CAAMFest 2016 Highlights and Audience Awards
And just like that, CAAMFest 2016 comes to a close after 11 days celebrating Asian and Asian American stories in film, music and food.
And just like that, CAAMFest 2016 comes to a close after 11 days celebrating Asian and Asian American stories in film, music and food.
Thanks for all your contributions to our great, mutual journey, with one common destiny. Perhaps we have all been flowers growing between concrete and stone. But we are also the forest.
Directions In Sound flourishes this year by including two inspiring, music-centric films paired with special live showcase featuring emerging and cutting-edge musicians from Korea and the SF Bay Area.
Here is our guide to experience, contribute to, and, above all, respect the Mission during CAAMFest 2016.
Aziz Ansari in “Master of None,” Constance Wu in “Fresh Off the Boat,” and Vincent Rodriguez III in “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” make the list, according to CAAM staff and community folks.
The Curse of Quon Gwon is the earliest known film directed by an Asian American, and one of the earliest directed by a woman.
An African American teacher in Alaska seeks ways to connect curriculum with her APA students.
AAJA and CAAM partner for the first time to present an evening of Asian American film projects.
An opportunity for K-12 teachers to spend summer in New York learning about Asian Americans in film and literature.
“Hungry for Love” is a new film by CAAM Fellow Soojin Chung’s — “a heart-warming love story where food brings people together.”
Help us find the family featured in this footage, circa 1939.
CAAM’s Asian American home movie collection debuts on Comcast on Demand.