EatDrinkFilms is proud to co-present two more features at this year’s San Francisco Jewish Film Festival, following Thursday’s gala opening night showing of Dough, which will have several more screenings. Continue reading
EatDrinkFilms is proud to co-present two more features at this year’s San Francisco Jewish Film Festival, following Thursday’s gala opening night showing of Dough, which will have several more screenings. Continue reading
By general consensus, 2013’s Blue Jasmine was Woody Allen’s best movie in years — a fair assessment, although tipped tremendously by Cate Blanchett’s spectacular lead performance. Continue reading
by Dianne Boate
Cornmeal has come a long way in the hearts of cooking people for its versatility within a wide variety of dishes. Continue reading
by Len Weiler
There’s a universality to coming-of-age stories. Continue reading
This week’s two comical shorts include one from a pair of actor-directors whose Breaking the Fast screens at this year’s San Francisco Jewish Film Festival. Continue reading
What do musicians, artists, surfers, animators, local documentary filmmakers and Bay Area film lovers all have in common? They are all subjects of the 9th annual SF Frozen Film Festival in the Mission. Continue reading
With more than 300,000 Twitter followers, a heaping helping of controversy, and a rich supply of attitude and humor, Humphry Slocombe is not your average ice cream shop. Continue reading
by Vince Keenan
Paul Clarke’s The Cocktail Chronicles is often my first and only stop when researching a drink. Continue reading
by Emily S. Mendel
The 35th San Francisco Jewish Film Festival (JFF), the first and still the largest of its kind, returns to the San Francisco Bay Area July 23-August 9, 2015 with 70 offerings from 17 countries as diverse as Uruguay, Latvia, and Sweden. Fifty-five feature films will be shown (38 documentaries and 17 narratives), plus 15 shorts. Continue reading
by Vince Keenan
In 2012, the Guinness Book of World Records certified Sherlock Holmes “the most portrayed literary human character in film and television.” Continue reading