The following list comes from Larry Chadbourne of the Film On Film Foundation:
My 6 favorite Rep/Revival Screenings from 2009
In historical order

2. Lady Of The Pavements (1929) - Castro. The stand-out entry in this year's SF silent film fest, a rarely shown late Griffith, benefited from the vocals by pianist Donald Sosin's wife Joanna Seaton, in an attempt to reconstruct some of the missing sound discs. Her rendition of Berlin's "Where Is The Song of Songs For Me?", which at one point seemed to match the lip-movements on screen of the lovely Lupe Velez, evoked gasps from the audience.
3. La Tete D'Un Homme (1932) PFA's Duvivier series was the year's archival goldmine, with numerous seldom shown classics revisited and several rare items projected with special electronic subtitles. Of these the Simenon adaptation as well as the later 1957 Pot Bouille, a work of literary craftsmanship made just before such artistry would be overwhelmed by the New Wave, stood out. I single out La Tete D'un Homme for its Sternbergian pictorial texture, its striking use of the Brechtian street singer, and its anticipation of American film noir.
4. Jeanne Dielman (1975) SF Moma's interesting Akerman series allowed me to finally catch up with this modernist landmark.It is the kind of film that changes the way you look at things, if only such mundane matters as cleaning one's bathtub. The showing was enriched by the scholarly introduction by B. Ruby Rich, one of the best intros to a film I've ever heard.

6. Who Will Watch The Watchmen? (2003) PFA's Karel Vachek series offered those with the stamina to spend five Sunday afternoons immersed in Czech history, culture and politics the rewarding-payoff. In Watchmen, Vachek's wandering eye was anchored somewhat by the need to keep returning to rehearsals of a Smetana opera not well known in North America, "Dalibor". This more than made up for the other moments of frustration making-one's way through this massive oeuvre.
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