Wailuku Film Festival 2026
    Film / Arts Festival

    TL;DR
    Key Highlights

    • Experience over 80 unique films celebrating Maui's culture from June 18 to 21!
    • Engage with filmmakers through workshops and talk-story panels in a historic theater!
    • Celebrate Indigenous voices and local storytelling at a truly community-driven festival!
    • Reconnect with Hawaii-connected filmmakers showcasing their work from around the world!
    • Enjoy Wailuku's vibrant atmosphere and local businesses while immersing in film culture!
    Thursday, June 18, 2026 - Sunday, June 21, 2026
    Event Venue
    Wailea Golf Course / Various, South Maui
    Maui, Hawaii, USA

    Wailuku Film Festival 2026

    Event Overview: Wailuku Film Festival

    When a film festival closes after 25 years, it leaves behind something that no press release and no new event can instantly replace: the specific shape of its absence. The Maui Film Festival built its quarter-century identity around the Celestial Cinema at Wailea, around the luminaries it honored under the Hawaiian stars, and around a model of film celebration that the wider festival world recognized as genuinely one of a kind. When it filed for bankruptcy in May 2025 and confirmed that its 25-year chapter was over, there was a real question about what would follow.

    The answer is the Wailuku Film Festival. And it is not trying to be what the Maui Film Festival was. It is trying to be something entirely different: a community-rooted, values-driven, education-focused celebration of film as a form of storytelling that is rooted in place, perspective, and purpose, held not in the resort corridors of Wailea but in the historic heart of Wailuku, Maui's most culturally layered town, across four days from June 18 to 21 at one of the most architecturally significant theaters in the Hawaiian Islands.

    Its inaugural edition will screen over 80 films across four categories that say more about what Maui's film culture actually needs than any marketing brief could. This is a festival built from the inside out, by the people who run the island's film office, for the storytellers who are already here and the ones who need a reason to come home.

    The Vision: Why This Festival Exists and What It Is Built to Do

    Festival Director Brian Kohne, who serves simultaneously as the Maui Film Commissioner at the Maui Film Office, stated the festival's founding purpose with the kind of directness that usually only comes from people who have been waiting a long time to say something clearly:

    "Wailuku Film Festival exists to cultivate a nurturing, values-driven space where filmmakers are empowered to take creative risks, build meaningful relationships, and be celebrated. We're creating a place where filmmakers can find a home, or return home, to share stories that matter so we can all grow forward together."

    That word home does significant work in that sentence. The Hawaiʻi film category is designed explicitly to bring Hawaiʻi-connected filmmakers who are working elsewhere in the world back to Maui to screen their work. As Kohne explained: "We're seeking our people who are out in the world working and bring them home, give them a reason to bring their art home, to inspire us, to reconnect with us." That is a different founding impulse from nearly every other film festival, whose first instinct is to attract the largest possible outside profile. The Wailuku Film Festival's first instinct is to strengthen a community's relationship with its own creative identity.

    Vince Keala Lucero, filmmaker and founding member of the Hawai'i Film Alliance, added: "The Wailuku Film Festival is an inspiring opportunity to strengthen Maui's creative ecosystem and elevate Hawai'i's stories on the world stage. Mahalo to everyone involved. Holoimua!"

    The festival is brought to the community by the County of Maui and the Maui Film Office, with the Mayor's office formally endorsing it as "a vital investment in the future of Maui's creative economy." That institutional backing matters: it signals that the Wailuku Film Festival is not a temporary solution to the gap left by its predecessor but a long-term commitment by local government to building a sustainable film culture on the island.

    The Four Program Categories: What Films the Festival Celebrates

    The Wailuku Film Festival accepts all film formats and genres, including narrative, documentary, independent, experimental, animated, and episodic works, across both short and feature-length categories, from filmmakers anywhere in the world. The single requirement is alignment with at least one of four focus areas:

    Hawaiʻi

    The broadest and most inclusive of the four categories, the Hawaiʻi category encompasses films made in Hawai'i, films made about Hawai'i, and films made by filmmakers from Hawai'i regardless of where they were produced. The deliberate breadth of this definition is intentional: it creates space for everything from a narrative feature set on Maui's North Shore to a documentary made by a Maui-raised filmmaker about an entirely different part of the world, as long as the human connection to these islands is present. It is a category defined by identity rather than geography, which is a meaningfully different way of thinking about what makes a film "from" a place.

    Indigenous Voices

    The Indigenous Voices category is one of the most distinctive features of the Wailuku Film Festival's programming philosophy. It is open to Indigenous filmmakers from around the world, with Kohne explicitly naming New Zealand and the broader Pacific as regions whose mainstream Indigenous film culture could inspire and connect with Hawaiian filmmakers. As he described the vision: "if we can bring in some top indigenous filmmakers from New Zealand and other regions that have gone mainstream, we can inspire our makers."

    That ambition to connect the Native Hawaiian filmmaking community with the broader global Indigenous storytelling movement, which has produced internationally significant work from Aotearoa New Zealand, Canada, Australia, and across the Americas, is among the most thoughtful curatorial decisions the festival has made. It positions Wailuku as a meeting point in the Pacific for a global conversation about Indigenous representation in cinema that is more relevant and more urgent than ever.

    Watersports

    The Watersports category is the most distinctively Maui-specific of the four, and it is an honest acknowledgment of something that the island's film industry has always known but that mainstream film festival programming rarely reflects: the ocean defines life on Maui in ways that no other single natural feature does. Ho'okipa Beach Park on the North Shore is the windsurfing and kitesurfing capital of the world. The waves at Peahi (Jaws) are among the most challenging and most filmed big-wave breaks on the planet. Outrigger canoe paddling, surfing, freediving, and the broader ocean tradition are not peripheral to Maui culture: they are its most visible and most exported expressions. A film festival that includes a dedicated Watersports category is saying something true about the island it comes from.

    Student Shorts

    The Student category is perhaps the most direct expression of the festival's founding purpose. Open to filmmakers currently enrolled in accredited high schools, colleges, and universities, it is divided into two subcategories: High School (maximum 10 minutes) and Higher Education (maximum 20 minutes). The submission guidelines emphasize creative risk-taking, originality, and fresh perspectives across all formats, from documentary and narrative to experimental and hybrid forms.

    Kohne's motivation for the student focus is straightforward and worth hearing directly: "Students who have not attended a festival don't know what they are." The festival's goal is not simply to screen student work but to introduce a generation of young Maui filmmakers to the professional infrastructure, the community, and the shared purpose that film festivals exist to create. This is a festival that explicitly wants to be "a student's first film festival," and that founding intention carries the possibility of generational impact that no celebrity-honoree program could produce.

    The Program: Four Days of Screenings, Panels, and Community

    Over the four days from June 18 to 21, the Wailuku Film Festival program will move through a full and varied calendar of activities that balance the films themselves with the relational and educational infrastructure that gives a festival its lasting value.

    The confirmed program elements include:

    • Screenings: More than 80 films across the four categories, spread across the festival venues throughout the four days. The scale of 80 films in four days means a rich and varied program that covers narrative and documentary, short and feature, amateur and professional, across the full breadth of the category definitions.
    • Talk-Story Panels: The Hawaiian concept of talk-story, the informal, meandering, relationship-building conversation that has been a social institution on the islands long before it was formalized into anything, is named explicitly in the festival's program description. That naming is intentional: the panels at the Wailuku Film Festival are not simply industry Q&A sessions. They are designed to have the warmth and genuine exchange of the talk-story tradition.
    • Workshops: Hands-on filmmaking and craft workshops for attendees, with particular orientation toward the student and emerging filmmaker community that is one of the festival's primary audiences.
    • Filmmaker Gatherings: Social events designed to create the informal connections between filmmakers that are, for many festival participants, the most professionally valuable part of any festival experience.
    • Community Events: Events designed to bring the broader Wailuku and Maui community into contact with the festival, reflecting the founding philosophy that this is a festival for the island rather than simply on it.

    The ʻĪao Theater: A Stage That Has Hosted Legends

    The ʻĪao Theater at 68 North Market Street, Wailuku is one of the most historically significant buildings in the Hawaiian Islands and an entirely appropriate venue for a film festival that is explicitly about culture, identity, and the relationship between stories and places.

    Opened in 1928 in the Spanish Mission architectural style that was characteristic of the era's theater construction across California and Hawaii, the theater originally served as both a movie house and a vaudeville performance space. The entertainers who appeared on its stage in the World War II era read like a USO hall of fame: Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra, Betty Hutton, and Mickey Rooney all performed there for troops during the war years, when Maui served as a significant military staging and training ground.

    The theater fell into disrepair in the 1980s and faced possible demolition before community advocacy secured its listing on the State of Hawaii's Register of Historic Places in 1994 and the National Register of Historic Places in 1995, giving it the preservation protection that its architecture and history warranted. It subsequently became the home of Maui OnStage, the island's community theater organization, which has been using it for live performances ever since.

    As a film festival venue, the ʻĪao Theater provides something that no modern multiplex or resort conference center could offer: the specific, irreplaceable atmosphere of a historic movie palace whose walls have absorbed nearly a century of performances, where the architecture itself carries the memory of everyone who sat in those seats before you.

    The festival also uses the Naylor building and the MACC's Castle Theater (the Maui Arts and Cultural Center in Kahului), providing additional screening capacity and event space across the festival period.

    Wailuku: The Town That Was Always More Than a Gateway

    Wailuku is not a destination that most Maui tourism itineraries emphasize, and that is precisely its advantage as a festival location. It is Maui's county seat, the island's civic and administrative center, and a town with a historical depth and a concentration of genuinely local businesses, restaurants, and cultural institutions that the resort zones of Kīhei and Wailea cannot claim.

    North Market Street, where the ʻĪao Theater stands, is the historic commercial spine of Wailuku's old town, a walkable streetscape of early 20th-century buildings that houses antique stores, local restaurants, coffee shops, and the kind of independent retail presence that distinguishes a lived-in town from a tourist-facing resort strip. The Maui Film Commissioner's decision to hold the festival specifically here, in a venue district where "theaters are within walking distance of restaurants and businesses," reflects a deliberate philosophy of keeping the festival embedded in daily Wailuku life rather than sequestered in a dedicated venue complex.

    The approach to 'Iao Valley State Monument is minutes from the theater. The valley's narrow walls of green volcanic rock, rising steeply above the 'Iao Stream, and the iconic 'Iao Needle, a 1,200-foot basalt pinnacle rising from the valley floor, represent one of the most visually dramatic and culturally significant landscapes in all of Hawai'i. For festival visitors arriving between screenings and panels, the valley is a 10-minute drive from the theater and a completely different kind of encounter with the island that the festival celebrates.

    Getting to Wailuku and Practical Visitor Information

    Getting to Maui

    Kahului Airport (OGG) is located approximately 5 minutes from Wailuku by car, making the festival's central Maui location one of the most accessible airport-to-venue situations of any island film festival in the Pacific. Direct flights connect Kahului to Honolulu (35 minutes), Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Phoenix, Portland, and other West Coast US cities. Inter-island connections from O'ahu, Kaua'i, and the Big Island are available multiple times daily.

    Getting around Wailuku

    The festival venues on North Market Street are walkable from each other and from the parking areas around the historic town center. Rental cars from Kahului Airport provide access to the broader island, and the 5-minute drive between the airport and Wailuku makes logistics straightforward for festival-goers flying in specifically for the event.

    Where to stay

    The broader Central Maui area around Wailuku and Kahului offers a range of accommodation options from budget to mid-range, providing a more locally flavored and less resort-oriented base than the Kāʻanapali or Wailea hotel zones. For visitors who want beach access alongside the festival, Kīhei on the South Shore is approximately 20 to 25 minutes from Wailuku and offers the full range of accommodation at more accessible prices than the Wailea luxury zone.

    Tickets and Submissions

    Current and updated ticket and submission information is available through the official festival website at wailukufilm.com and through the festival's social media at @wailukufilmfestival (Instagram) and @wailukufilm (Facebook).

    June Weather on Maui

    June brings warm, dry conditions across Maui's central and southern areas, with daytime temperatures around 28 to 30 degrees Celsius in the lower elevations. Wailuku, on the island's central isthmus, benefits from consistent northeast trade winds that moderate the heat into conditions ideal for moving between outdoor festival events and indoor screenings. Evenings in Wailuku settle to a comfortable 22 to 24 degrees Celsius.

    Verified Information at a Glance

    Item: Confirmed details

    Event name: Wailuku Film Festival (inaugural edition)

    Event category: Community film festival; independent, documentary, narrative, experimental, animated, episodic; Hawaiian, Indigenous, Watersports, Student focus

    Dates: June 18 to 21 (four days)

    Primary venues: ʻĪao Theater, 68 North Market Street, Wailuku, Maui (National Register of Historic Places, opened 1928); MAPA (Maui Academy of Performing Arts) building, Wailuku; Naylor building, Wailuku; MACC Castle Theater, Kahului

    Films: 80+ films across four categories

    Categories: Hawaiʻi, Indigenous Voices, Watersports, Student Shorts (High School max 10 min; Higher Education max 20 min)

    Program elements: Screenings, talk-story panels, hands-on workshops, filmmaker gatherings, community events

    Festival Director: Brian Kohne (Maui Film Commissioner, Maui Film Office)

    Organizer: County of Maui and Maui Film Office

    Philosophy: "Film as an art form rooted in place, perspective, and purpose"

    Submissions: Open to filmmakers worldwide; must align with at least one of four categories; all formats and genres accepted; via wailukufilm.com

    Ticket pricing: To be confirmed; check wailukufilm.com for updates

    Nearest airport: Kahului Airport (OGG), approximately 5 minutes from Wailuku by car

    Iconic nearby attraction: ʻĪao Valley State Monument and ʻĪao Needle, 10 minutes from festival venues

    June climate: 28 to 30°C daytime; 22 to 24°C evenings; dry; trade wind influence; ideal for multi-venue festival movement

    Social media: @wailukufilmfestival (Instagram), @wailukufilm (Facebook)

    Official website: wailukufilm.com

    The Wailuku Film Festival is the clearest statement Maui has made in years about what it believes film is for: not a red carpet for celebrities, but a shared space where stories that matter get told, seen, and celebrated in the community that shaped them. Eighty films in four days at a theater where Frank Sinatra performed for troops and the ʻĪao Valley rises green at the end of the street. Talk-story panels, workshops, filmmaker gatherings, and four category windows wide enough to welcome voices from Native Hawai'i, the global Indigenous film community, the ocean culture of the Pacific, and the next generation of student storytellers just finding their eye. Visit wailukufilm.com, check the screening schedule as it is announced, submit your film if you have one that belongs, and come to Wailuku for June 18 to 21 ready for what happens when a community decides to tell its own stories on its own terms.

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