November 30 - December
10, 2000
An Exhibition of International
Cinema
News,
11/1/2000
THE
FILMS OF THE 11TH WASHINGTON JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL
The 11th Washington Jewish Film Festival: An Exhibition of International Cinema opens on Thursday, November 30, 2000 with the DC Premiere of the award-winning Italian film The Sky Falls (Il Cielo Cade), starring Isabella Rossellini and Jeroen Krabbè. Co-sponsored by the Italian Cultural Institute and the Embassy of Italy, the film will be screened at the historic Lincoln Theatre. Directors Andrea and Antonio Frazzi and writer Lorenza Mazzetti have been invited for this special screening. Additionally, DC Mayor Anthony Williams will be present at the screening.
The Sky Falls, based on Lorenza Mazzetti's autobiographical novel, begins in summer, 1943, when two young orphaned girls are brought to Tuscany to stay with their aunt (Isabella Rossellini) and uncle (Jeroen Krabbè). Jeroen Krabbè shines in his role as a German Jewish intellectual, and cousin to Albert Einstein. With measured sensitivity, Isabella Rossellini brings grace to her role as Krabbè's wife. After the first moments of awkwardness, the girls fit right into the peaceful life of the house. The time goes by happily, but the violence of the war, until that moment just a remote echo, will fall on this family with all its cruelty and pointless ferocity.
The Festival closes at the Lincoln Theatre on December 10th with the Czech dark comedy Divided We Fall, directed by Jan Hrebejk. In a small Czech village during World War II, a childless couple, Josef and Marie Cizek (played by award-winning actor Boleslav Polivka and Anna Siskova), hides their former neighbor, a young Jewish man who has managed to escape from the death camps but has lost his entire family. Their other neighbor, now a enthusiastic Nazi collaborator, drops by at odd hours and begins to suspect. The collaborator's German boss, shattered by the death of his young sons in the war, announces that he is moving into the couple's spare room, and to keep him out the wife blurts out she is pregnant and needs it for a nursery. Suddenly, the barren couple needs to somehow become pregnant in a hurry and you can see where this is going. Divided We Fall is a remarkable mixture of comedic and dramatic elements a la Life is Beautiful with some of the best production values yet seen in a Czech film. (Film note by Eddie Cockrell.) A reception at the Embassy of the Czech Republic will follow.
In addition to the DCJCC's Cecile Goldman Theater, this year's Festival will be presented at the following venues: The Lincoln Theatre, Visions Cinema-Bistro-Lounge, Foundry Theatres, and free screenings at the Goethe-Institut Washington and the National Gallery of Art.
Below are some of the highlights of the more than 45 titles to be presented this year:
AARON
COHEN'S DEBT
Starring renowned Israeli actor Moshe
Ivgi (CUP FINAL, LOVESICK ON NANA STREET), AARON COHEN'S DEBT is a powerful,
fact-based, Israeli TV drama of police brutality and bureaucratic ineptness.
AFTER
THE TRUTH
In this chilling drama Josef Mengele is delivered to present-day Berlin, where
he is forced to stand trial for the atrocities which afforded him the title
"Auschwitz's Angel of Death.
ALL
MY LOVED ONES
Inspired by the real life experiences of English stockbroker Nicholas
Winton, who saved nearly seven-hundred Czech Jewish children in 1939, ALL
MY LOVED ONES focuses on the Silberstein family, a loving, extended Jewish
family, as they navigate the rapids and doldrums of life in Eastern Europe.
ALMONDS
AND WINE
A five minute animated short, ALMONDS AND WINE is a delightful story about
the immigrant experience in North America. Set to the rollicking music of
KAPELE, one of today's leading exponents of the current Klezmer revival.
AMERICAN
LIVES: JEWISH STORIES
With three intimate narratives (a group of teens at a summer camp, a young
woman in an interfaith relationship, and a Baltimore mother's quest for spirituality),
AMERICAN LIVES: JEWISH STORIES focuses on the challenges and joys of being
Jewish in America.
BABCHA
Dror, a hip, third generation Israeli, is the caregiver for his grandmother
Babcha. With the help of a motorcycle, a trip to the beach and much black
humor, they both try to cope with the past.
THE
BRIAN EPSTEIN STORY
The film traces the rise and fall of the man behind the biggest cultural revolution
of our times: The Beatles. Their manager, Brian
Epstein's early life was fraught with failures. As both a gay man and
a Jew he felt doomed to be an outsider. Falling in love with The Beatles rescued
himself as much as it catapulted them into stardom.
COCK
FIGHT
Israeli chicken breeder, Marziano, arrives at a Palestinian checkpoint just
as it's declared closed. Temperatures and tempers soar as an argument ensues
to get the checkpoint opened.
COHEN'S
WIFE
In the wake of a rape, a young ultra-orthodox woman awaits the Rabbinical
court's decision whether her husband must divorce her. Directed by an orthodox
woman, COHEN'S WIFE is a provocative modern-day, portrait of a couple torn
by religious dogma and familial devotion.
DISPARUS
Passion, art and politics fuel this fascinating drama that moves back and
forth in time as a woman tries to solve the mysterious disappearance of Alfred
Katz: working man, Trotskyite and poet- in Paris in the late 1930's.
THE
DYBBUK
A luminous retelling of the famous Yiddish folktale of a wandering soul in
search of an earthly body. From Agnieszka
Holland, the director of EUROPA, EUROPA (1991); OLIVIER, OLIVIER (1992);
and THE SECRET GARDEN (1993).
FAMILY
SECRET
A photo of a young child in her father's desk. A mysterious letter received
from Romania. Beginning with these scant clues, FAMILY SECRET reveals how
American filmmaker Pola Rapaport discovered a half brother whose existence
was kept a secret by their father.
FIGHTER
FIGHTER is a powerful combination of friendship, adventure, and the inner
strength of two friends whose different paths, 50-years earlier, lead to collisions
along the way today. Jan Weiner and Arnost
Lustig join forces and retrace the steps of a 25-year-old Weiner's courageous
journey through Europe.
GEOGRAPHIE
A collage of sounds, Jewish imagery and languages, GEOGRAPHIE is a short experimental
film that examines the nature of Jewish geography.
IT
WILL END UP IN TEARS
IT WILL END UP IN TEARS
is a touching story of how a tight-knit Argentinean-Israeli
family copes and comes to terms with their daughter's homosexuality. The documentary
provides an intimate and compassionate portrait of one young woman's coming
out story set amidst the cultural and social upheavals of modern day Israel.
JAZZMAN
FROM THE GULAG
JAZZMAN FROM THE GULAG retraces the life of legendary jazz musician Eddie
Rosner, a man of Polish Jewish descent nicknamed "White Louis Armstrong" by
Mr. Armstrong himself.
KING
OF THE JEWS
After inadvertently catching a sneak preview of THE KING OF KINGS at Radio
City Music Hall as a young boy, documentary filmmaker Jay
Rosenblatt was inspired to craft this visually arresting 18 minute short
that recounts the historical origins of Christian anti-Semitism.
KIPPUR
Director Amos
Gitai's (KADOSH, WJFF 1999) film is an image-driven, autobiographical
chronicle of the 1973 Yom Kippur War. "Early scenes in no way prepare the
viewer for the extraordinary realism of the battle front material, which is
stunningly staged by Gitai and his team." (Variety)
LAST
RESORT
Through a series of cat and mouse games, Noam Wax, the charismatic leader
of an Israeli Army communal living experiment, gathers six former members
back to their one time mountain settlement. His purpose is to complete a documentary
film about the settlement that will help him overcome the trauma and scars
left over from those days.
THE
LIFE OF THE JEWS IN PALESTINE
Presumed to be lost for 80 years, this 1913 film resurfaced only recently
when it was discovered in the vaults of France's national film archive. Shot
by Russian documentarian and active Zionist Noah
Sokolovsky, the film depicts Jews planting, sewing seeds, constructing
schools and laboring side by side to build the nation that would become Israel.
THE
LOST LOVER
"A complex, often haunting emotional drama about a woman who identifies a
wild-eyed young man with her dead son, THE LOST LOVER is at the same time
a heartfelt affirmation of the need for Jews and Arabs to live in peace. Based
upon A.B.
Yehoshua's novel." (Variety)
THE
MAELSTROM
In this remarkable experimental film by Hungarian artist Pèter
Forgács (FREE FALL), home movie footage made by the Dutch Jewish Peereboom
family from 1938-1942 is used to reconstruct the family's everyday lives,
emotions and feelings.
THE
METAMORPHOSIS OF MR. SAMSA
Canadian animator Caroline
Leaf's THE METAMORPHOSIS OF MR. SAMSA is a superb sepia-toned interpretation
of Kafka's nightmarish story.
ONE
DAY CROSSING
Budapest, Hungary. October 1944. As the Hungarian Nazi movement Arrow
Cross grows stronger, a young mother poses as a Christian to protect her son.
Yet, this charade is challenged when her husband brings home a Jewish boy
he has saved from execution.
PLEASURES
OF URBAN DECAY
Hailed as one of America's last great comic strips, Ben Katchor's "Julius
Knipl, Real Estate Photographer," is familiar to readers of alternative weekly
papers throughout the nation. With Katchor as our guide and narrator, PLEASURES
OF URBAN DECAY takes the viewer on a tour behind New York City's facades and
through its cracks.
RETURN
OF TUVIA
In this moving, short directed by Akiva
Potok, the aged Tuvia walks into a watch store in search of employment.
Instead, the barrier between past and present is swept away as the shopkeeper
makes a stunning recognition.
ROSENZWEIG'S
FREEDOM
In September 1991, a group of skinheads attacks a foreign worker's hostel
in Germany. The same night, a neo-Nazi leader is shot and killed. Michael
Rosenzweig is the primary murder suspect. His brother Jacob, a young attorney,
takes on his defense.
SCOTTSBORO:
AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY
One of the most significant, yet often forgotten, legal fights of the twentieth
century, SCOTTSBORO: AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY reexamines the story of nine black
youths, defended by a New York Jewish attorney, who were unjustly accused
of raping two white women in Alabama in the '30's.
SIMON
MAGUS
Set in Poland in the late 19th century, SIMON MAGUS is a dark fable of love
demonology, and supernatural business practices. Simon Magus (SHINE's Noah
Taylor) is an outcast of a man possessed by his strange dreams and visions
who becomes the key in a struggle to build a railway station in the town that
will bring the village into the modern era.
THE
SPECIALIST (UN SPECIALISTE)
From Israeli-born, Paris-based Eyal
Sivan, comes THE SPECIALIST (UN SPECIALISTE), a controversial black and
white documentary about Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann and one of the most
famous trials in history.
THE
STREET
Based upon a story by writer Mordecai
Richler (author of The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz and Joshua Then
and Now), animator Caroline
Leaf's THE STREET is a bittersweet tale about sibling rivalry, aging grandparents
and "other mysteries of the human heart."
TIMBRELS
AND TORAHS: CELEBRATING WOMEN'S WISDOM
Celebrating aging in a youth obsessed culture, TIMBRELS AND TORAHS: CELEBRATING
WOMEN'S WISDOM introduces "Simchat Hochmah" or "Celebration of Wisdom", a
new rite of passage ceremony created for Jewish women making the transition
from mid-life to their elder years.
A
TRIAL IN PRAGUE
Set during the height of the Cold War, A TRIAL IN PRAGUE tells the story of
an infamous Czech show trial of fourteen leading Communists who were tried
on charges of high treason and espionage. Although they were innocent of these
charges, they confessed, and the fourteen men, eleven of whom were Jews, were
all convicted.
UNDER
CONTROL
Hadar, a young army officer, goes navigating I the desert with one of his
soldiers. In the course of the expedition they discover some new facts about
their shared past and Hadar is put to the ultimate test.
VOYAGES
Poland. Paris. Tel Aviv. VOYAGES, the new film from acclaimed director Emmaunel
Finkiel (MADAME JACQUES SUR LA CROISETTE),
follows the lives of three seemingly unconnected elderly Jewish women across
borders and cultures as they search for reconstructed or new lives.
VULCAN
JUNCTION
VULCAN JUNCTION covers a week in the lives of a group of friends just before
the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Featuring a cast of talented Israeli screen and TV
stars, the film is a nostalgic trip back in time before the county was engulfed
in a conflict that would forever change it.
WE
WERE IN IT TOO:
AMERICAN-JEWISH WOMEN VETERANS REMEMBER WORLD WAR II
Director Debora Duerksen's documentary traces the fascinating experiences
of eight Jewish-American women who served in uniform in World War II.
WEINTRAUBS
SYNCOPATORS
The Weintraubs Syncopators began their career in 1920s Berlin and quickly
became one of the most sought-after Jazz bands in Berlin. This documentary
presents the career of this mostly Jewish ensemble, including performances
in some of the greatest concert and music halls, as well as in the legendary
film "Blue Angel" with Marlene
Dietrich.
WOULD
I LIE TO YOU?
What does it take to pass as a Jew? Set in The Sentier, Paris' Tunisian-Jewish
garment district, Director Thomas
Gilou's whimsical, romantic comedy, WOULD I LIE TO YOU? explores this
confounding question when Edouard a down on his luck gentile, is mistaken
for a Jew.
ZUMMEL
A haunting dance suite, ZUMMEL (Gathering in Yiddish) is a metaphorical search
for escape, liberation and arrival as six black clad figures are set adrift
is this short choreographed by Allen Kaeja.
ZYKLON
PORTRAIT
Director Elida
Schogt's film is a personal and powerful experimental film that meshes
home movies, archival instructional films, underwater photography, family
snapshots and hand painted imagery to create an elegy for her Dutch grandparents.
Our Festival brochure will be available at our Festival Venues and inserted into Washington Jewish Week on Thursday, November 16 and the "Weekend" section of selected home delivery issues of The Washington Post on Friday, November 17.
If you do not receive the Festival catalog in your copies of either of these newspapers and wish to receive a copy by mail, please leave a voice mail at 202.777.3248, send an email to [email protected] or fill out our online mailing list request form after November 17, and we will be happy to send you a copy of the catalog. In your voice mail or email message, please leave your name and mailing address as well as your email address, so that we may add you to our email newsletter mailing list. Be sure to see our program corrections.
Our periodic email newsletter, WJFFnews, is the best way to receive the most information about future events. Only selected events will be publicized through paper mailings. In addition to our email newsletter and occasional paper mailings, all events will also be announced in Center in the City (the DCJCC's monthly publication, available to both members and non-members), as well as on this Web site. If you would like to see sample issues of WJFFnews, you can see the latest issues online.
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