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2007 Award of Honor Gala

Friday, October 26

The Board of Directors of the Japan Society of Northern California cordially invites you to join us in honoring Mr. Yuzaburo Mogi and Mr. Philip Kan Gotanda at the 2007 Award of Honor Gala

Westin St. Francis, Union Square
335 Powell Street, San Francisco

5:30 VIP Reception
6:00 General Reception & Silent Auction
7:30 Dinner & Program

Business Attire

Each year, the Japan Society of Northern California holds its Annual Gala to present our Award of Honor to one or more individuals or organizations whose work has played a significant role in building and promoting the relationship between the United States and Japan.

This year we are very pleased to present the Annual Award of Honor to Mr. Yuzaburo Mogi, Chairman and CEO of Kikkoman. We also are delighted to present a special Artistic Achievement Award to one of the nation’s leading playwrights, Mr. Philip Kan Gotanda.

VIEW OUR 2007 GALA PHOTO ALBUM
Gallery ID: 2858, Key: nihon
Courtesy of Orange Exposure Photography

2007 GALA SPONSORS
We would like to thank each of our sponsors in 2007:

Visionary
Kikkoman

Innovator
Mizuho

Partner
All Nippon Airways Co., Ltd.
Japan Airlines International Co., Ltd.
United Airlines

Benefactor
Bank of the West
Chevron
JFC International Inc.
KPMG
MOL America
Morrison Foerster LLP
Sony
Squire, Sanders & Dempsey LLP
Teraoka Legal Counsel
John & Joyce Thomas
Union Bank of California
Wells Fargo

Patron
The Asia Foundation
ATA Ventures
Consulate General of Japan in San Francisco
Fuji Xerox Co. Ltd.
Hitachi America, Ltd.
Japanese Chamber of Commerce of Northern California
Latham & Watkins LLP
NEC Electronics America, Inc.
Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP
Pacific Ventures LLC
Public Policy Institute of California
William P. Fuller
Toyota/NUMMI

Individual Sponsors
Access International Law Group
DEFTA Partners
DRAFTFCB
Mitsuko & Edwin Duerr
Houlihan Lokey Howard and Zukin
Kathleen & Kozo Kimura
Legend Capital Management LLC
NTA America
Marsh Risk & Insurance Services
Osaka University San Francisco Office
Quantal International
Nobuko Saito & Gary Cleary
Nobuaki Tomita, Kimono Stylist
Arthur Trueger
USF Center for the Pacific Rim

Donors
Airbus Japan
AZCA, Inc.
New City North America
Sakata Seed America Inc.
Jack Wadsworth

Sponsor list current as of October 16, 2007.

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2008 Award of Honor Gala

The Japan Society of Northern California would like to thank the sponsors and participants who made the 2008 Awarcd of Honor Gala and live auction a huge success!

Each year, the Japan Society of Northern California holds its Annual Gala to present our Award of Honor to one or more individuals or organizations whose work has played a significant role in building and promoting the relationship between the United States and Japan.

Women are a largely untapped yet significant resource in the Japanese business world. For this reason, the Japan Society of Northern California was proud to celebrate women leaders in US-Japan business at the 2008 Award of Honor Gala.

In 2008 the Society recognized two outstanding women pioneers in business between our two countries: Ms. Sakie Fukushima of Korn/Ferry International and Ms. Kathy Matsui of Goldman Sachs Japan. They are both role models and an inspiration to women everywhere.

We were also very pleased to present a Lifetime Achievement Award to Mr. Richard Heggie, a former Japan Society president with over five decades of leadership experience in Asia and the US.

$ 250.00      View details

 

2009 Award of Honor Gala

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Please join us at the 2009 Award of Honor Gala as we highlight two exemplary profiles in leadership.

Award of Honor Recipients:
Ambassador Shunji Yanai
Mr. Toichi Takenaka, President & CEO of Takenaka Corporation

Date:
Saturday evening, November 21, 2009

Location:
Hotel Nikko
222 Mason Street, San Francisco
map

Time:
VIP Reception – 5:30 pm
General Reception & Silent Auction – 6:00 pm
Dinner Program – 7:15 pm

Attire:
Black tie optional.

Please RSVP no later than Friday, November 6, 2009.

For more information about the event, as well as honoree biographies, please click here.

Please purchase individual tickets below.

Please click here for information on table sponsorships.

To make a donation in honor of Ambassador Yanai or Mr. Takenaka, please click here.

PLEASE NOTE:
The registration deadline has passed. No refunds can be issued for cancellations received after Friday, October 23, 2009.

Your contribution to the Japan Society is tax-deductible to the full extent allowed by law.

$ 35.00 - $ 500.00      View details

 

2009 Gala Donation

A donation in honor of Ambassador Shunji Yanai or Mr. Toichi Takenaka can be made to the Japan Society of Northern California in one of two ways:

  • A cash donation to the Japan Society to be used for general operating expenses. To make a cash donation, you may do so online below.
    Contributors of $500 or more will be recognized as a sponsor of the event unless otherwise requested.

  • An in-kind donation to the Gala’s silent auction, in which your company name will be listed in the auction catalog, as well as displayed during the auction. To make an in-kind donation, please send an email to jsnc@usajapan.org

$ 50.00 - $ 5,000.00      View details

 

2009 Year Ahead Part II—New Youth Culture in Japan

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Japanese teens and pre-teens are helping to boost Japan’s sluggish economy as they devour popular culture, from electronics and fashion to books and music. Others are expressing themselves through less mainstream behaviors. How does today’s youth culture reflect deeper, more complex issues—such as race, gender and cultural politics—in Japan? Two experts on youth culture will discuss current trends in music and alternative subcultures as they forecast how these trends may shape future generations.

Dr. Jennifer Milioto Matsue is Assistant Professor of Music, Asian Studies, and Anthropology at Union College in New York. Matsue’s research incorporates various music cultures in Japan—including the underground Tokyo hardcore rock scene, nagauta (a type of traditional chamber music), electronica and trance raves, and wadaiko (Japanese ensemble drumming)—and how performers find meaning through participating in such music worlds. She is the author of Making Music in Japan’s Underground: The Tokyo Hardcore Scene, and holds a Ph.D. in Ethnomusicology from the University of Chicago.

Dr. Marvin D. Sterling is Assistant Professor in the Anthropology Department at Indiana University. Sterling’s research examines the popularity of Jamaican subculture in contemporary Japan, from reggae to Rastafari. Sterling explores the Western idea of race and identity in modern Japan, through minzokugaku (folklore studies), Japanese anthropology, and Japan’s interpretation of Western popular cultural forms. Sterling holds a Ph.D. in Cultural Anthropology from the University of California, Los Angeles and currently is developing his forthcoming book, Babylon East: Dancehall, Roots Reggae and Rastafari in Japan.

Moderator Lisa Katayama writes about Japan, pop culture, technology, and human rights for publications such as Wired, Popular Science, Giant Robot, PRI, and The New York Times Magazine. Born and raised in Tokyo, she is the author of Urawaza: Secret Everyday Tips and Tricks from Japan, and her blog, http://www.tokyomango.com, was a finalist for the 2008 Weblog Awards.

Time:
Thursday, February 26, 2009
6:00 pm Reception & Registration
6:30-8:00 pm Panel and Q&A

Location:
Variety Preview Room
582 Market Street (in the Hobart Building)
San Francisco, CA [map]

Cost:
$5 Japan Society Members & Members of Co-sponsoring Organizations
$15 Non-Members
Free for Japan Society Student Members

This is a lecture event hosted by the Japan Society of Northern California. Guest passes issued by the Japan Society will be accepted. Seating is limited and advanced registration is recommended to ensure a seat. Refunds will not be made after Monday, February 23, 2009.

This program is made possible by the support of Union Bank of California.
Co-sponsored by the Center for Asian American Media and University of San Francisco Center for the Pacific Rim.




$ 0.00 - $ 65.00      View details

 

2009 Year Ahead Part I—Financial Crisis: Japan in the Global Economy

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Click here to download Dr. Hoshi’s PowerPoint presentation.

How will Japan’s financial systems fare in the aftermath of 2008’s global economic meltdown? Despite significant efforts from the world’s major economic players, the U.S. financial crisis and accompanying credit crunch have impacted countries across the globe. Collapsing export markets, currency instability and expanding trade deficits in Japan and the U.S. are sure to influence both countries’ economic growth in 2009. Our leading financial experts on Japan will discuss the major economic developments of 2008 and share their predictions on the Japanese economy in the year ahead.

Dr. Hugh Patrick is Director of the Center on Japanese Economy and Business at Columbia Business School, Co-Director of Columbia’s APEC Study Center, and R.D. Calkins Professor of International Business Emeritus. A top expert on the Japanese economy and Pacific Basin economic relations, Patrick has published 16 books and some 60 articles and essays on finance, business and Japan-U.S. economic relations. Patrick received his B.A. from Yale University, M.A. degrees in Japanese Studies and Economics and his Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Michigan.

Dr. Takeo Hoshi is a Professor and Pacific Economic Cooperation Chair in International Economic Relations at the University of California, San Diego, as well as a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and the Tokyo Center for Economic Research. His many publications include Crisis and Change in the Japanese Financial System with Dr. Hugh Patrick. Hoshi earned a Bachelor of Liberal Arts (Kyoyo Gakushi) in Social Sciences from the University of Tokyo and a Ph.D. in Economics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Time:
Thursday, January 15, 2009
6:00 pm Reception & Registration
6:30-8:00 pm Panel and Q&A

Location:
Union Bank of California
400 California Street, 11th Floor Assembly Hall
San Francisco [map]

Cost:
$5 Japan Society Members
$15 Non-Members
Free for Japan Society Student Members

This is a lecture event hosted by the Japan Society of Northern California. Guest passes issued by the Japan Society will be accepted. Advanced registration is recommended for building security purposes. Refunds will not be made after Monday, January 12, 2009.

This program is made possible by the support of Union Bank of California.
Co-sponsored by the University of San Francisco Center for the Pacific Rim and JETRO San Francisco.




$ 15.00      View details

 

2010 Annual Fund Drive

We know that these are demanding times for everyone, but your support today will help us through a difficult year and enable us to keep Japan front and center in the public eye for years to come.

$ 25.00 - $ 250.00      View details

 

2010 Annual Fund Drive

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$ 25.00 - $ 250.00      View details

 

2010 Annual General Meeting

Thursday, March 25, 2010

We are pleased to invite you to join us for our 2010 General Members Meeting. This exclusive, members-only gathering is your opportunity to meet the new members of the Board of Directors of the Japan Society, and to learn about our plans for the future.

After a short presentation, we will be joined by Daniel C. Sneider, Associate Director for Research, Shorenstein APARC, for a talk on current developments in US-Japan relations in the DPJ (Democratic Party of Japan) era.

Reception to follow.

Daniel C. Sneider is the associate director for research at the Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center at Stanford University. He currently directs the center’s project on Nationalism and Regionalism and the Divided Memories and Reconciliation project, a three-year comparative study of the formation of historical memory in East Asia. His own research is focused on current U.S. foreign and national security policy in Asia, including work on a diplomatic history of the building of the United States Cold War alliances in Northeast Asia.

Sneider was a 2005-06 Pantech Fellow at the Center, and the former foreign affairs columnist of the San Jose Mercury News. He has appeared as a foreign affairs commentator on the Lehrer News Hour and on National Public Radio. Sneider also has had a long career as a foreign correspondent. From 1990-94, he was the Moscow Bureau Chief of the Christian Science Monitor, covering the end of Soviet Communism and the collapse of the Soviet Union. From 1985-90, he was Tokyo Correspondent for the Monitor, covering Japan and Korea.

Location:
Hotel Nikko
222 Mason Street, San Francisco
map

Time:
5:00-6:00 pm – Members Meeting & Presentation, 25th floor Peninsula Room
6:00-7:00 pm – Reception, 25th floor Golden Gate Room
Light hors d’oeuvres will be served; no host bar.

Cost:
The Annual General Meeting is a free event open only to current Japan Society members.

$ 0.00      View details

 

2010 Award of Honor Gala

NEW! Ambassador Schieffer's speech available here.

Neither thunder nor lightning could keep guests away from the Japan Society of Northern California 24th Award of Honor Gala at the Hotel Nikko on Saturday November 20th.  More than 300 attendees braved thunderstorms rattling San Francisco to applaud speeches by Japan Society Award of Honor recipients Ambassador J. Thomas Schieffer, US Ambassador to Japan 2005 to 2009, and Takahiro Moriguchi, Chairman of JP Morgan Securities Japan, and by Lifetime Achievement Award winner . Hatsuro "Hats" Aizawa, recipient of the Japan Society’s Lifetime Achievement Award,

Storm survivors were rewarded by a surprise guest performance by new Japanese Consul General of Japan in San Francisco Hiroshi Inomata, who jumped in on the drums with the George Yamasaki Quartet for a rousing rendition of Loco-Motion that got the audience on their feet and dancing and ended the Society’s 24th annual gala with a bang.

Many thanks to all our corporate and individual members and to all the many other companies and individuals from around the Bay Area who supported this year's gala with sponsorships, tickets, auction donations, wine and food and volunteering on Gala night.

We truly couldn't have done it without you. Kokoro kara o-rei moushiagemasu!

 

 

 

 

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Please join us at the 2010 Award of Honor Gala as we celebrate Bay Area-Japan business collaboration.

Award of Honor Recipients:
Ambassador J. Thomas Schieffer

Mr. Takahiro Moriguchi, Chairman, JPMorgan Securities Japan Co. Ltd.

Lifetime Achievement Award:
Mr. Hatsuro Aizawa

Date:
Saturday evening, November 20, 2010

Location:
Hotel Nikko
222 Mason Street, San Francisco
map

Time:
General Reception – 6:00 pm
Dinner Program – 7:15 pm

Attire:
Black tie optional.

Please RSVP no later than Friday, November 5, 2010.

For more information about the event, as well as honoree biographies, please click here.

Please purchase individual tickets below. *Special early registration pricing is available for tickets purchased by 5:00 pm on Friday, October 22, 2010.

Please click here for information on table sponsorships.

To make a donation in honor of Ambassador Schieffer, Mr. Moriguchi or Mr. Aizawa, please click here.

PLEASE NOTE:
Registration for this event is closed.

No refunds can be issued for cancellations received after Friday, October 22, 2010.

Your contribution to the Japan Society is tax-deductible to the full extent allowed by law.

$ 95.00 - $ 800.00      View details

 

2010 Gala Donation

A donation in honor of Ambassador J. Thomas Schieffer, Mr. Takahiro Moriguchi or Mr. Hatsuro Aizawa can be made to the Japan Society of Northern California as follows:

  • A cash donation to the Japan Society to be used for general operating expenses. To make a cash donation, you may do so online below.
    Contributors of $500 or more will be recognized as a sponsor of the event unless otherwise requested.

 

$ 50.00 - $ 5,000.00      View details

 

2011 Annual General Meeting

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

We are pleased to invite you to join us for our 2011 General Members Meeting. This exclusive, members-only gathering is your opportunity to meet the new members of the Board of Directors of the Japan Society, and to learn about our plans for the future–plus, it's free for all Japan Society Members.

Our special guest speaker for the evening will be Consul General Hiroshi Inomata.

Reception to follow.

Location:
Hotel Nikko
222 Mason Street
San Francisco, CA
[Map]

Date & Time:
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
5:00 to 6:00 pm Members Meeting & Presentation, Carmel II room, 3rd Floor
6:00 to 7:00 pm Reception, 25th floor Golden Gate Room

Light hors d’oeuvres will be served; no host bar.

Cost:
The Annual General Meeting is a free event open only to current Japan Society members.

$ 0.00      View details

 

23rd Annual US-Japan Friendship Cup Tennis Tournament

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Click here to view 2009 tournament photos.

Please note: This event has limited space and registration is first come first served. Please read carefully and register early to ensure your spot in the tournament.

Online registration is now closed. Please call the Society office at 415.986.4383 for sign up information.

Tournament Information

The Japan Society is proud to present the 23rd Annual US-Japan Friendship Cup Tennis Tournament.

Started in 1987, the purpose of this friendly tournament is to develop a warm relationship between the peoples of Japan and the United States. The Consular Cup, which was donated to the tournament in 1990 by the Consulate General of Japan, will be awarded to the winner.

Time:
Saturday, June 5, 2010
9 am – 3:30 pm. Please be prompt, and plan to stay for the entire event.

Location:
Mills High School
400 Murchison Dr., Millbrae, CA 94030 map
(Street parking west of El Camino on Millbrae Ave.)

Fee:
$30
Fee includes registration & bento box. Please bring your own drinks.

Registration Deadline:
Wednesday, May 26. Refunds will not be granted after this date.

Other Information:

  • Matches will be men’s/women’s/mixed doubles; your partner will change each round. The doubles partner will be decided by drawing lots, no pre-arrangements.
  • Each player plays a total of 4 sets, each set consisting of 8 games (plays a total of 32 games).
  • The player with the most number of winning games out of 32 games is the winner.
  • Players must 17 or older to participate. All skill levels welcome.
  • This is a friendship tournament, with the intention of enjoying tennis with players of all skill level. Please note this is not a competitive USTA tournament.
  • There will be an award ceremony after the games, so participants are asked to stay until the end of the event.
  • We will confirm your participation by email prior to the tournament.
  • Players participate at their own risk. The Japan Society, Mills High School and San Mateo High School District will not be held responsible for any injury or accident sustained while playing in the tournament.

For more information, please contact jsnc@usajapan.org

This event is held in cooperation with the Consulate General of Japan in San Francisco.

Supporters: Mrs. Keiko Horkan, Ito En, Inc., Mr. Kozo Kimura, Nijiya Market, Port of San Francisco, Sanrio, Inc., Sushi on North Beach - Katsu, Yonex Corporation USA, Yuzu Passion, Zalles Racquet Sports

$ 30.00      View details

 

24th Annual US-Japan Friendship Cup Tennis Tournament

Saturday, May 21st, 2011

Congratulations to our 2011 champion, Mr. Yasuo Shimada, and to all of this year's players and sponsors for raising nearly $700 for Japan earthquake relief!

The Japan Society is proud to announce the 24th Annual US-Japan Friendship Cup Tennis Tournament.

Started in 1987, this friendly tournament was launched to build friendships between the peoples of Japan and the United States on the courts. The Consular Cup, which was donated to the tournament in 1990 by the Consulate General of Japan, will be awarded to the winner.

This year, 100% of net proceeds from the tournament will go to JSNC Japan Earthquake & Tsunami Relief Fund to rebuild communities damaged by the disastrous earthquake and resulting tsunami that struck the Northeastern region of Japan.

Please note: This event has limited space and registration is first come first serve. Please read carefully and register early to ensure your spot.

Time:
Saturday, May 21, 2011
9 am – 3:30 pm. Please be prompt, and plan to stay for the entire event.

Location:
Mills High School
400 Murchison Dr., Millbrae, CA 94030 map
(Street parking west of El Camino on Millbrae Ave.)

Fee:
$40
Fee includes registration & bento box. Please bring your own drinks.

Registration Deadline:
Monday, May 16. Refunds will not be granted after this date.

Other Information:

  • Matches will be men’s/women’s/mixed doubles; your partner will change each round. The doubles partner will be decided by drawing lots, no pre-arrangements.
  • Each player plays a total of 4 sets, each set consisting of 8 games (plays a total of 32 games).
  • The player with the most number of winning games out of 32 games is the winner.
  • Players must be 17 or older to participate. All skill levels welcome.
  • This is a friendship tournament, with the intention of enjoying tennis with players of all skill level. Please note this is not a competitive USTA tournament.
  • There will be an award ceremony after the games, so participants are asked to stay until the end of the event.
  • We will confirm your participation by email prior to the tournament.
  • Players participate at their own risk. The Japan Society, Mills High School and San Mateo High School District will not be held responsible for any injury or accident sustained while playing in the tournament.

For more information, please contact jsnc@usajapan.org

This event is held in cooperation with the Consulate General of Japan in San Francisco

Supporters: Yonex Corporation USA, Port of San Francisco, Japan Airlines, Katsura Garden, The Magnolia of Millbrae, Inc.Kanpai Sushi & Naomi Sushi, Ito En Ltd., California Bank & Trust, Yakult U.S.A. Inc.


$ 40.00      View details

 

26th Annual Berkeley Kite Festival

Saturday & Sunday, July 30-31, 2011

Kites aren't just for kids any more—there’s something for everyone at the Berkeley Kite Festival. Experience the excitement and artistry of modern kite flying. Special guests include the Sode Cho Kite Team of Hamamatsu, Japan. Today’s Hamamatsu Matsuri is a celebration of the renewal of life and the confirmation of community spirit.

From the Japanese-Style Rokkaku Kite Battle for the Skies to the free kite making and candy drop for kids, you won't want to miss this year’s Annual Berkeley Kite Festival.

Location:
Cesar E. Chavez Park at the Berkeley Marina
Berkeley, CA
[Map]

Date & Time:
Saturday & Sunday, July 30-31, 2011
10:00 am to 5:00 pm

Cost:
Free and open to the public. For more information, please visit the Berkeley Kite Festival website or call 510-235-KITE (5483).

Parking is available at the Marina for the flat rate of $10 per day (includes shuttle service from the parking area to the Festival).

 

$ 0.00      View details

 

28th Annual San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival

March 11-21, 2010

The 28th Annual San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival (SFIAAFF) brings the best Asian and Asian American films from around the globe to venues in San Francisco, Berkeley and San Jose.

The Japan Society is delighted to co-present two films at this year’s festival: LT. WATADA and DEAR DOCTOR.


In LT. WATADA, Lieutenant Ehren Watada is the bravest man in the military, or the best friend of Al Qaeda, depending on whom you ask. Court marshaled after refusing to deploy to Iraq, he has become a heroic model of resistance for those who oppose a war based on, as he says, “intentionally manipulated intelligence.” Documentary filmmaker Freida Lee Mock allows the very well spoken lieutenant to tell his tale of resistance, one that finds its bravery not on the battlefield, but in the soul.


One of Japan’s most promising young filmmakers, Miwa Nishikawa, delivers her most fully realized and emotionally satisfying work in her third feature, DEAR DOCTOR. The film begins with the sudden disappearance of Ino, the only doctor in a small, rural village. Flash back two months, when a young intern from Tokyo arrives in a red convertible for his residency with Ino. Through the intern’s eyes, we see a portrait of a kindhearted country doctor revered as a savior by the villagers. But when Ino and an elderly female patient decide to keep her potentially fatal illness hidden from her family, Ino’s own secrets start to slowly unravel, and force everyone to question whether a lie is a sin if told in the name of compassion. The film features a refreshing, bluesy harmonica score and a stellar performance by Tsurube Shofukutei—one of Japan’s most popular comedians—as Doctor Ino.

For more information and to purchase tickets, please visit the 28th Annual San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival website.

$ 0.00      View details

 

53rd San Francisco International Film Festival

April 22-May 6, 2010

The 53rd San Francisco International Film Festival returns April 22-May 6 with more than 100 unique programs of the finest independent, documentary and international cinema, playing host to more than 80,000 film-lovers, filmmakers, and industry professionals. The International combines a range of marquee premieres, international competitions, hard-hitting documentaries, digital media work and star-studded gala events.

This year, the Japan Society is proud to co-present The Invention of Dr. Nakamats, directed by Kaspar Astrup Schröder.

A legend in his own time—and mind—the fascinating, forbearing 80-year-old Yoshiro Nakamats holds 3,400 patents, including the floppy disk, bouncing shoes and the impossible-to-resist Love Spray. This humorous, quirky and visually striking cinematic portrait proves wholly worthy of its eccentric subject. With short Arsy-Versy (23 min).

Location:
Sundance Kabuki Cinemas
1881 Post Street
San Francisco, CA
Map

Time:
Friday, April 30 at 9:30 pm;
Monday, May 3 at 1:30 pm; and
Wednesday, May 5 at 6:30 pm

For more information about The Invention of Dr. Nakamats, please visit the SFIFF53 website. For tickets and information about SFIFF53, visit sffs.org or call 925-866-9559.

Other SFIFF53 films of interest:

Air Doll
Directed by Hirokazu Kore-eda, Japan 2009

Kore-eda returns with possibly his most surprising work to date. An “air doll” suddenly comes to life in the middle of modern Tokyo in this offbeat, gorgeously filmed and soulfully directed anti-fairy tale about love, loneliness and what it means to be human, starring Korean starlet Bae Doo-na.

For more information about Air Doll, please visit the SFIFF53 website.


Littlerock
Directed by Mike Ott

A sleepy Los Angeles exurb and its shiftless young residents are seen through the eyes of two Japanese tourists in this intimate evocation of a small town in Southern California where everyone’s talking but no one really understands.

For more information about Littlerock, please visit the SFIFF53 website.

$ 0.00      View details

 

54th San Francisco International Film Festival

April 21-May 5, 2011

The 54th San Francisco International Film Festival returns April 21-May 5, presenting the finest in independent, documentary and international cinema.

This year, the Japan Society is pleased to copresent HOSPITALITÉ, directed by Koji Fukada. In this black comedy the lives of a timid small-time printer and his young wife are turned inside out by the arrival of a stranger who moves in and takes over their world. Set in a village-like outpost in the heart of Tokyo, this is a wry commentary on Japanese xenophobia. Kiki Sugino heads a spritely ensemble cast.

Director Koji Fukada was born in Tokyo, Japan in 1980. HOSPITALITÉ was a winner of the Best Picture Award at the Japanese Eyes section of the 2010 Tokyo International Film Festival.

Dates and Times:
Saturday, April 23 at 9:00 pm / NEW PEOPLE
Thursday, April 28 at 6:30 pm / NEW PEOPLE
Saturday, April 30 at 8:15 pm / Pacific Film Archive

Please visit the 54th San Francisco International Film Festival website for screening locations, ticket information and more.

 

$ 0.00      View details

 

A Cook's Journey to Japan

Friday, May 21, 2010

Join us at Noe Valley’s Omnivore Books as author Sarah Marx Feldner reads from her new cook book, A Cook’s Journey to Japan.

At twenty-eight, Sarah had a great job at a growing food magazine and a bungalow all her own. But rather than feeling a sense of security, Sarah found herself “painfully bored, feeling scarily trapped and stuck.” So she did what anyone would do—quit her job, sold her house and moved to Japan.

Having spent time in Japan teaching English as a second language four years prior, Sarah returned to explore her love of food, cooking and Japanese cuisine. A Cook’s Journey to Japan is the result of her adventures traveling throughout Japan, sampling home cooking and collecting recipes from everyday people.

After graduating from college with a degree in Spanish, Sarah Marx Feldner headed to Japan to teach English for a year. There, she found a countryside, cuisine and overall aesthetic she quickly fell in love with. A few years later, back in Japan, Sarah traveled the country—from the top of Honshu to the tip of Kyushu—collecting recipes and stories from as many people as would share them. This book, her first, is the culmination of that journey.

Location:
Omnivore Books
3885a Cesar Chavez Street
San Francisco, CA
Map

Time:
Friday, May 21, 2010
6:00 to 7:00 pm

Cost:
Free and open to the public. Advanced registration is not required.

For additional information, please visit the Omnivore Books website or call 415-282-4712.

The Japan Society kindly thanks Omnivore Books for hosting this event.

$ 0.00      View details

 

Advanced Japanese - San Francisco

Date & Time:
Thursdays, 9/8 - 12//8/2011,  6:00 – 8:00 PM
No class on 9/22 & 11/24

Location:
Japan Society of Northern California (Classroom)
500 Washington Street, Suite 300
San Francisco, CA 94111 (map)

Teacher: Ms. Nobue Maeda

Textbook: わかって使える日本語(中級レベル)Other materials provided by teacher.
Teaching materials and lessons covered may vary slightly from class to class.

Advanced Japanese Class is designed for students with a solid foundation in written and spoken Japanese. The class is conducted entirely in Japanese and focuses on the development of extended discourse abilities and advanced reading skills. Class materials are drawn from a variety of sources such as textbooks, newspaper, and novels.

If you are not already a member please read about our individual membership!

By registering for this class, you are agreeing to the Japan Society of Northern California’s Class Policies.

$ 195.00 - $ 300.00      View details