San Francisco Green Film Festival


The San Francisco Green Film Festival was an environmental film festival which was held annually from 2011 to 2019.

History

The festival was founded by Rachel Caplan, who had previously worked for the Edinburgh Film Festival, the San Francisco Film Society and the San Francisco Ocean Film Festival.
The first festival in 2011 featured the Brazilian documentary film Hauling directed by Sean Walsh, and the film ' by Werner Herzog. Author Margaret Atwood appeared for a satellite Q&A after the screening of In the Wake of the Flood, a documentary by Ron Mann on Atwood's book tour for her novel The Year of the Flood. French photographer Yann Arthus-Bertrand presented a screening of Home. The German documentary ' had its U.S. premiere at the festival. The festival's 2011 Green Tenacity Award was awarded to Swedish director Fredrik Gertten for the film Bananas!*.
The 2012 festival included The Island President by Bay Area Filmmaker Jon Shenk, and British director Anthony Baxter’s You've Been Trumped in a double bill with the 1983 Bill Forsyth classic Local Hero. Prizewinners included Baxter and Blood in the Mobile by Danish director Frank Piasecki Poulsen.
Films and guests at the 2013 festival included environmental activist Tim DeChristopher at Bidder 70, Bay Area director Nancy Kelly at the Opening Night premiere of Rebels with a Cause, director Ben Kalina at the West Coast Premiere of Shored Up, Sundance winner A River Changes Course from director Kalyanee Mam, a spotlight of German director Thomas Riedelsheimer including films Breathing Earth and Garden in the Sea, and an outdoor screening of Tiny - a story about living small with a solar-powered projector in Annie Alley in downtown San Francisco. Swiss director Markus Imhoof received the Best Feature Award for his documentary More Than Honey.
The 2014 Festival took place from May 29 to June 4 at the Roxie Theater in San Francisco's Mission district. According to the Festival program, there were more than 60 new environmental films; guests included author Jonathan Franzen for Emptying the Skies, marine scientist David Ainley for The Last Ocean, and agriculturalist Cary Fowler for Seeds of Time.
The 2015 festival was the 5th Annual San Francisco Green Film Festival and took place from May 28 to June 3. In 2015, the theme was Changing Cities. The festival theme was explored in seven programs ranging from Bikes vs Cars; Museum of the Hidden City, a 'live' performance piece with actors and film projections; The Chinese Mayor. Speakers at the 2015 festival of over 96 filmmakers and guests included writer Dan Koeppel, Greenpeace’s Annie Leonard, Pixar’s Ralph Eggleston, City Hall’s Bevan Dufty, OPS’ Louie Psihoyos and many local scientists, academics and activists.
The 6th Annual San Francisco Green Film Festival took place from April 14 through April 20, 2016. The theme was Keep It Wild - "from the highest mountain tops, to the deepest forests, and the parks in between, Green Film Fest 2016 is bringing you characters that are taking on fierce battles and beautiful adventures to protect their bit of wild and prove the outdoors is for everyone". The Festival opened with the new film from Josh Fox, How To Let Go Of The World at the Castro Theatre and closed with the 50th Anniversary screening of Born Free with actress/activist Virginia McKenna in attendance. There were 68 films, with over 100 guests and filmmakers throughout the Festival at venues across the San Francisco Bay Area.
The 2017 Green Film Fest was held in April 20–26 as a citywide celebration for Earth Day.
Green Film Fest 2018 was scheduled to take place in September to align with the Global Climate Action Summit, an event held in San Francisco in support of the Paris Climate Agreement.
In 2019, the Green Film Festival took place for the last time. The tenth edition was planned to be held over 10 days in September 2020, but in July, founder and CEO Rachel Caplan announced that the festival would cease operations due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Around that time, it had a staff of three employees, not counting its board of directors.

Venues

Best Feature Award

New juried award introduced in 2017 for Best Bay Area Environmental Feature with $5,000 prize.
The Festival is a member of the Green Film Network, an association of worldwide environmental film festivals.