a dash of Alice Rohrwacher magical-realism, this tender film is a celebration of the shared sentient experience—biological and emotional.

Saturday, April 27, 7:30pm at the Vogue Theatre

THE PRACTICE / LA PRÁCTICA
(Martín Rejtman, Argentina/Chile/Germany/Portugal, 2023, 95 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)

Argentina’s master of deadpan humor Martín Rejtman (Silvia Prieto, Festival 1999; Two Shots Fired, Festival 2014) returns with a droll satire of relationships and wellness culture in a tale centered on an Argentine yoga instructor living in Chile. Gustavo (Esteban Bigliardi) is recently divorced and struggling with the end of his marriage, problems at his yoga studio, and an injury he is trying to treat with exercise instead of the recommended surgery. An ex-wife he is still in love with, a nagging mother who wants him to return from Chile, a student recovering from a brain injury, another student who may be a thief, and a comely pharmacist are among the characters whose lives and problems intersect in Rejtman’s surreal, absurd, and complex comedy.

Saturday, April 27, 8:45pm at the Marina Theatre

MACARIO
(Roberto Gavaldón, Mexico, 1960, 91 min. In Spanish with English subtitles)
*Q&A with awardee Gary Meyer and presenter Anne Thompson

A village’s Day of the Dead celebration foreshadows a bewitching magical realist fable in director Roberto Gavaldón’s dreamy adaptation of a B. Traven (The Treasure of the Sierra Madre) short story set in colonial Mexico. Impoverished woodcutter Macario (Ignacio López Tarso) has never gone a day without hunger, more acute now that he has five children to feed. His wife produces a rare turkey for him and him alone to eat but when he elects to share it with a mysterious stranger, he gains the power to heal, a gift that enriches the family but also puts Macario in the murderous crosshairs of the Spanish Inquisition. Mexico’s first foreign-language film Oscar nominee, its star López Tarso won the Golden Gate Award for Best Actor when Macario screened at the 1960 Festival. Gabriel Figueroa’s (Luis Buñuel’s The Exterminating Angel) luminous black-and-white cinematography sparkles anew and astonishes in a 4K restoration.

Presented as part of the SFFILM Mel Novikoff Award. For over 30 years, the SFFILM Mel Novikoff Award is given to an individual or institution whose work has enhanced the film-going public’s appreciation of world cinema. This year’s Mel Novikoff presentation will include Gary Meyer in conversation with IndieWire Editor-at-Large Anne Thompson, followed by a screening of the 1960 Mexican classic Macario and Jessica Yu‘s memorable short Sour Death Balls.

Saturday, April 27, 12pm at the Premiere Theatre