Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Special Opening Night Celebration

Special Opening Night Marks
18th Annual Silicon Valley Jewish Film Festival
and the Grand Opening Celebration
of the New Oshman Family JCC in Palo Alto

The Silicon Valley Jewish Film Festival and the Oshman Family Jewish Community Center in Palo Alto are co-sponsoring the Saturday, October 17 Opening Night Event on the new Taube Koret Campus for Jewish Life. This special program marks both the opening of the 18th Annual Film Festival, and the grand opening weekend of the new Oshman Family Jewish Community Center. It begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Albert and Janet Schultz Cultural Arts Hall. Enter the campus at 3921 Fabian Way, Palo Alto.

The Festival is offering the Argentinean movie,"Letters for Jenny." It will be preceded by a short talk by Monique Balbuena, Assistant Professor of Literature at the University of Oregon in Eugene. Dr. Balbuena is an expert on the Latin Jewish experience, including Jewish contributions to literature and to the Tango Dance.

The evening continues with a colorful and entertaining demonstration of Tango.

Tango
The Opening Night event
includes a Tango dance presentation

Tickets are available from Brown Paper Tickets. Ticket prices in advance for this movie and special program are $25, general; $20 for Oshman Family JCC members. At the door, ticket prices will be $30, all admissions. Proceeds benefit both the SVJFF and the OFJCC.

Brown Paper Tickets


Letters for Jenny (Cartas para Jenny)

Letters for JennyThis sensitively directed film depicts a young woman in love who must make life choices after learning of an unexpected pregnancy. Jenny's decisions cannot be made alone and it is only when she discovers three letters written by her mother before her death that Jenny is able to decide how to move forward. After reading her mother's first letter, Jenny decides to travel to Israel from Argentina and begin a new life. The journey to Jerusalem helps Jenny soften her personal pain, and discover new opportunities-including a new love-so that she can put her life in perspective. The story is moving, and the cinematography is stunning, with scenes of Argentina, Spain and Israel.

Argentina/2007, Spanish (with subtitles), 96 min. Feature

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

This Year's News

The Film Festival is now an independent 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation. The Addison-Penzak Jewish Community Center of Silicon Valley in Los Gatos is a major sponsor of the Film Festival. The Oshman Family Jewish Community Center in Palo Alto is also a major sponsor.

The SVJFF is co-sponsoring the opening of the Festival and the Grand Opening of the Oshman Family Jewish Community Center Taube Campus for Jewish Life on Saturday night, October 17 with special movie and entertainment. This is the start of the grand opening weekend for the new campus off of San Antonio Road, Palo Alto The Festival schedule will be officially released by late August/early September. Special events, special speakers and great films from around the world are planned.

All Wednesday night screenings will now be at the Camera 7 Theater, Pruneyard Shopping Center, Campbell. So now you can avoid the freeway backups and choose from many great restaurants before coming to the movies. Sunday movies in San Jose will continue at the Camera 12 Theater, downtown San Jose.

NEW THIS YEAR

In response to audience requests, all Wednesday night Festival movies will now be shown at the Camera 7 Theater, Pruneyard Shopping Center, Campbell. Sunday movies will continue at the Camera 12 Theaters, 201 S. Second Street, San Jose. Additional films are being offered in Palo Alto.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

SAVE THESE DATES

October 21-November 22
18th Annual Silicon Valley Jewish Film Festival

October 15, 2009, 7 p.m., Sunnyvale Community Center, Sunnyvale Gala Patron Event (light supper and bonus movie not included in the regular Festival

October 17, 2009, 7:30 p.m., Oshman Family JCC, Palo Alto Opening Night Special Event. The Silicon Valley Jewish Film Festival and the Oshman Family JCC officially open the new Taube Campus for Jewish Life as well as the start of the 18th Annual Festival. Enjoy a wonderful film from Argentina "Letters from Jenny", plus a Tango demonstration. Please note, special tickets will be required for this event.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Mini-Israeli Film Festival

May 16th, 17th, 20th
in honor of Israel's 61st Anniversary!

Films Include "Shiva", "Arab Labor" and "It's Now or Never"

The Mini-Israeli Festival is co-sponsored by:
Palo Alto JCC Israeli House

Go to http://www.SVJFF.org for more info.


Shiva
ShivaIn this emotional rollercoaster a fascinating portrait of a Moroccan-Israeli family is painted as mourners gather for the traditional seven days of mourning (shiva). The intensity of this situation is a catalyst for more than just emotional support and communal grief. This film Boasts an impressive cast of some of Israel's best actors including Keren Mor, Yael Abecassis, Hana Azoulay-Safrari, Hanna Laszlo, Moshe Ivgy and Alon Abutbul.

Arab Labor

Arab LaborA satiric sitcom written by Israeli-Arab Author Sayed Kashua, broadcast on prime time Israel television. The show is about a young Arab couple, Amjad and Bushra, and their young daughter, who live in an Arab village on the outskirts of Jerusalem. Amjad is a journalist who desperately seeks to assimilate into the prevailing Israeli Jewish cultural milieu with mixed and hilarious results.


It's Now or Never

It's Now or Never The resolution on the partition of Palestine was adopted by the UN on November 29th, 1947. While all Israelis were dancing and celebrating, David Ben Gurion, the leader of the new Jewish entity remained ambivalent - after 2000 years in the Diaspora the statehood is in reach, yet the threat of Arab armies invading the Jewish lands in Palestine was very real. This dramatic re-enactment starring Yossi Kantz as David Ben Gurion depicts, step by step, the crucial and dramatic six months before the state of Israel was inaugurated.


Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Israeli Film, Waltz With Bashir

Israeli Film, Waltz With Bashir,
Just Nominated for An Oscar®
as Best Foreign Language Film!

Silicon Valley Jewish Film Festival
Arranges Private Screening on February 3rd.

Just yesterday, Waltz With Bashir (http://waltzwithbashir.com/) was nominated as Best Foreign Language Film for this year's Oscars®. The Silicon Valley Jewish Film Festival announces a special private screening of this award-winning film. Waltz with Bashir also won Best Foreign Film at the Golden Globes®, and won six Israeli Academy Awards®. Tickets will sell quickly.

Waltz With Bashir

Waltz with Bashir

Summary: One night at a bar, an old friend tells director Ari about a recurring nightmare in which he is chased by 26 vicious dogs; every night, the same number of beasts. The two men conclude that there is a connection to their Israeli Army mission in the first Lebanon War of the early Eighties.

Ari is surprised that he can't remember a thing anymore about that period of his life. Intrigued by this riddle, he decides to meet and interview old friends and comrades around the world. He needs to discover the truth about that time and about himself. As Ari delves deeper and deeper into the mystery, his memory begins to creep up in surreal images.

Written, directed and produced by Ari Folman
Running Time: 87 minutes
Hebrew; With English subtitles.



Upcoming dates for your calendar:

Sunday, March 8

Special Israeli film in connection with Tel Aviv's 100th birthday.

Location and time:
7pm, Cubberley Theater, 4000 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto (map)

Sunday, March 22

Northern California Premiere of Against the Tide, directed by Rick Trank, award-winning director of I Have Never Forgotten You (shown at the 17th Annual SVJFF). This is a sneak preview, special for the SVJFF.

Friday, September 5, 2008

17th SEASON OF THE SILICON VALLEY JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL OPENS WITH BLOCKBUSTER MOVIES

The 17th annual Silicon Valley Jewish Film Festival (formerly the San Jose Jewish Film Festival) opens Sunday, October 26 and the 3 p.m. film that day is “Fugitive Pieces”, produced by Robert Lantos, who was also producer of the epic 1999 film, “Sunshine.” “Fugitive Pieces” stars Ayelet Zurer, the well-known Israeli actress who has starred both inside and outside of Israel.

Fugitive PiecesThis blockbuster film is a gripping drama that tells a story about how a young boy copes with personal ghosts after a traumatic event takes place before his very eyes in WWII Poland. This cinematic masterpiece, through kaleidoscopic cinematography, including scenes from both a Greek island, and Toronto, charts the process by which he eventually frees himself.

Yiddish TheaterThe Festival actually begins at 1 p.m. on October 26 with, “The Yiddish Theater: A Love Story.” The wonderful music and singing in the film will bring back Yiddish memories. Opening Day ends with the Israeli suspense film, “The Debt,” which presents a chair-gripping story of the Mossad’s revenge.

Tickets and information to the Silicon Valley Jewish Film Festival are available from the Festival web site at www.svjff.org. Patron memberships, which include admission to the movies as well as the Gala Patron Event (dinner and additional film, not included in the regular schedule) on Thursday, October 23, can be arranged through the Festival office at 408-833-9226.

In January of this year, the San Jose Jewish Film Festival changed its name to the Silicon Valley Jewish Film Festival to reflect the broad reach of the audience in the Santa Clara Valley. From local to foreign, the Festival again features a bevy of films that entertain, and educate. The SecretsNumerous Israeli movies are again on the schedule, including “The Champagne Spy” (Sunday, November 2 and Wednesday, November 5), an intriguing James Bond-like story (only real) about an Israeli spy in Egypt, and “The Secrets” (Sunday, November 16 and Wednesday, November 19), a drama about two Israeli girls who meet a mysterious older woman in Tzfat. The Israeli blockbuster “The Bubble”, an adults-only Tel Aviv story, plays Sunday, November 9.

Un SecretOther films at this year’s Festival include “Un Secret”, a French film (Sunday, November 2). Also on November 2 is “Refusenik”, featuring the dramatic and successful worldwide effort to open up the old Soviet Union’s emigration policy. More than 20 films are shown in the month-long Festival, one of the most significant cultural events of the Silicon Valley.

This year, there are four movies playing at the Cubberley Community Center in Palo Alto on successive Thursday evenings beginning October 30. Check www.svjff.org for more information.

Last year, the Festival attracted attendance of more than 5,000. You are urged to order tickets in advance from the festival web site, or by calling 1-800-838-3006 since movies do sell out. They will again be held at the Camera 12 Theater, 201 South Second Street San Jose. Major support of the Silicon Valley Jewish Film Festival is provided by: Addison Penzak Jewish Community Center of Silicon Valley, the City of San Jose, the Koret Foundation, Dorsey and Whitney, LLP, Metro, the Silicon Valley Bank Foundation, and Silicon Valley Community Newspapers.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Jellyfish Director on NPR

Thu, May 1, 2008 -- 11:00pm
Etgar Keret -- Robert Siegel talks with Israeli writer Etgar Keret. Keret has a new short story collection out, called "The Girl on the Fridge" as well as a film, "Jellyfish," which won the Camera d'Or prize at Cannes in 2007. The film is a collaborative effort with his wife weaving together stories about three unrelated women in Tel Aviv. Keret talks about the film, his writing and how he's regarded by fellow Israeli artists.

Listen to the clip http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=90111794