Los Gatos Weekly Times

Cinequest goes live again in South Bay after 2½ years

Film festival was cut short by COVID-19 in 2020

- By Anne Gelhaus agelhaus@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

When COVID-19 cut Cinequest short in March 2020, the plan was to mount the second half of the San Jose film festival in August of that year.

Fast-forward to August of this year, and Cinequest is making its much-anticipate­d return to an in-person format. Films are set to be screened and events are set to be held Tuesday through Aug. 29.

“We thought we were postponing for a few months, but that wasn't the case,” says Halfdan Hussey, co-founder and CEO of Cinequest Inc.

The 2½-year hiatus gave Hussey and the rest of the Cinequest staff some time to regroup.

“We've done it for quite a while, so it was nice to take a bit of a break,” Hussey says of the in-person festival. “I'm envisionin­g having fun

again like it's the first year. We don't have any expectatio­ns because we're coming out of the pandemic.”

The first Cinequest was held in 1990, with the first Maverick Spirit Award going to Jon Jost for his innovation­s

in filmmaking. This year's Maverick winners include Jim Gaffigan, whose film “Linoleum” will be screened on the festival's opening night.

While Cinequest has featured plenty of establishe­d artists over the years, the festival is also a showcase for up-and-coming filmmakers from all over the world. This year's 220 films represent 55 countries and include 130 world or U.S. premieres.

Hussey says festival submission­s increased from 2020.

“For us, the biggest surprise with the film artists was that our expectatio­ns were that not a lot of great films were made in the last 2½ years,” he adds. “This year is the biggest comedy and inspiratio­nal film lineup we've had. People are bummed out enough; let's do something to make them laugh.”

About 60 percent of the films at the in-person Cinequest were also screened during one of two online versions of the festival held during the pandemic. Cinejoy had already launched pre-pandemic, and Hussey says the online festival will take place regularly along with the in-person version.

“We've done three versions of Cinejoy,” he adds. “Every one has found a new way of bringing forward aspects you find at an in-person film festival. It helped extend our reach to different people who wouldn't show up to San Jose.”

While the online festival brought in new audiences, Hussey says, “It doesn't replace the experience of getting people together in person and meeting and talking. I'm really stoked that we were able to come back.

“Cinequest has always been about community,” he adds. “Not being able to do this for two years makes you realize this is special.” The festival is dropping the virtual reality component that was showcased in recent years to focus on films.

“It's nice to make that the focal point of the festival,” Hussey says.

While the in-person festival is usually held earlier in the year, Hussey says no decision has been made about when next year's Cinequest will be.

“We have to be fluid and flexible,” he adds. “We'll see how August goes.”

For ticket informatio­n and the full festival lineup, visit https://cinequest.org.

 ?? STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Cinequest founders Halfdan Hussey and Kathleen Powell announce in March 2020the festival's second week would be reschedule­d due to coronaviru­s concerns. Fast-forward to this year, and Cinequest is making its much-anticipate­d return Tuesday.
STAFF ARCHIVES Cinequest founders Halfdan Hussey and Kathleen Powell announce in March 2020the festival's second week would be reschedule­d due to coronaviru­s concerns. Fast-forward to this year, and Cinequest is making its much-anticipate­d return Tuesday.

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