Shalom Sesame DVD Club

Posted on December 5, 2012 at 8:00 am

The popular Shalom Sesame DVD series has announced a Shalom Sesame DVD Club.  Grover the Muppet and Anneliese van der Pol (That’s So Raven, Broadway’s Beauty and the Beast) travel to Israel to meet new people and learn new things in this 12-part DVD series co-produced by Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit educational organization behind Sesame Street, and Israel ’s Channel HOP!  Each 30-minute, live-action and animated DVD focuses on storylines drawn from Jewish cultural traditions, highlighting lessons on Hebrew letters and words, unique sites in Israel , and Jewish values. Through Sesame Street characters, celebrities and stories, viewers learn about Jewish traditions, culture and holidays. Guest appearances by celebrity talent include Debra Messing, Achinoam Nini, Mira Awad, Jake Gyllenhaal, Christina Applegate and Greg Kinnear.

The club is free and members can opt for purchasing the entire DVD series or single titles for a 15% discount , in a single shipment or on a monthly basis.

Shalom Sesame’s “Chanukah the Missing Menorah” episode on PBS this December. The 12 DVDs in the series are: “Welcome to Israel,” “Chanukah: The Missing Menorah,” Shabbat Shalom, Grover!,” “Grover Plants a Tree,” “Mitzvah on the Street,” “Be Happy, It’s Purim!,” “It’s Passover, Grover!,” “Grover Learns Hebrew,” “Countdown to Shavuot,” “The Sticky Shofar,” “Monsters in the Sukkah,” and “Adventures in Israel.”  Each Shalom Sesame DVD includes over 20 minutes of bonus extras including trailers, sneak peeks of all titles, Grover’s Video Player (music videos), sing-alongs and Karaoke of favorite tunes like “Aleph Bet Song,” “Rosh Hashanah Hannah” (a spoof of Hannah Montana) and the famous “Rubber Duckie” song (in Hebrew) among others. A highlight of Grover’s Video Player on Adventures in Israel is “There Must Be Another Way” by Achinoam Nini, Mira Awad and Shalom Sesame friends – the song that represented Israel in the 2009 Eurovision Song Contest in Hebrew, Arabic and English.

Follow Shalom Sesame on YouTube and Facebook and watch “Chanukah: The Missing Menorah” on your local PBS station.


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Interview: Julie Locke of “The Heart of Christmas”

Posted on December 4, 2012 at 6:00 pm

Julie Locke‘s two-year-old son Dax was critically ill with cancer.  He loved Christmas lights, so although it was only October, she put them up.  When their neighbors found out why the Lockes had Christmas decorations up before Halloween, they came together to give Dax an early Christmas, and that story inspired the heartwarming film starring Candace Cameron Bure, “The Heart of Christmas” and the Matthew West song, “One Last Christmas.”

I spoke to Ms. Locke about the loss of her son, the support of the community, and the foundation she has created to give back to St. Jude Hospital, with thanks for all they did to help Dax.  I asked her about the response to the movie.  “It’s just been overwhelming, such a blessing.  So many people’s lives have changed, their priorities are different.  It has been so peaceful for me to know that my son’s life can help other people realize the importance of family and what love is really about,” she told me.  “Dax was so strong.  He was two and he was sick a lot.  But kids don’t sit there and complain like we do.  Seeing him so happy and full of life made me a stronger person.  He was suffering, truly, but he always wanted to dance and be happy.  I tried to let him see me being happy because that’s what he did for me.”

Locke started a blog on the social network Caring Bridge “to cut down on the phone calls” when Dax first got sick.  She received over two million comments.  “People would write me messages of inspiration and prayers and I could feel the love.  It really helped me when I was feeling alone.”  She said it was overwhelming to try to care for Dax.  She did not have time for anything else.  It was the neighbors who spread the word about putting up Christmas decorations and got the whole community involved, “a silent showing of support for us.”  They were new to the neighborhood and knew no one in the area, “so it was really powerful.”

She set up a foundation to run St. Jude for one day because “they never charge families.  They never worry about the money.  They gave me a year and a half with my son that I never would have had. That’s my life mission.”  She hopes people who see the movie will be reminded that “it is important to cherish every moment with your family, because that is what life is about.  Life not about money or material things; it is about relationships and loving one another and helping one another.   I hope people can see in the movie how people did that for me and how it changed my life.  It’s such a fulfilling thing in your heart to be able to do that for someone.”

I have a copy of the DVD to give away.  Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with “Heart” in the subject line and tell me your favorite Christmas ornament.  Don’t forget your address!  (US addresses only)  I’ll pick a winner at random on December 10.

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Behind the Scenes Contests and Giveaways Interview

Trailer: Every 2012 Movie

Posted on December 4, 2012 at 2:16 pm

Fabulous mash-up of every movie released this year:

I love Michael Sheen’s “Oh, my” from “Breaking Dawn, Part 2.”  And the “Step Up: Revolution” dancers.

How many movies can you identify?  The full list is here.

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The Man Behind “It’s A Wonderful Life” — Philip Van Doren Stern

Posted on December 3, 2012 at 11:00 am

It was an honor to interview Marguerite Stern Robinson about Beliefnet’s Movie of the Month, It’s a Wonderful Life. Dr. Robinson’s father, Philip Van Doren Stern, wrote the short story, “The Greatest Gift,” and when no one would publish it, he printed it up himself and sent it out as a Christmas card.  Director Frank Capra and leading man James Stewart, both just back from serving in WWII found in the story the inspiring and meaningful ideas they wanted for their first post-war project.  It was not especially popular at first, but by the 1970’s it had become a holiday classic and no film is more beloved and more emblematic and influential.

In her afterward to the book, The Greatest Gift, Dr. Robinson writes about three themes in the film that continue to be especially important today. One is the issue of “financial inclusion.” Another is “the awesome power of apparent insignificance.” “The business about the insignificance is very important. George wished he had never been born. It was only after he learned for himself what the world would have been like without him that he begs to be returned to his life. Clarence, his guardian angel, then grants George’s wish,” she said. The third relates to David Brooks’ article, “Social Animal.” She explained that the article raises the question “about which is better, to have freedom and adventure or roots and connections. comes down strongly on the side of roots and connections, which is certainly related to ‘It’s a Wonderful Life.’”

I asked her if she had a favorite scene and she responded, “It’s all my favorite!”

Check out the rest of the interview in Beliefnet’s Movie Corner!

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Contest: Life of Pi Book

Posted on December 2, 2012 at 8:00 am

Have you seen “Life of Pi?”  Would you like to read the book?  I have a copy of the movie tie-in edition of the book by Yann Martel to give away.  Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with “Pi” in the subject line.  Don’t forget your address!  (US addresses only.)  I’ll pick a winner at random on December 8.  Good luck!

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Books Contests and Giveaways
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