To Change the World: Highlights of the 2015 San Francisco Jewish Film Festival

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

SF Jewish Film Festival Exudes a Sense of Responsibility

by Michael Fox

Sometimes a movie is just a movie, to appropriate the one-liner apocryphally attributed to Sigmund Freud. (“Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar” actually sounds to my ears more like something another Jewish intellectual, Groucho Marx, would have said. But I digress.) As far as the typical filmgoer is concerned, movies are stories, diversions, entertainment and, on rare and special occasions, art. But for a great swath of movies, even some produced by Hollywood studios (credo: “Profits first, last and always”), palpable moral consciousness is as central as the plot. To those of us who esteem cinema as a social good, those films are often the most exciting and profound.  Continue reading

SFJFF Berkeley Big Night: THE STURGEON QUEENS

by Joyce Goldstein

The Sturgeon Queens (2014) is a charming paean to the Russ & Daughters appetizer store on the Lower East Side of NYC, now celebrating its hundred-year anniversary. The story is told by many different voices: three generations of the Russ family; celebrity patrons of the store such as Calvin Trillin, Maggie Gyllenhal, Mario Batali and Ruth Bader Ginsberg; and narrated by long-time customers who read from a script written by director Julie Cohen.

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