San Diego International Film Festival

The San Diego International Film Festival is an independent film festival in San Diego, California, produced by the non-profit San Diego Film Foundation. The main event has traditionally been held annually in the autumn at venues in the Gaslamp Quarter, La Jolla and Balboa Park.

San Diego International Film Festival
Festival co-hosts Jeffrey Lyons, Ben Lyons and Scott Mantz at a Critics Panel in 2016.
LocationSan Diego and La Jolla
Established2001
Founded byKarl Kozak, Robin Laatz
AwardsGolden Eagle, Kumeyaay Eagle, Gregory Peck Award, Chris Brinker Award
Artistic directorTonya Mantooth
Websitesdfilmfest.com

The festival hosts celebrity awards banquets, panel discussions, retrospectives, parties, premieres and contemporary independent narrative, documentary and short film screenings. Competitive juried categories vary year to year and have included foreign language, animated, Native American, military, social justice, equestrian, thrillers and local films made in San Diego.

Special advanced screenings for VIP members[1] and educational programs[2] for San Diego area high schools are held year round in addition to an annual formal "Oscar watch party" in the winter.[3]

History

The San Diego International Film Festival (originally just "The San Diego Film Festival") and its non-profit foundation were founded in 2001 by event planner Robin Laatz and her filmmaker husband Karl Kozak.[4]

Opening night films have screened at the historic Balboa Theatre.

In its first decade, films premiering at the festival included Roger Dodger, The Blair Witch Project, Fahrenheit 9/11, An Inconvenient Truth, Waiting for Superman, Napoleon Dynamite, Primer, The Machinist and Born Into Brothels.

The festival has been designated "Best Party Fest" and "Best Beach Fest" by the "Ultimate Film Festival Survival Guide."[5] It has also been criticized along the same lines for being "more intent on throwing parties than putting quality films on the screen."[6]

New Leadership/Native Direction

In 2012, leadership passed to husband and wife producers Dale Strack and Tonya Mantooth.[7] According to Strack said they were modeling it after Napa Valley Film Festival, with a "longer term goal" of rivaling Sundance or TriBeCa.[6]

The festival expanded to a second location in La Jolla the same year.

Another new change was the establishment of a "Native American Advisory Board," whose name was changed in 2017 to "American Indian Advisory Board".[8] Tribes represented on the AIA board include Sac and Fox, Luiseño, Kumeyaay, Seminole, Lipan/Mescalero Apache and the Barona Band of Mission Indians. Notable members of the board include character actor Saginaw Grant (The Lone Ranger, Breaking Bad), Randolph Mantooth (Emergency!, Sons of Anarchy, brother of Tonya Mantooth) and Erica Pinto, the Chairwoman of Jamul Indian Village.[9]

2012-2019

Notable films premiering at the festival during this time include Silver Linings Playbook, 12 Years a Slave, He Named Me Malala, Goosebumps, The Imitation Game, Wild, Lion, Tiger, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, Call Me By Your Name, Marshall, The Favourite, Widows, Boy Erased, Jojo Rabbit, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Marriage Story, The Irishman, and Parasite.

In 2013, New York area film critic Jeffrey Lyons was added as festival host and made honorary jury chairman. He acted as host or as co-host along with his with son Ben Lyons or with Access Hollywood film critic Scott Mantz, up until 2018, when Mantz hosted solo.

The festival added "International" to its name in 2016, having previously been known only as the San Diego Film Festival.[10]

In 2016, the festival established a Film Insider Series for VIP members to watch featured official selections and festival winners, premieres and special advanced screenings throughout the year.[11]

In September 2019, the festival began hosting free screenings of popular movies on Mission Beach.[12]

In 2019, the festival expanded to six days and hosted a second opening night film (The Irishman) at the La Jolla Village.[13][14]

2020-present

Notable films premiering at the festival during this time include Nomadland, The French Dispatch, Spencer, The Power of the Dog, The Lost Daughter, The Banshees of Inisherin and The Inspection.

In 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the festival was reduced to four days and presented 114 films both virtually and on drive-thru screens.[15][16]

As of 2020, the San Diego International Film Festival is a qualifying festival for the Canadian Screen Awards.[17]

In 2021, limited in-person screenings resumed at new venues including the Museum of Photographic Arts and the San Diego Museum of Art in Balboa Park, as well as the Catamaran Resort in Mission Bay.[18] A special screening was held on the deck on a historic aircraft carrier at the USS Midway Museum.[19]

In 2022, after organizers at the Women's Museum of California's had ended their Women's Film Festival due to the COVID-19 pandemic, they joined forces with the San Diego Festival to present a women's series of films.[20]

In 2023, the film festival's opening night is being held at Westfield UTC AMC on October 8. Where, for the festival's 22nd year, they will have a showing of the Oscar winning film, The Holdovers.[21] The Festival will be occurring October 18th-22nd at Balboa Park’s Museum of Photographic Arts, during those 5 days there will be showing 91 films of the 3,200 films that were submitted. The theme of this years Festival is "Celebrating the power of film," meaning films will be outlining the importance of film and it's impact on our society and community.[22][23]

Awards

Alan Arkin was the first recipient of the Gregory Peck Award at the San Diego Film Festival in 2014

Gregory Peck Award

The Gregory Peck Award for Cinematic Excellence has been presented by the family of San Diego native Gregory Peck at the festival since 2014. Recipients at the San Diego festival include Andy Garcia,[24] Laurence Fishburne,[25][26] Keith Carradine, Patrick Stewart,[27] Annette Bening[28] and Alan Arkin.[29] The family originally presented the award at the Dingle International Film Festival in Ireland. Previous recipients include Gabriel Byrne, Jim Sheridan, Jean-Jacques Beineix and Laura Dern.[30]

Chris Brinker Award

The Chris Brinker Award was created by the family of Chris Brinker, a San Diego area producer best known for The Boondock Saints movies, who died of a brain aneurysm at the age of 42.[31] The award is given every year to the best first time director in competition at the festival.

Golden Eagle

Since 2014, honored celebrities and winning filmmakers have been presented with a "Golden Eagle" themed statuette, sculpted by Apache artist Ruben Chato.[32]

Kumeyaay Eagle Award

An annual award presented to the best film competing in the American Indian track.[33]

Night of the Stars Awards

The festival offers other awards - Auteur, Vanguard, Humanitarian, Rising Star, etc. - that vary year to year. Honorees include:

Gala Event Films

Year Opening Night Other Galas Closing Night Ref
2022 Armageddon Time (dir. James Gray) The Banshees of Inisherin (dir. Martin McDonagh)

The Lost King (dir. Stephen Frears)

Taurus (dir. Tim Sutton)

Empire of Light (dir. Sam Mendes) [48]
2021 C'mon, C'mon - (dir. Mike Mills) The French Dispatch (dir. Wes Anderson)

Spencer (dir. Pablo Larrain)

Belfast (dir. Kenneth Branagh)

The Power of the Dog (dir. Jane Campion)

The Worst Person in the World (dir. Joachim Trier)

The Lost Daughter (dir. Maggie Gyllenhaal) [49]
2020 Nomadland - (dir. Chloé Zhao) - drive-in

Drunk Bus - virtual village

Stardust (dir. Gabriel Range) - World Premiere

Blithe Spirit (dir. Edward Hall)

MLK/FBI - virtual village [15][16]
2019 Jojo Rabbit (dir. Taika Waititi) - Gaslamp

The Irishman (dir. Martin Scorsese) - La Jolla

The Kill Team (dir. Dan Knauss)

Motherless Brooklyn (dir. Edward Norton)

Clemency (dir. Chinonye Chuckwu, US)

Parasite (dir. Bong Joon Ho)

The Truth (dir. Hirokazu Kore-eda)

Marriage Story (dir. Noah Baumbach) - Gaslamp

A Hidden Life (dir. Terrence Malick) - La Jolla

[50][51]
2018 Can You Ever Forgive Me?

(dir. Marielle Heller, US)

Everybody Knows (dir. Asghar Farhadi)

Widows (dir. Steve McQueen)

The Favourite (dir. Yorgos Lanthimos)

Wildlife (dir. Paul Dano)

Boy Erased (dir. Joel Edgerton)
2017 Marshall (dir. Reginald Hudlin, US) Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Call Me By Your Name (dir. Luca Guadagnino)

Thelma (dir. Joachim Trier, Norway)

Killing Gunther (dir. Taren Killam) - World Premiere

The Last Movie Star as Dog Years (dir. Adam Rifkin)

Dismissed (dir. Benjamin Arfman, US)

World Premiere

2016 Other People (dir. Chris Kelly, US) Lion (dir. Garth Davis, Australia)

Denial (dir. Mick Jackson, UK/USA)

Julieta (dir. Pedro Almodovar, Spain)

The Eagle Huntress (UK/Mongolia)
2015 Septembers of Shiraz (dir. Wayne Blair) Blackway as Go With Me

Diablo (dir. Lawrence Roeck)

Youth (dir. Paolo Sorrentino, Italy)

He Named Me Malala

2014 Wild (dir. Jean-Marc Vallée, US) The Imitation Game (UK/US)

The Equalizer (dir. Antoine Fuqua)

You're Not You (US) [52]
2013 12 Years a Slave (dir. Steve McQueen, UK/US)

The German Doctor (dir. Lucía Puenzo)

August: Osage County (US) [53]
2012 Silver Linings Playbook (dir. David O. Russell)

Seven Psychopaths (dir. Martin McDonagh)

Quartet (dir. Dustin Hoffman, UK)

The Sapphires (dir. Wayne Blair, Aus)

[54]
2011 50/50 (dir. Jonathan Levine, US) Like Crazy (dir. Drake Doremus) The Bully Project (dir. Lee Hirsch) [55]
2010 Waiting For "Superman" [56]
2008 The Lucky Ones (dir. Neil Burger) Morning Light (dir. Mark Monroe) [57]
2004 The Machinist (dir. Brad Anderson)

Primer (dir. Shane Carruth)

Dear Frankie (dir. Shona Auerbach)

Born Into Brothels (dir. Zana Briski)

[58]
2003 Broadway: The Golden Age (dir. Rick McKay)

Mothers & Daughters

[59]
2002 Rodger Dodger (dir. Dylan Kidd, US) Now You Know (dir. Jeff Anderson, US) Anything But Love as Standard Time (US) [60]

Partnerships

Films frrom San Diego that win or are nominated in the 48 Hour Film Project are screened during the festival every year.

The San Diego International Film Festival has partnered with the San Diego County Office of Education and the San Diego Unified School District to bring films about social issues like homelessness, water pollution and refugees to area high schools.[39]

The festival - along with the GI Film Festival, FilmOut San Diego, San Diego Asian Film Festival, San Diego Latino Film Festival, Horrible Imaginings Film Festival - submits films to San Diego Film Week, a city-wide spring showcase produced by Film Consortium San Diego. Submitted films are eligible to win San Diego Film Awards.[61]

See also

References

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