The AFS Guide to SXSW 2024
Leave a CommentSXSW is a magical time of the year where, for a few weeks in March, the world turns its eyes on Austin, and the entire city transforms to exhibit the freshest work across creative disciplines and host countless artists, industry titans, fans, and supporters. For us, it’s all about the films and the Texas filmmakers who get the spotlight during the festival.
With so much going on, it can be hard to keep track of all the exciting events going on, but if you’re reading this, you’re a part of the Austin Film Society, which also means you’re now the recipient of our handy guide for all events in the AFS universe taking place at this year’s festival. Read on, help us support the talented members of the film community, and we hope to see you out and about during SXSW 2024!
AFS Filmmaker Events

The AFS community includes filmmakers from throughout Texas: those who’ve received support from the AFS Grant and members of the AFS Board of Directors. Many of these artists are exhibiting their in this year’s festival, so be sure to check out their screenings at various venues across town. (Click through film titles to see the showtimes for each film.)
Produced by Jessica Wolfson (AFS Grant Supported Filmmaker), and directed by Julie Lunde Lillesæter (Austin Public Producer)
CLEMENTE
Produced by Mike Blizzard (AFS Board Member), executive produced by Richard Linklater (AFS Artistic Director)
FADERS UP: THE JOHN AIELLI EXPERIENCE
Directed by David Hartstein and Sam Wainwright Douglas (AFS Grant Supported Filmmakers)
THE IN BETWEEN
Directed by Robie Flores (AFS Grant Funded Project)
LOS MOSQUITOS
Directed by Nicole Chi, produced by Edna Diaz (AFS Grant Funded Project)
THE PASSING
Directed by Ivete Lucas and Patrick Bresnan (AFS Grant Supported Filmmakers)
THE QUEEN VS. TEXAS
Directed by Emil Lozada (AFS Grant Supported Filmmaker)
Directed by Arturo Jiménez and Edna Diaz (AFS Grant Funded Project)
SASQUATCH SUNSET
Directed by David and Nathan Zellner (AFS Grant Supported Filmmakers)
SHÉ
Directed by Renee Zhan (AFS Grant Supported Filmmaker)
SING SING
Directed by Greg Kwedar, produced by Monique Walton and Clint Bentley (AFS Grant Supported Filmmakers)
SWAMP DOGG GETS HIS POOL PAINTED
Produced by Paul Lovelace (AFS Grant Supported Filmmaker)
SWITCH UP
Produced by Elizabeth Avellán (AFS Advisory Board Member)
AFS Panels
In addition to film screenings, AFS also gets to participate in panels and meetups with other members of the industry at large. Come and listen to members AFS’s leadership discuss a range of topics pertaining to the present and future of the Texas film industry.
SXSW EDU: Who’s Tracking the Creative Workforce?
Panelist Rakeda Ervin (AFS Director of Community Education)
March 4 | 1–2 PM | Austin Convention Center
Having access to creative workforce data is essential to the success of the creative industry. That’s why AFS Director of Community Education Rakeda Ervin and a panel of regional experts will discuss their insights at SXSW EDU. Educators, employers, and filmmakers are all invited to join this discussion about who is reflected in the data and the role we play in strengthening the industry’s ecosystem.
Trust the Process: The Making of SING SING
Moderator Holly Herrick (AFS Head of Film and Creative Media)
March 9 | 10–11:00 AM | Austin Convention Center (Room 17AB)
Join the filmmaking team for a deep dive into the seven year journey to bring SING SING to life from script to screen and what it takes to truly make films as a community. SING SING is screening as part of the SXSW Film & TV Festival. SXSW Film & TV badge holders are welcome.
The Shine Co. Presents Texas Studios’ Tapestry
Panelist Martin Jones (AFS Head of Austin Studios)
March 11 | 10:00 AM | Arterie House
AFS’s Head of Austin Studios Martin Jones joins panelists Heather Page and Mindy Raymond from The Shine Company at Arterie House to discuss stages, sustainability, and savings while giving a glimpse into the future of local film production. SXSW Film & TV badge holders are welcome; please email mindy@weareshineco.com to RSVP.
AFS Member ShortCase
March 10 | 12 PM | AFS Cinema
The AFS ShortCase is an annual program of short films made by AFS members at the MAKE level and above. The event will include a post-screening Q&A with the filmmakers featured in the program.
This screening is free and open to the public, but you must reserve your ticket in advance.
CAN I DANCE FOR A SANDWICH
Filmmaker: Mike Woolf, Beef and Pie Productions
Photographer Alan Pogue’s documentation of Austin’s cultural and political life over the last 50 years is unmatched. So of course he was there, in the rain, shutter clicking, catching a random moment as it became magic. ‘Dance for a Sandwich’ is one of ten short documentaries embedded in the 23rd Street Mural Project.
BABE MAGNET
Filmmaker: Rachel Kichler
Upon news of their cancelled flight, four strangers band together to rent a car from Corpus Christi to Houston.
TINY, TEXAS
Filmmaker: David Lykes Keenan
In 1980s Texas, a star player and his coach face off on the basketball court and, figuratively speaking, hard truths are revealed as the onion of their relationship is peeled back.
BLACK MAGIC
Filmmaker: Cristin Stephens
Black Magic is about a diversity hire who contends with the expectations of her boss at the cost of her identity.
REVERIE
Filmmaker: Kelli Horan
In a future where time travel is used as a form of therapy, Imogen grapples with the weight of her troubled past and is given the opportunity to revisit her younger self and confront the experiences that shaped her present self.
BOYZ NIGHT
Filmmaker: Chris Lyke
When their mutual friend flakes on game night, two acquaintances get to know each other better.
RACA
Filmmaker: Drew Saplin
Raca follows Nacho, a socially inept, katana-wielding weirdo in search of connection, as he treks across his small coastal town on the 4th of July on a quest to find ice for his “best friends” in time for the fireworks show.
GRILLED QUESO
Filmmaker: Sergio Muñoz Esquer
A night in the life of an immigrant couple working in a food truck in the busiest area in Austin.
THE HUNGRY STORYTELLER
Filmmaker: Yuta Yamaguchi
A three-year-old boy tells his first favorite story.
SXSW Film Satellite Venue: AFS Cinema

For 2024, the SXSW Film & TV Festival will be releasing a limited number of public pre-sale tickets for select screenings at select venues, including AFS Cinema. All screenings are general admission. Seating is subject to capacity and will occur on a priority basis approximately 45 minutes before the screening starts, and attendees are advised to arrive as early as 60 minutes prior to each screening. For more information, be sure to check out our website.
Among the 19 films we’re screening this year are GASOLINE RAINBOW (dir. the Ross brothers, BLOODY NOSE, EMPTY POCKETS); SING SING (dir. Greg Kwedar, prod. Monique Walton and Clint Bentley, all AFS Grant-supported filmmakers); the Austin-made AN ARMY OF WOMEN (prod. AFS-supported Jessica Wolfson, dir. Austin Public Producer Julie Lunde Lillesæter); YASMEEN’S ELEMENT (dir. Amman Abbasi, DAYVEON); and SASQUATCH SUNSET (dir. the Zellner brothers, DAMSEL, KUMIKO, THE TREASURE HUNTER).
This is a great way to catch some of the amazing films playing at the festival without having to compete for downtown parking. Plus, we feel there’s something extremely satisfying about drinking a margarita while seeing a movie before almost everyone else in the world.
March 9 | 11 AM | AFS Cinema
7 BEATS PER MINUTE
March 9 | 2:15 PM | AFS Cinema
SING SING
March 9 | 5:45 PM | AFS Cinema
TURTLES
March 9 | 9:15 PM | AFS Cinema
THE HOBBY
March 10 | 11:15 AM | AFS Cinema
DOPPELGÄNGERS³
March 10 | 2:45 PM | AFS Cinema
GIRLS WILL BE GIRLS
March 10 | 5:45 PM | AFS Cinema
YASMEEN’S ELEMENT
March 11 | 5:15 PM | AFS Cinema
KRZYK – LOSING CONTROL
Mar 11| 8:15 PM | AFS Cinema
SASQUATCH SUNSET
March 12 | 5:00 PM | AFS Cinema
March 12 | 8:15 PM | AFS Cinema
DORY PREVIN: ON MY WAY TO WHERE
March 13 | 6:00 PM | AFS Cinema
SMUGGLERS
March 13 | 9:00 PM | AFS Cinema
SHE LOOKS LIKE ME
March 14 | 5:30 PM | AFS Cinema
A HOUSE IS NOT A DISCO
March 14 | 9:00 PM | AFS Cinema
AN ARMY OF WOMEN
March 15 | 6:00 PM | AFS Cinema
7 KEYS
March 15 | 9:15 PM | AFS Cinema
RESYNATOR
March 16 | 12:00 PM | AFS Cinema
HOW TO BUILD A TRUTH ENGINE
March 16 | 3:30 PM | AFS Cinema
Kawase’s relationship with her parents is further dissected in SKY, WIND, FIRE, WATER, EARTH (2001) where she processes the sudden death of her long-absent father. The film begins with her looking back on her previous film diaries, EMBRACING and THE GRANDMOTHER TRILOGY. The audience is invited to join her as she subjectively approaches the interpretation of her past and begins to understand the impact her upbringing had on her sense of self. In an effort to further define this, we are given access to conversations with her mother about motherhood and the dissolution of her parents’ marriage. Later she visits a tattoo artist, initially contemplating getting an identical tattoo to her father’s, engaging in a lengthy conversation about her creativity, trauma, and even her own narcissism. Kawase, at her core, uses her films, regardless of genre, to answer her own questions about life. Would her career be where it is now without the separation of her parents? Can the death of a loved one shake one’s regard for mortality or even redefine the trajectory of an artist’s output? These self discoveries are significant to understanding Kawase’s cinema.
Often in her work, Kawase’s camera feels voyeuristic. Persistently handheld, the camera follows or invades the spaces of her characters. In the opening of SHARA (2003), the camera meanders through a building and happens upon two young brothers playing together before following them (in an impressive long take) as they play tag through a labyrinthine neighborhood. It feels invasive until the scene serves to reveal the inexplicable disappearance of one of the brothers. The film then follows two teenagers as they approach adulthood: one boy, Shun, still working through the guilt and grief of losing his brother years prior as his mother (played by Naomi Kawase herself) is approaching the birth of another child; and a girl, Yu, questioning her own identity when she learns that her mother is actually her aunt (a clear self-referential plot). The film ends with Shun’s mother giving birth, shot in a way that make it feel like we’re intruding on the family in this private moment. Again, here, the camera lingers, revealing the wonder and community that new life can bring.
The death of her father and the impending (and eventual) death of her grandmother influenced many of Naomi Kawase’s following films. TARACHIME (2006) saw her point the camera toward herself again as she documented her own pregnancy and childbirth while reckoning with her grandmother’s deteriorating health. THE MOURNING FOREST (winner of the 2007 Grand Prix at Cannes) sees a caretaker and elderly man, both grieving, lose themselves in a local forest, in a tale about the use of work as a distraction from processing one’s emotions. And again in STILL THE WATER (2014), the ephemeral nature of life is displayed as a teenage couple learns to let go of those who leave. It may seem obvious to some for an auteur to mine their own life for art, but Naomi Kawase embraces this technique — she breathes her experiences into broader characters for us to relate to, sure, but also for her own well being.
Now that the subjects of her film diaries have largely passed, in more recent years, Naomi Kawase has transitioned to more commercial narrative films compared to her enigmatic early works. However, she continues to excavate her own life into this new period of her career. Although the film is fiction, in SWEET BEAN (2015) the elderly heroine — played by the late, always magnetic Kirin Kiki (SHOPLIFTERS) — is modeled after Kawase’s grandmother. The heroine of RADIANCE has both an absent father and a mother in a deteriorating condition. A trailblazing force for female directors in Japan, Naomi Kawase has used her family and own self reflections to create cinema since the start of her career, reminding us all the effects our persisting ruminations of the past can have on our present.

















