18 Best Performing Arts in San Francisco, California

Castro Theatre

Castro Fodor's choice

A large neon sign marks the exterior of this 1,400-plus-seat art-deco movie palace whose exotic interior transports you back to 1922, when the theater first opened. High-profile festivals present films here, along with classic revivals and foreign flicks. There are a few cult-themed drag shows every month. Lines for the Castro's popular sing-along movie musicals often trail down the block.

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American Indian Film Festival

Presented by the American Indian Film Institute, this event has been based in San Francisco since 1977. Each November the festival takes over various venues, including the Palace of Fine Arts Theatre.

Balboa Theatre

Richmond

This historic theater, which just celebrated its 88th birthday, features a combination of classic movies, second-run hits, local documentaries, and art-house favorites.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Embarcadero Center Cinemas

Embarcadero

Shows often sell out at this extremely popular five-screen theater, which screens the best in first-run independent, art-house, and foreign films.

1 Embarcadero Center, promenade level, San Francisco, California, 94111, USA
415-352–0835

Film Night in the Park

One of the best times you can have watching a movie in San Francisco—and it's free—the Film Night in the Park is wildly popular. Put on by the San Francisco Neighborhood Theater Foundation, the event shows free films throughout the city from mid to late summer. Films like The Graduate, JAWS 3 in 3D, Sixteen Candles, and Citizen Kane are screened in outdoor spaces such as Union Square or Dolores Park. All shows begin at dusk. Bring a picnic, but chairs are not welcome.

Mill Valley Film Festival

Marin County's annual film festival, in early October, is a renowned community event. The films shown span the genres, from features and documentaries to video, animated, and experimental film.

Opera Plaza Cinemas

Civic Center

The four theaters and their screens are small, but this is often the last place you can see an independent or foreign film before it ends its run in the city. It's great for indie-film-loving procrastinators, but if you arrive late for the show, you may have to sit in the front row of the tiny screening room.

601 Van Ness Ave., between Turk St. and Golden Gate Ave., San Francisco, California, 94102, USA
415-771–0183

Pacific Film Archive

Affiliated with the University of California, this theater screens a comprehensive mix of classics, American, and foreign films.

Paramount Theatre

The spectacular art-deco Paramount screens a few vintage flicks (The Sting, Casablanca) every month and presents live events.

Roxie Theater

Mission District

This is San Francisco's oldest continually operating theater, which turned 100 back in 2009. Film noir and indie features and documentaries, as well as first-run movies and classic foreign cinema, are the specialties. It's also home to the city's Noise Pop Festival. Monday nights are discounted.

San Francisco CAAMFest

Asian and Asian-American cinema is the focus of this March festival, presented by the Center for Asian American Media (CAAM). The lineup includes feature and short films and videos—everything from animation to documentaries.

San Francisco IndieFest & DocFest

This popular event presents a slate of movies that are defiantly out of the mainstream. IndieFest caters to a younger demographic and specializes in oddball fare rarely programmed at other festivals; DocFest performs the same service for documentaries that you won't find at the local multiplex.

San Francisco International Film Festival

For two weeks at the end of spring, the San Francisco Film Society—which also sponsors year-round screenings and film series—takes over several theaters, including the Castro Theatre, the Sundance Kabuki Cinema, and Pacific Film Archive, to launch this festival. The event schedules about 300 films, documentaries, and videos from 50 countries; many are U.S. premieres.

San Francisco Jewish Film Festival

In late July and early August, the Castro Theatre and other Bay Area venues screen films as part of this event. Parties on the opening and closing nights of the festival celebrate the films and filmmakers.

Sundance Kabuki Cinema

Japantown

Moviegoing here is a first-class experience. The seating is comfy and spaced out, and you can reserve your seat in advance online, so you don't need to arrive an hour early to snag one. The standard concession items are available, along with food options that are borderline gourmet. Beer and wine—which you can take into the theater!—are also served. Film screenings run the gamut from mainstream blockbusters to offbeat indies.

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The Clay

Pacific Heights

This small but comfortable single-screen theater dates to 1910 and shows first-run art-house films.

2261 Fillmore St., at Clay St., San Francisco, California, 94115, USA
415-561–9921