• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
San Francisco Silent Film Festival

San Francisco Silent Film Festival

The San Francisco Silent Film Festival is a nonprofit organization dedicated to educating the public about silent film as an art form and as a culturally valuable historical record.

  • Events
        • Events

        • MAY 6   QUEEN KELLY
          MAY 7    AMAZING TALES FROM THE ARCHIVES
          MAY 7    THE ABYSS and THE CLOWN
        • Live Music

        • Musicians
        • Learn about our musical accompanists

        • Visit

        • Plan Your Visit
        • Accessibility
        • Things We Like
  • Support
    • SUPPORT SFSFF
    • Ways to Support
    • Letter from the Directors
    • Grantors and Sponsors
  • Preservation
    • The SFSFF Collection
    • Film Loan Applications
  • Library
    • Browse the Library
    • Our Musicians
    • Screening Room
    • Event Archive
Sign In Become a Member
Sign In
  • Event
  • San Francisco Silent Film Festival 2026

LOVE ONE ANOTHER

Music by Guenter Buchwald, Mas Koga, and Sascha Jacobsen
Director
Carl Th. Dreyer
Cast
Vladimir Gajdarov, Polina Piekowskaja, Richard Boleslawski

A cynical tsarist agent sews suspicion among peasants about Jews trying to replace them in order to weaken the revolutionary fervor gaining strength in the cities. Meanwhile one young woman from the shtetl just wants a say in her fate. Carl Dreyer’s moving depiction of anti-Semitism’s sinister harms, both macro and micro, is a silent-era rarity, yet typical in the care the director takes to attain a harrowing authenticity.

  • 99 minutes
  • Germany
  • 1922
  • DCP
Underwritten by
Sunrise Foundation for Education and the Arts
Special Support provided by
German Consulate General of San Francisco

Live musical accompaniment by Guenter Buchwald, Mas Koga, and Sascha Jacobsen

Conductor, composer, pianist, and violinist GUENTER BUCHWALD is a pioneer of the renaissance in silent film music. He has accompanied silent films for thirty-eight years with a repertoire of more than three thousand titles and has conducted orchestras worldwide from Iceland to Romania, Tokyo to Zurich. In great demand as a composer, he has scored silent films as varied as Suzuki and Ota’s What Made Her Do It?, René Clair`s Paris qui dort, Chaplin´s Pawn Shop, and Murnau’s Nosferatu. A soloist known for his virtuoso improvisation, he has appeared regularly at film festivals in Berlin, Bonn, Bologna, Zurich, Pordenone, and Seattle. He is a lecturer at the Film Science Institute at the University of Zurich and resident conductor of the Freiburg Philharmonic Orchestra for Silent Film in Concert. He is cofounder of the Silent Movie Music Company and is musical director of Bristol’s Slapstick Silent Film Festival in England.

New York based multi-instrumentalist MAS KOGA developed his worldview at an early age.  Soon after his birth in Chiba Japan, his family relocated to the US due to his father’s work, and he spent this adolescent years moving around multiple times. By the time he graduated high school, he had lived in three countries and nine different cities. Mas took an interest in music as a young child, especially in jazz. At 11 years old he started learning the trumpet and joined the school band. After another move to Munich, he had a chance to borrow an alto saxophone—and that changed his life. At 15, he began teaching himself with a magazine cutout of a fingering chart and CDs and cassettes of his favorite music. With an international upbringing, it was fitting that he found himself at San Jose State University in the Improvised Music Studies department, where he intensively studied and explored musical tradition from around the world. Fueled with a passion for cross-cultural experience, Mas started to incorporate the Japanese shakuhachi into his music, and began his apprenticeship with master shakuhachi artist Masayuki Koga. Mas’s sound encompasses the many cultural traditions he’s been touched by, and the worldview developed though diverse life experiences. He aims to create music that respects traditions and goes beyond styles and idioms to ultimately help diminish all forms of social boundaries.

Bassist SASCHA JACOBSEN draws on a variety of musical styles from classical to jazz and Argentine Tango. He has performed with Kronos Quartet, theatrical greats Rita Moreno, Mandy Patinkin and Patti LuPone, musicians Bonnie Raitt, Randy Newman, and Raul Jaurena, among many others. Jacobsen is in demand as a performer, composer, and arranger, with commissions by the San Jose Chamber Orchestra, Berkeley Youth Symphony, and SF Arts Council among others. He is also a dedicated teacher and has coached students at numerous arts and music schools in the Bay Area. Jacobsen is the founder of the Musical Art Quintet, which performs his original compositions, and plays bass in the group. SF Weekly writes, “Classical training and a taste for evocative melodies underpin this sound.”

Details

Original Language Title
DIE GEZEICHNETEN
Country
Germany
Director
Carl Th. Dreyer
Year
1922
Cast
Vladimir Gajdarov, Polina Piekowskaja, Richard Boleslawski
Source
Danish Film Institute
Runtime
99 minutes
Format
DCP
Sun, May 10, 2026
5:00 PM
Castro Theatre
$20 general
$18 member
Buy Tickets

Footer

How can we help?

info@silentfilm.org 415-777-4908
  • WRAPPER
        • True Art Transcends Time

        • ABOUT

        • About Us
        • Resources
        • Press Materials
        • Press Accreditation
        • SOCIAL

        • Facebook
        • Instagram
        • Subscribe

        • Photos by Pamela Gentile and Tommy Lau.
          Copyright © 2019 San Francisco Silent Film Festival Privacy Terms