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2006 Archives

A Green Chariot

A Green Chariot

Directed by Gilad Goldschmidt 

Israel, 2005 

Russian, Hebrew with English subtitles 

Color, 47 min. 

Feature


This topical drama explores with sensitivity the burning question of "who is a Jew." A young Soviet immigrant, who has become observant and is engaged to an observant sabra, faces a moral crisis and test of the strength of his faith when he discovers that he may not be Jewish based on the rigorous standards of Orthodox Judaism. This film suggests that this issue may be resolvable in a manner that would be acceptable to all concerned.

Beethoven’s Hair

Beethoven’s Hair

Directed by Larry Weinstein 

Canada, 2005 

German, Danish, with English subtitles 

Color, 82 min. 

Docu-drama


Ludwig van Beethoven lived and died as a tormented genius, whose contribution to civilization will surely last forever. Within minutes after Beethoven died in Vienna, Ferdinand Hiller, a Jewish music student who later became a famous musician in his own right, surreptitiously clipped a lock from the master’s hair. The lock of hair seemingly vanished from history. This film, which combines elements of high drama, intrigue, and modern technology, explains how that lock of hair mysteriously reappeared on an auctioneer’s block at Sotheby’s in Denmark and how its authenticity was confirmed through the most sophisticated of scientific procedures. This lock of hair now resides permanently at San Jose State University, where it may be seen by all, two months of the year.


Note: After the film, plan to stay for a discussion with Larry Weinstein of Toronto, the film’s director, and Russell Martin, of Colorado, the author of the book by the same name.

Children’s House

Children’s House

Directed by Tamar Feingold 

Israel, 2005 

Hebrew with English subtitles 

Color, 52 min. 

Documentary


In the earliest days of the State of Israel, children in a kibbutz spent most of their earliest years in a communal "children’s house" rather than with their parents. In this film, artists who grew up in a kibbutz organize an exhibit that emphasizes the sterile and emotionally deficient childhood that they experienced in the children’s house of their kibbutz. This is a stimulating film that analyzes an aspect of the parent-child relationship that has profoundly affected the lives of many, if not most, Israelis who spent their formative years on kibbutzim. Another view, albeit potentially controversial, of life on the kibbbutz.

Fateless (Sortsalanság)

Fateless (Sortsalanság)

Directed by Lajos Koltai 

Hungary, Germany, UK, 2005 

Hungarian, German with English subtitles 

Color/B&W, 140 min. 

Feature Recommended for adult audience


It is Hungary in 1944, and a teen-ager from a middle class Budapest family is caught in a police round-up of Jews. Sent to a series of Nazi camps he is completely separated from his family, and exposed to unimaginable horrors. Nonetheless he manages to survive. Realistic and grim at times, it depicts an indomitable will to survive. After his release, he somehow relinquishes his bitterness and vows to continue with his life. This mature and existential film is based upon the semi-autobiographical novel by Hungarian Jewish author Imre Kertész, who recently received the Nobel Prize for Literature and, incidentally, adapted his novel for this film. Nominated  European Film Award: Best Cinematographer, Gyula Pados; Best Composer, Ennio Morricone; Official selection: Berlin Film Festival 2005, Teluride Film Festival 2005, Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.

Gloomy Sunday

Gloomy Sunday

Directed by Rolf Schubel 

Germany, 1999 

German with English subtitles 

Color, 114 min. 

Feature


Best of the Best


The San Jose Jewish Film Festival offered this film, one of the most popular ever shown at the Festival, in 2003. We are offering it as a "Best of the Best", in case you missed it or have been waiting to see it again! It plays in theater # 10 on November 5, at 5:30 p.m.


This highly-charged dramatic romance told in flash backs beautifully conjures both an intensely personal and political tale. Budapest, 1930s: Lazlo, a Jewish restaurant owner, hires pianist Andras to play in his restaurant. Both men fall in love with the beautiful waitress Ilona who inspires Andras to create his successful but dangeroous composition, Gloomy Sunday an actual hit-song of the early 1930's. The fragile balance of their erotic menage-a-trois spirals out of control when a German freshman Hans (Ben Becker, The Harmonists) falls in love with Ilona as well. Hans later returns as an SS officer offering Jews passage out of Hungary in exchange for money. (Sexual situations, nudity)

Go for Zucker (Alles auf
                Zucker)

Go for Zucker (Alles auf
Zucker)

Directed by Dani Levy 

Germany, 2004

German with English subtitles

Color, 95 min 

Feature


This outrageously comedic film, immensely popular in Germany, dares, after many decades, to depict Jews as people who face the same challenges as other Germans. In fact, Paul Spiegel, President of the Central Committee of Jews in Germany, was quoted as saying this movie "helps to bring Jews and non-Jews back on track to normality." Two Jewish brothers in Germany have not spoken for over forty years. One is thoroughly dissolute, and the other is highly observant. The brothers are forced to reconcile, in some manner, if they are to share in an inheritance from their recently departed mother. Winner of six Golden Lolas (German Film Academy) and Ernst Lubitsch Award for Best German Comedy (2005). This is the first German-Jewish comedy since World War II, created by the producers of "Run Lola Run" and "Goodbye Lenin." Get ready to laugh!


Underwritten by Dr. Susan Gould

Hats of Jerusalem

Hats of Jerusalem

Directed by Nati Adler 

Israel, 2005

Hebrew, Greek, Arabic, Amharic with English subtitles

Color, 50 min. 

Documentary


Jerusalem is home to peoples of differing faiths and cultural origins. In a city where more heads seem to be more covered than not, a person’s hat or other head covering serves to identify not only one’s faith but culture and origin as well. This film explores, in an entertaining manner, those head coverings, such as those worn by Arabs, by Greek and Armenian clergy, and the myriad hats worn by members of Hassidic communities and other ultra-Orthodox Jews.


Underwritten by Pearl and Leonard Rosenthal

Holocaust Tourist

Holocaust Tourist

Directed by Jes Benstock 

UK, 2005 

English 

Color/B&W, 10 min.

Short documentary 


A "tourist trade" has grown up in Poland at both the ghetto in Kraków and at the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp. This film highlights the ironic juxtaposition between the death camp facilities at Auschwitz-Birkenau and the nearby hot dog stands that cater to tourists.


Underwritten by Gloria and Ken Levy


After movie, there was a discussion with Monsignor Eugene Boyle who has worked diligently since 1963 on Catholic-Jewish interfaith relations, and Rabbi Aaron Schonbrun of Congregation Beth David in Saratoga. The discussion will be moderated by Bart Charlow of the Silicon Valley Conference for Community and Justice. The sponsors of this exciting event are The Catholic Diocese of San Jose, the Jewish Community Relations Council of Silicon Valley, the Anti-Defamation League, and the Silicon Valley Conference for Community and Justice.

Isn’t This a Time

Isn’t This a Time

Directed by Jim Brown 

US, 2004 

English

Color/B&W, 90 min. 

Documentary


In the early 1950s, folk music became the conscience of America, and Harold Leventhal, who began his career as a song plugger for Irving Berlin and before that a union organizer, was largely responsible for making that voice heard throughout the country. Over the years, he managed the most famous of folk music groups and singers, including the Weavers, Peter Paul & Mary, and Joan Baez. In this fascinating film, which was made the year before he died in 2005, the surviving Weavers, Peter Paul & Mary, Leon Bibb, Arlo Guthrie, and Theodor Bikel gather at Carnegie Hall in a musical tribute to their mentor and friend. This delightful film chronicles the panorama of folk music in America and will enthrall any audience, regardless of its age.

Land of the Settlers

Land of the Settlers

Directed by Chaim Yavin 

Israel, 2005 

Hebrew with English subtitles 

Color, 90 min. 

Documentary


Famed Israeli television anchor Chaim Yavin, who believes that Israeli occupation engenders Arab hatred and thwarts peace, traveled extensively throughout the Occupied Territories to interview settlers and local Palestinians. These interviews, together with those with Israeli advocates of withdrawal, are insightful and provocative, guaranteed to be thought-provoking.

Like a Fish Out of Water

Like a Fish Out of Water

Directed by Leonid Prudovsky 

Israel, 2006 

Hebrew, Spanish with English subtitles 

Color, 50 min. 


Feature In this amusing and well-paced Israeli comedy, a secular Argentine-born immigrant in Israel falls in love with his religiously traditional ulpan teacher. Her parents believe him to be a marine biologist. What they don’t know is that he is a former Argentine television soap opera star who now works in a service station. Lots of twists and turns with a smile!


Underwritten by Eli Reinhard

Live and Become

Live and Become

Directed by Radu Mihaileanu 

France/Israel, 2004 French

Hebrew, Amharic with English subtitles 

Color, 140 min. 

Feature


In a Sudanese refugee camp sheltering Ethiopians displaced by civil war and famine in 1984, the Israeli secret service has begun Operation Moses, airlifting thousands of Falashas, or Ethiopian Jews, to Israel. Ethiopia is in chaos and times are precarious for its small but ancient Jewish community. A Jewish woman offers to take an Ethiopian Christian boy with her, after her son dies. The Christian mother, knowing that she likely will never see her son again, admonishes him to "go, live and become." After the Jewish woman dies shortly after arriving in Israel, the boy, now known as "Shlomo," is alone in a strange land. He realizes that he must conceal his identity as a Christian and make a transformation into Israeli society.Radu Mihaileanu, the renowned creator of "Train of Life," addresses in "Live and Become" the profound issues of survival and preservation of identity, as well as the redemptive power of love.Audience Award for best film—2005 Berlin International Film Festival. Recipient of the Golden Swan (Best Film) and Best Screenplay awards, Copenhagen International Film Festival (2005) and the Jury Prize for Best Film, Valenciennes Film Festival (2005).


Underwritten by Gloria and Ken Levy

Melting Siberia

Melting Siberia

Directed by Ido Haar

Israel, 2004

Russian, Hebrew with English subtitles 

Color, 74 min. 

Documentary


The lives of most elderly citizens of the former Soviet Union were disrupted by numerous and repeated tragedies, including civil war, the Second World War, and famine. No group has suffered more than have its Jews. In this film, a middle-aged Israeli woman, whose elderly mother also lives in Israel, tracks down her father, a Jewish man who had been an officer in the Red Army and shamelessly abandoned her and her mother shortly after her birth. It’s a story personal to the young Israeli director who coaxes his mother to go back to find the man she left behind.


Press material – "Melting Siberia", Theatrical Release, Israel.


Yehuda Stav - "Yedioth Aharonot" Newspaper, 28.01.05 ****


Ido Haar’s new film is an additional proof that a documentary film is as capable of unfolding a deeply moving story as the best of melodramas. Furthermore, "Melting Siberia" shows that reality has more dramatic impact than any soap opera scenario. When it succeeds in sifting the right materials from reality, when it is shot and edited intelligently, when it is wisely and thoughtfully directed, a documentary piece can rouse the same excitement and exhilaration is us as the great feature films do.


Gidi Orsher – "Gale Tzahal", Radio Station, 2.2.05 ****


Gentle, touching movie. 


Uri Kline - "Ha'aretz" Newspaper, 3.2.2005


That Ido Haar, the director of the documentary film "Melting Siberia", has the eye of a true documentarist, is evident in the way he examines his surroundings and the people populating them. All through the film he strikes the right balance between the central dramatic narrative and the transient marginal images that embellish it. The result is an intelligent, honest, and a very touching film… a beautiful and deeply moving documentary.


Yossi Shoval - "Ma'ariv" newspaper, 21.01.05


The thrilling "Melting Siberia" is a roller coaster of laughter and tears that has captivated the audience.…the film turns into an emotionally breathtaking merry-go-around, that takes you by the throat and hits you straight in the stomach. Through its captivating protagonists, "Melting Siberia" becomes greater than life - a film about morality, love, and family.


Yaniv Halfon - "Walla" Website, 24.01.05


…entrancing dialogues and thrilling Chekhovian scenes. The view is snowy yet the happenings are smoldering hot. The breath steams in the freezing air, yet the conversations burn with emotion.

Oriental

Oriental

Directed by Avi Nesher 

Israel, 2005 

Color, 46 min. 

Hebrew with subtitles English 

Documentary


The cultural differences between Israelis and Arabs must be factored into virtually every discussion, at every level. To emphasize this point, the film cross-cuts the interaction of a Jewish Israeli belly dancer and the Israeli Arab musical group with which she is performing, with interviews with high-profile Palestinian and Israeli participants in the Camp David negotiations. You will hear the inside story on why those discussions ultimately failed.

Out of Sight

Out of Sight

Directed by Daniel Syrkin 

Israel, 2005 

Hebrew with English subtitles 

Color, 86 min. 

Feature 

For mature audience


Two young Israeli girls, cousins of one another, are best friends from their earliest years. After they are grown, one of them kills herself, seemingly for no reason. The other friend, who has been blind from birth, is able to process facts that the sighted persons around her cannot, and she works to understand why her best friend took her own life. This intense and riveting story, the ending of which will startle you, reveals a dark secret in the dead girl’s family. Mature themes not suitable for children. Israeli Academy Award in 2005 for Best Director to Daniel Syrkin for "Out of Sight."

Sister Rose’s Passion

Sister Rose’s Passion

Directed by Oren Jacoby 

USA, 2004 

English 

Color, 39 min. 

Documentary 


Listen to what the late Sister Rose E. Thiering, an amazing Catholic nun, says about Mel Gibson’s "Passion of the Christ." in the movie about her life’s passion, the battle against anti-Semitism in the Church. This Wisconsin-born Dominican nun, who passed away a few months ago, pressured the Roman Catholic Church to repudiate its teachings that all Jews bore collective responsibility for the crucifixion of Jesus. Eventually, in 1965, at the urging of Pope John Paul XXIII, the Vatican ecumenical council known as "Vatican II" clearly and unequivocally absolved the Jews of this long-standing accusation of guilt and in doing so, they quoted from Sister Rose’s writings. You will hear from Catholic theologians about anti-Semitism in the Church, and Sister Rose’s positive influence.


Underwritten by Gloria and Ken Levy

The First Time I Turned Twenty
		      (La
		        Première Fois Que J’ai Eu 20 Vingt Ans)

The First Time I Turned Twenty
(La
Première Fois Que J’ai Eu 20 Vingt Ans)

Directed by Lorraine Levy 

France, 2005 

French with English subtitles 

Color, 90 min. 

Feature 


A talented ensemble cast gives life to this charming coming-of-age story set in France in the 1960s. A plain, 16-year-old Jewish girl, misunderstood by her loving but dysfunctional family, is determined to become a member of her school’s renowned jazz band, which has never had either a Jew or a girl. Once in the band, she encounters obstacles that test the full measure of her indomitable spirit. This uplifting and piquant film captures the essence of a simpler time, but one where the challenges of adolescence were as great as they remain today.


Underwritten by Robert and Kennon Hudson

The Jews of Iran

The Jews of Iran

Directed by Ramin Farahani 

The Netherlands, 2005

Color, 52 min. 

English, Hebrew, and Farsi with English subtitles 

Documentary


In light of the Iranian government’s relentless hostility toward Israel and its proxy war, through Hezbollah against the Jewish state, this well-directed and tightly-edited film now has an especially foreboding nature. The movie portrays the lives of Iran’s remaining Jews. They acknowledge the existence of discrimination, go out of their way to portray their devotion to Iran and, perhaps understandably, avoid criticizing its government. This is an inside look at an otherwise hidden but previously vibrant culture.

The Journey of Vaan Nguyen

The Journey of Vaan Nguyen

Directed by Duki Dror 

Israel, 2005 

Hebrew, Vietnamese (with English subtitles) 

Color/B&W, 56 min. 

Documentary


What is it like to be a foreigner in a strange land? "The Journey of Vaan Nguyen" explores the universal refugee experience, confronting issues of separation, alienation, and yearning. A Vietnamese family flees the chaos of their country in the 1970’s, and joins fellow Vietnamese refugees in Israel, at the invitation of Menachem Begin. Their children are born there, grow up in Israel speaking Hebrew as their first language, and the older daughter--like most Israeli youth--joins the Israeli army. More than 30 years after their arrival in Israel, they travel back to Vietnam, a country very different from the one they left. The question they try to answer is "should they stay"?Sponsored by the Consulate General of Israel


Question/answer session after movie with Duki Dror, the producer/director, as well as a representative of the San Jose Vietnamese community.

The Kibbutz

The Kibbutz

Directed by Racheli Schwartz 

Israel, 2005 

Hebrew with English subtitles 

Color/B&W, 52 min. 

Documentary


The kibbutz movement was, for many years, the pride of Israeli society and epitomized the reclamation of land that had lain barren for centuries. The vibrancy of that movement, however, has changed in recent years as more kibbutzim have fallen on hard times and seemingly lost their relevance in the fabric of Israeli society. This documentary focuses on that decline. The youth of this particular kibbutz have left for the cities and its dining hall and children’s house are shuttered, leaving old and disillusioned kibbutzniks with memories of a vibrant past. Those who remain do not, unfortunately, understand why the concept that they loved has vanished. This film attempts to answer that question.

The King’s Daughter

The King’s Daughter

Israel Broadcasting Authority-Original Production 

Directed by Sari Makover-Belikov, Ora Maymon-Pilewski 

Israel, 2005 

Hebrew, Yiddish with English subtitles 

Color, 58 min. 


Documentary General visitors to Mea Shearim, an ultra-orthodox section of Jerusalem, usually do not go behind the doors to truly understand what life is like for the people who live there. "The King’s Daughter" highlights the events leading to the wedding of the granddaughter of the Rabbi of Vizhnitz, and by doing so, provides a glimpse into the day-to-day lives of four Mea Shearim Hassidic women. You will love the grand wedding at the end!


Underwritten by Eli Reinhard

Yiddish Aroma

Yiddish Aroma

Directed by Leonid Horovits 

Israel, 2004 

Hebrew, Yiddish with English subtitles 

Color, 52 min. 

Documentary


With a strong desire to preserve a language and culture in decline, a Yiddish theatre troupe in Tel Aviv prepares for a première. The troupe’s performers and technicians are magically drawn to Yiddish culture. Some are life-long Yiddish speakers, other non-Yiddish-speaking Israelis, and still others grew up in Yiddish-speaking homes. We see that, in a departure from the past, Yiddish is now received favorably in Israel not only by older people but by the youth as well.


Underwritten by Pearl and Leonard Rosenthal

39 Pounds of Love

39 Pounds of Love

Directed by Dani Menkin
USA/Israel 2005
English/Hebrew/Spanish
74 min


  • Ophir Award (Israeli Academy) Best Israeli Documentary 2005

  • Best Documentary 2005 Palm Beach International Film Festival


39 POUNDS OF LOVE is the heartwarming story of Ami Ankilewitz, an American-born Israeli who at the age of 1 was diagnosed with a rare form of Muscular Dystrophy that renders him immobile, except  for one finger, which he uses to work as a 3D animator. His doctor  predicated he'd die before the age of six. Over thirty years have passed and Ami, weighing only 39 pounds, still survives and "loves life", he is considered one of the world's greatest medical miracles. The film follows a riveting cross-country journey that Ami took with friends across the USA in search of the doctor who predicted his early demise. Along his journey, Ami attempts to come to terms with another major incident from his past.

Janem, Janem

Janem, Janem

Bay Area Premier
Directed by Haim Bouzaglo
Israel, 2005
Hebrew w/English subtitles
104 minutes

* Warning: Language and Sexual Content


  • Awarded prizes for direction, editing, script and music -2006

  • Syracuse International Film Festival


Aldi, is a school teacher and combat vet with post war syndrome. He’s turning 40 and going through an acute mid-life crisis. His wife refuses to have children and doesn’t fulfill him. He decides to travel, but instead of getting on a plane, he goes for a journey in his own country and discovers an unknown world in the middle of Tel Aviv.

Live and Become

Live and Become

Directed by Radu Mihaileanu
Amharic, French, Hebrew w/ English subtitles

France/Israel, 2005
148 minutes


  • Audience Award for best film – 2005 Berlin International Film Festival

  • Best Screenplay award – 2005 Copenhagen International Film

  • Festival Jury Prize for Best Film - 2005 Valenciennes Film Festival, France


In a Sudanese refugee camp sheltering Ethiopians displaced by civil war and famine in 1984, the Israeli secret service has begun Operation Moses, airlifting thousands of Falashas, or Ethiopian Jews, to Israel. A non-Jewish Ethiopian woman persuades a Falasha woman whose own son has just died, to allow her son to assume his identity. Renamed Schlomo, the boy is adopted by a loving, liberal Israeli family, however Israel,  rather than being the Promised Land, turns out to be rife with racism. We follow Schlomo through the trials and tribulations of assimilation.

Sliding Flora

Sliding Flora

Sam Spiegel Film & TV School

Directed by Talya Lavie
Israel, 2003
12 minutes

Flora was born in the field, that’s what she keeps telling everyone. She is a waitress in a quirky coffee shop that requires complex acrobatic skills to serve the customers. She is on the verge of quitting when something wonderful happens.

The Schwartz Dynasty

The Schwartz Dynasty

Bay Area Premier

Directed by Shmuel Hasfari, Ori Inbar 

Israel 2005
Hebrew w/English subtitles
104 minutes
* Warning: Language


A small Israeli town seethes with conflict, pitting its residents against each other and threatening to divide it: religious vs. secular, immigrants vs. native-born and dead against the living.


Into this pressure cooker enter two young people who try to bridge the opposing worlds: Anna, a beautiful young Russian woman, born to a Jewish man and a Christian mother, has come to Israel to fulfill her father’s dying wish – to be buried in the Holy Land.


Avishai, a 24-year-old Orthodox Jew, descendant of a distinguished dynasty of Rabbis, struggle to overcome the tyranny of his father, a zealous Jewish settler, and his grandmother.


Avishai’s grandfather had committed suicide after being accused of accepting bribes, and the grandmother’s only wish is to be buried beside her husband. The iron-willed old woman stirs the entire town into battle, dragging Avishai and Anna into the conflict.

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