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For the past sixteen years, The Ojai Valley has
been home to the Ojai Film Society, a non-profit,
educational organization dedicated to enhancing
the cultural life of Ventura County through a variety
of motion picture-related events presented throughout
the year.
The Film Society's primary activity is an annual
series of 36 distinguished films shown at The Ojai
Playhouse movie theater on Sunday afternoons.
In 1998, the Film Society's Program Director,
Steve Grumette, was invited to serve as a juror
at the Canyonlands Film Festival in Moab, Utah.
With a comparable population and boasting both a
vibrant arts community and a spectacular natural
environment, Moab is similar to Ojai in many ways.
Unlike Ojai, however, which has several million
people living within a 75-mile radius, Moab is situated
in the middle of a vast desert, with the closest
large city more than 200 miles away. And so, on
his return from Utah, it occurred to Steve that
if Moab could support a thriving film festival,
why not Ojai? From that germ of an idea, the Ojai
Film Festival was born.
At the next meeting of the Board of Directors
of the Ojai Film Society, Steve proposed that they
establish their own film festival, and after many
months of investigation and debate, the plan was
finally approved. On November 15, 2000, nearly two
years of intensive effort by more than a hundred
volunteers culminated in the opening of the first
Ojai Film Festival to an overwhelmingly enthusiastic
response from filmmakers and filmgoers alike.
After two very successful years of operation,
The Ojai Film Festival became too large an event
to remain a project of the Ojai Film Society, and
so early in 2002, the festival established itself
as an independent nonprofit foundation, dedicated
to continuing and expanding the traditions created
during the first two years.
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