Skip to main content Skip to search

YU News

YU News

Tournées Film Festival Brings Contemporary French Film to YU

Jan 29, 2009
-- Francophiles and all who love great cinema will have reason to rejoice come February. For the very first time, Yeshiva University hosts the Tournées Film Festival, February 5–23. This festival brings the best of contemporary French films to the YU community. The full schedule of movies is available here. The theme of the festival is “Identity at the Margins: Power, Justice, Change.” Matthew Udkovich, lecturer in French at Yeshiva College and organizer of the Tournées Film Festival, explained that YU could choose from 100 French film thanks to a grant from FACE Council. “After narrowing down our choices, we realized that in each of the seven films selected, there was a struggle—people, both individuals and groups, seeking to define themselves and meeting with opposition from the establishment in the form of a country, corporation, history, or family,” Udkovich said. “From Marjane Satrapi’s autobiographical depiction of her conflicted homesickness in 'Persepolis' to Bouchareb’s recounting in 'Indigènes' of the African soldiers fighting for the French ideals of liberté, fraterité, and égalité that seemingly leave them out, iterations of this struggle bring different outcomes in each film,” he added. Read an interview with Udkovich on the new Arts@YU blog here. The line-up of films is diverse enough to appeal to different groups within the YU community. “Young artists might find inspiration in the art collective featured in 'Chats Perchés'; young women and immigrants might find empowerment in 'Le Plafond de Verre'; future lawyers might find motivation in 'L’Ivresse du Pouvoir,'” Udkovich said. Admission to the seven recent French films is free with a valid YU ID card. A $2 donation is kindly suggested for others. The Tournées Film Festival at Yeshiva University is co-sponsored by the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures; the Department of English; the Department of Sociology; and the Department of Jewish History. All films will be shown with English subtitles.