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From July 17 – August 3, the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival returns to San Francisco and the East Bay with a diverse lineup of fresh and bold films and events that celebrate independent filmmaking and Jewish identity in all its forms.
The Jewish Film Institute extends a tremendous thank you to the dozens of community partners who ensure that San Francisco Jewish Film Festival programs are successful and its audiences are diverse.
The JFI Filmmakers in Residence Program is a year-long, community-driven artist residency that provides creative, marketing, and production support for emerging and established filmmakers whose documentary projects explore and expand thoughtful consideration of Jewish history, life, culture, and identity. Learn more about current and former Residents and upcoming application opportunities here.
The Jewish Film Institute and San Francisco Jewish Film Festival thanks all of its sponsors that make its programs possible. This list is updated regularly.
From July 17 – August 3, the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival returns to San Francisco and the East Bay with a diverse lineup of fresh and bold films and events that celebrate independent filmmaking and Jewish identity in all its forms.
Renowned chef Michael Solomonov explores a diverse world of food drawn from more than 100 cultures. Chefs, farmers, vintners, cheese makers and home cooks discuss their roots and show specialties that both preserve and update traditional recipes using global inspiration. Uniquely and lovingly prepared shakshuka, boreka, maqluba, couscous and a kugel that challenges expectations are just a few of the irresistible dishes featured. Warning: This movie will make you hungry!
Diane Kurys (Peppermint Soda, Entre Nous) once again mines her autobiography to fictionalize the early years of her parents’ marriage, a mysterious uncle of whom nobody speaks and the circumstances of her birth. Intimacy and suspense are the keys to Kurys’s novelistic framing of Jewish life in a corner of Lyon, France, just after the war, when freedom meant one thing to a man, another to a woman.