Cinematic Self-Love
Film-about-film themes and in-jokes somehow just go down easier when you’re mentally lost in the thicket of a film festival.
Showing 18 results for sbiff
Film-about-film themes and in-jokes somehow just go down easier when you’re mentally lost in the thicket of a film festival.
Matt Kettmann meets Charlie LeDuff, realizes he’s drunk, and then watches his stellar doc The United Gates of America. What do the residents of Canyon Lake, California have to teach us all? Plenty.
Charles Donelan relates the results of the Q&A with Borat star Sacha Baron Cohen. This online special features a full-length version of the talk. Donelan’s article ran in the Feb. 1, 2007 issue of The Independent.
With SBIFF’s Weekend One in the bag, it’s about time for a four-day retrospective of Indy photographer Paul Wellman’s best shots to date. Come inside and see what stars walked down the red carpet over the past few days.
This inspiring entry in the 2007 SBIFF details three men who overcame adverse circumstances to create art.
Hannah Tennant-Moore serves up two delicious reviews of the delightful French film Avenue Montaigne and the English Scenes of a Sexual Nature. In so doing, she shows how easy and cheap it is to travel the world in the form of SBIFF.
Nonetheless, this year we tried, so what follows is a roundup-in no particular order-of what our own critics felt were the best and worst parts of this year’s SBIFF.
It was one of last weekend’s many illuminating “only at the Film Festival” moments when Haskell Wexler screened his rough-hewn but lovable documentary Who Needs Sleep? at the Lobero Theatre.