
Award Honorees Include Vision Award Recipients Arnold Schwarzenegger and Gus Van Sant;
Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar to Receive Disruptor Award Presented by Deadline;
Patrick Schwarzenegger to Receive Rising Star Award; and Ondi Timoner to Receive the Impact Award
Lineup Includes Opening Night Documentary ‘The Brotherhood’ and Closing Night ‘Is This Thing On?’
Nine World Premieres, 30+ Shorts and Key Awards Contenders Alongside Dynamic Conversations

The Sun Valley Film Festival (SVFF), running from December 3–7, 2025, announced this year’s honorees and film lineup. The festival will screen 16 narrative and documentary features and 32 shorts including opening night film The Brotherhood, closing night film Is This Thing On?, along with Dead Man’s Wire, The Plague, The Testament of Ann Lee and Train Dreams. Festival honorees include Vision Award recipients Arnold Schwarzenegger and Gus Van Sant, Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar who will receive the Disruptor Award Presented by Deadline, Patrick Schwarzenegger who will receive the Rising Star Award, and Ondi Timoner will receive the Impact Award.
“We’ve always been a place for bold voices, for stories that take risks and break rules,” said Teddy Grennan, Executive Director of the Sun Valley Film Festival. “This year’s lineup captures that same energy, with filmmakers pushing the boundaries of what cinema can be. It’s thrilling to gather in these mountains in December, when the world slows down but creativity ignites.”
“Returning in December has become a beautiful new tradition — a time when the community, our sponsors, and creators come together to share in the warmth of great stories,” said Candice Pate, Director of the Sun Valley Film Festival. “There’s a magic that happens here — filmmakers, Academy voters, and audiences connecting in an intimate setting that celebrates the art of cinema at its finest.”
2025 Honorees
Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger will receive the prestigious Vision Award and participate in a Coffee Talk on Saturday, December 6. Schwarzenegger is an Austrian-born American actor, former bodybuilder, and politician, best known for his prolific film career and for serving as the 38th Governor of California. He and his family own a home in Sun Valley and have deep ties to the area.
Additionally, Director Gus Van Sant will also be honored with the Vision Award at the Vision Award Dinner on Friday, December 5. He will participate in a Coffee Talk that morning, and the festival will also screen his latest film Dead Man’s Wire. An auteur whose work has profoundly influenced contemporary cinema, Van Sant’s acclaimed filmography includes Drugstore Cowboy, My Own Private Idaho, To Die For, Elephant, and Good Will Hunting, which was nominated for Best Picture and Best Director at the Academy Awards.
Past Vision Award honorees include last year’s recipient Demi Moore (who went on to receive a Best Actress Academy Award nomination), Clint Eastwood, Gwyneth Paltrow, Oliver Stone, David O. Russell, Amy Poehler, Annette Bening, Josh Brolin, and Woody Harrelson.

Amy Poehler
Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar will receive the Disruptor Award presented by Deadline, recognizing creative talent who are shaping the industry with innovative and impactful work. This is the first time the award is being presented at the festival. Both of them will participate in a Coffee Talk on Sunday, December 7. Their most recent film Train Dreams will screen in the lineup on Saturday, December 6. Co-written by Bentley and Kwedar, and directed by Bentley, Train Dreams is an adaptation of Denis Johnson’s Pulitzer Prize finalist novella of the same name. The film premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival, and stars Joel Edgerton, Felicity Jones, William H. Macy and Kerry Condon.
Academy Award-nominee Clint Bentley is a writer-director-producer whose debut feature, Jockey, earned the AFI Audience Award and multiple Independent Spirit Award nominations. Bentley co-wrote and produced Sing Sing with Greg Kwedar, which earned three Academy Award nominations, including Best Adapted Screenplay, and was named one of the AFI and National Board of Review Top 10 Films of the Year. Greg Kwedar co-wrote and produced Jockey, as well as directed and co-wrote Sing Sing, which won the 2024 SXSW Festival Audience Award and earned three Academy Award nominations, three BAFTA nominations, and five Critics Choice nominations. Kwedar also directed Transpecos, winner of the SXSW Audience Award, and produced several acclaimed documentaries including Rising From Ashes and Running With Beto. He most recently served as co-writer and executive producer on Bentley’s Train Dreams and is set to direct Saturn Return for Netflix. Together, Bentley and Kwedar run ETHOS, their production company developing original and collaborative projects, including Possum Song, a fantastical comedy in development with Miles Teller attached.
Actor Patrick Schwarzenegger will be honored with the Rising Star Award on Saturday, December 6, recognizing a promising talent whose work on screen is quickly gaining industry attention. Patrick Schwarzenegger most recently starred in season 3 of Mike White’s critically acclaimed HBO series White Lotus and Ryan Murphy’s new FX limited-series, American Sports Story: Aaron Hernandez. Previous credits include the Amazon series Gen V, HBO’s critically acclaimed series The Staircase, The Terminal List, Amy Poehler’s film Moxie for Netflix, Echo Boomers, and the independent film Daniel Isn’t Real, which premiered to great reviews at the SXSW Film Festival. Up next, he will star opposite Margaret Qualley in Love of Your Life for Amazon MGM and be seen in the psychological thriller Bunker alongside Penélope Cruz and Javier Bardem. Previous recipients include the cast of Outer Banks, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Winston Duke, Sophie Thatcher, and Allison Williams.
Ondi Timoner will receive the Impact Award, which honors a film that highlights the resilience of the human spirit, for her recent documentary All the Walls Come Down. The film tells the story about a community affected by the Eaton Fire. Last year, the documentary Porcelain War received the award.
Opening Night & Film Selections
SVFF will open with The Brotherhood (dir. Mandon Lovett), a powerful documentary about the National Brotherhood of Snowsports — the first all-Black ski group — tracing its history, archival legacy, and mission to elevate Black athletes on the slopes.
Searchlight Pictures’ Is This Thing On?, directed by Bradley Cooper, will close the festival. As their marriage quietly unravels, Alex (Will Arnett) faces middle age and seeks new purpose in the New York comedy scene while Tess (Laura Dern) confronts the sacrifices she made for their family — forcing them to navigate co-parenting, identity, and whether love can take a new form.
The Festival’s full lineup showcases a wide range of narrative and documentary storytelling from emerging and established filmmakers, including:
- Above the Line (dir. Jeffrey Scott Collins) with Cedric the Entertainer, Sophia Ali, and Logic in attendance
- Ask E Jean (dir. Ivy Meeropol)
- Carolina Caroline (dir. Adam Carter Rehmeier)
- The Dating Game (dir. Violet Du Feng)
- Dead Man’s Wire (dir. Gus Van Sant)
- Gregg Allman: The Music of My Soul (dir. James Keach)
- Hard Twist: Through the Lens of Barbara Van Cleve (dir. Cynthia Matty-Huber)
- The Plague (dir. Charlie Pollinger)
- The Testament of Ann Lee (dir. Mona Fastvold)
- Tusker: Brotherhood of Elephants
- Train Dreams (dir. Clint Bentley)
Shorts Programming
SVFF will screen over 30 shorts in select programs, including highlight conversations and several Academy Award-eligible projects like:
- All the Walls Came Down, dir. Ondi Timoner in attendance for a discussion after the screening
- All Heart, dir. Michael Govier and Will McCormack, Academy Award winners in attendance
- Go Forward, dir. Peter Cambor — NBA star Isaiah Thomas in attendance for a discussion after the World Premiere screening
- Idaho Film Block — featuring short films shot exclusively in Idaho
- Pine, dir. Lilah Pate in attendance for a discussion after the World Premiere screening
- The New Yorker documentary series, followed by a Q&A hosted by George Prentice with Paul Moakley (Executive Producer of Video at The New Yorker). The program includes the live action short Two People Exchanging Saliva (dir. Natalie Musteata, Alexandre Singh), animated short Criminal (dir. Robe Imbriano), and documentary short Cashing Out (dir. Matt Nadel)
- Saving Our Ancestors — Reflections by Dr. Biruté Galdikas (dir. Charles Annenberg Weingarten
- The Truck, dir. Elizabeth Rao in attendance for a discussion after the screening
- Wrecking Party, dir. Elizabeth Giamatti in attendance for a discussion after the screening
Tickets for the 2025 Sun Valley Film Festival are available now. For additional information, visit sunvalleyfilmfestival.org