For the first time, Bay Area movie buffs wonât have to trek out to snowy Utah to experience the Sundance Film Festival in January.
San Franciscoâs Roxie Theater will play host to the week-long festivalâs lineup of movies, talks and other events.
Sundance selected the Roxie, a historic indie theater with two screens, as one of 33 partner film presenters around the country. Itâs the only Northern California theater chosen to partner with the festival. The other two presenters in California are near Los Angeles.
âThanks to a constellation of independent cinema communities across the U.S. we are not putting on our festival alone,â said Sundance Festival Director Tabitha Jackson in a statement released Wednesday. âAt the heart of all this is a belief in the power of coming together, and the desire to preserve what makes a festival uniqueâa collaborative spirit, a collective energy, and a celebration of the art, artists, and ideas that leave us changed.â
The Roxie Theater is among the 33 presenters selected by Sundance around the country to screen 2021 festival programming. (Courtesy Roxie Theater)
Like many other cultural events these days, the Sundance Festival is also happening online.
And unless the COVID-19-related health and safety restrictions lift in time for the 2021 event, which runs Jan. 28âFeb. 3, the in-person screenings will take place at the Fort Mason Drive-In, and not at the theaterâs home-base in the Mission District.
The Roxieâs director of programming, Isabel Fondevila, told KQED the festivalâs organizers reached out to her over the summer about the potential collaboration.
âWeâre not sure why we are the only partner theater in Northern California because there are definitely a lot of fantastic independent movie theaters around here,â Fondevila said. âThe Roxie has been around for a while and has a reputation for its programing and curation. We do show mostly independent films, and that includes a lot of films that have come out of Sundance. So I think those things helped.â
Under the terms of the partnership, Fondevila said Sundance is making a financial contribution to all of the satellite screen partners, including the Roxie, to help cover some of the costs associated with putting together the festival in the many remote locations.
Fondevila said the festival is also providing its partners with additional resources, like sponsorship knowhow. Plus, the Roxie gets to keep all of the income from festival ticket sales in San Francisco.
âSundance does not need to do satellite screenings all over the country,â Fondevila said. âBut they really believe a healthy ecosystem for artists and audiences requires that independent cinemas across the country survive and thrive.â
Copyright 2020 KQED