REEL TALK
San Antonio Film Festival honors '80s heartthrob Andrew McCarthy
Andrew McCarthy, seen here with Demi Moore, will be in town for the San Antonio Film Festival.
Let’s get this out of the way for Gen Xers. One of the most iconic actors of the John Hughes era, Andrew McCarthy, will be in town July 26 to accept the San Antonio Film Festival’s (SAFILM) annual Maverick Award.
But though the star of seminal works like St. Elmo’s Fire and Pretty in Pink adds some voltage to the 32nd annual festival, celebrity is less important than films themselves — and earning San Antonio a spot in the international scene.
San Antonio College alum Adam Rocha founded the SAFILM after having a short film selected for the San Diego Latino Student Film Festival. He saw similarities in the two cities and took the spirit home, creating a rag-tag version of the current fest in 1994 with a dozen movies and a low-rider bike awarded to best picture.
This year, SAFILM will screen more than 200 works from July 21-26 at marquee venues, including Tobin Center for the Performing Arts, Radius Center, City Base Cinema,Gunter Hotel San Antonio Riverwalk, and The Rock at La Cantera. And it no longer just showcases the possibilities of celluloid, but gives aspiring filmmakers a chance to connect through panels and mixers.
For the rest of us, there’s a chance to see original works in an age when Hollywood seems paralyzed by the bottom line. The opening screening, folk horror thriller Valley of the Horntak, follows a main character escaping a cult to find a missing boy. Things get tangled when he finds out his estranged son is genetically linked to the sect, whose members worship mind- and flesh-altering monsters.
Later in the evening, SAFILM will present the Texas premiere of The Legend of Juan Jose Mundo, a coming-of-age comedy set in suburban 1984 New York. The tale takes a clearer-eyed view of the teenage insecurity explored in Pretty in Pink as a high school girl pines for a charismatic Spanish exchange student.
The two films couldn’t be any more different, and that is the point. SAFILM is full of fascinating stories that the big studios overlook. Dad Genes charts the shock of a sperm donor who discovers through DNA testing that he may have more than 60 biological children. On Firm Ground is a touching documentary about two people battling Parkinson’s Disease.
McCarthy’s wife, Dolores Rice, even has a selection. Short film Fat unfolds after a weight-loss injection triggers a flood of trauma in a woman scarred by sexual violence.

Even the 2026 honorees prove that SAFILM is chasing far more than clout. Gregory Nava, the director of El Norte, Mi Familia, and perennial San Antonio favorite Selena, will receive this year’s Lifetime Achievement Award. Local artist Robert Tatum, who created many of the festival’s posters, will be named 2026 Patron of Cinema Arts.
Badges to SAFILM start as low as $49.99 for a one-day pass, with weekend badges running $99.99-$139.99. More information about screenings, events, and accommodation packages can be found online.
