Archive for the ‘Film’ Category

Hitler’s Daughter – A Return to the Bad Old Days?

Posted by Basia On July - 13 - 2010

Hitler’s Daughter – A Documentary by Aro Korol

Antisemitism never went away. It took on various new guises but it’s here and today raises its ugly head in various forms of deligitmisation of Israel and steady drip feeds of Anti Jewish feeling worldwide.

Aro Korol, A Catholic Polish film maker, has decided to tackle the issue using his film making talent to expose what happens even today in his own birth country and show how it is linked to global events.

The film, Hitler’s Daughter, highlights Polish anti-Semitism, which Korol feels is rife. It will show links with the world’s current spate of demonization of Israel by Europe and the radical Islamic world.
Korol’s story is an interesting one. As a boy, he lived in Poland with his family, amongst a mixture of Christian influences. His family friends and neighbours were Jehovah’s Witnesses, Seventh Day Adventists and various other groups. There was no issue for the young Aro about what a person’s religious belief was. All he knew was tolerance among his neighbours.

Korol’s Grandmother Marta worked in the local Cinema Paradiso. He remembers that sneaking in to the film shows and there began the longing for a film career. He says “my grandmother used to get fifteen free tickets for the film shows after she retired. She kept five and she would give me ten. I would go to that cinema time and time again to watch ‘Gone with the Wind’ and other classics”.

Film became Aro Korol’s life. At fifteen, he gained a part as a movie extra but what really inspired him was how film was made and the idea of directing his own movies.

Korol was eighteen when Steven Spielberg came to Krakow to film his then new movie, ‘Schindler’s List’. Aro Korol decided nothing would keep him away from the set and spent almost an hour trying to get past the security guards to get to the action. He describes what happens next. “I gave the security guards three tons of rubbish about why it was I should be able to go and watch the filming. It really was quite crazy when I think of it now, but I marched in eventually. I managed to get to the line producer, Marek Brocki, who was so stunned at my nerve, he gave me a crew badge”. Day after day, he returned to the set to watch the unfolding of what was to be a masterpiece.

In his late teens, Korol went to work in Germany and came back to Poland as a twenty year old. He then became aware of Radio Maryja. The station was started in 1991, by Redemptorist Tadeusz Rydzyk, often called Father Director by his followers. Korol started to notice what was apparently a massive channel for anti-Semitic and political broadcasts and it greatly disturbed him.

A year later, in Milan, he met the man who was to become his mentor and best friend, Lewis Kaplan. Kaplan was an art dealer and a cultured man who loved to parade Aro around in designer clothing and introduced him to people across the world. Wherever Lewis went, Aro went, be it Europe, Africa, Israel or Asia. The main event for every visit was a trip to the local synagogue and the contemporary art museums and galleries. Korol’s knowledge increased and he went from mild annoyance at being subjected to the pilgrimages to the synagogues to a respect and fascination with Judaism. He visited Yad Vashem and his eyes were opened to a suffering he had known little about.

In 1997 Lewis gave his protégé the greatest gift of all. He sent him to study at New York Film University. While in New York Korol met Gerry Schoenfeld and his wife Pat. Schoenfeld was one of the most influential figures in the theatre business and made a huge impact on Korol by being the first to refer to him as ‘an artist’. He then invited the couple back to Poland as a gesture of his friendship. Gerry refused to come, as he stated that he felt that ‘all Poles were anti-Semites’. Korol was devastated. Anti-Semitism was not something he had every considered part of his world and he wanted to show his new friends the Poland he loved. Eventually Pat agreed to come alone, in 1998.

Aro took her to Auschwitz and the trip was supposed to include a visit to the neighbouring camp, Birkenau. Pat Shoenfeld was so sickened by this visit that she left Auschwitz and made her way back to the airport for the first flight she could get back to New York.

During his time in New York, Korol spent time with Hannah and Howard Davitz, director of American TV phenomenon ‘Howdy Doody’. His memories of the couple included Hannah making his ‘second Barmitzvah’ party for his twenty-sixth birthday. Korol still calls Hannah today on Jewish festivals and is ‘the best Jew’ she knows.

In Poland in 2005, the presidential elections began. Kaczynski the new president was a so called moderate, but his twin brother Jaroslaw and the party were huge supporters of Radio Maryja. In 2006 the ‘Tolerance March’ in Poznan, Poland, sixty or more gays and lesbians were arrested and beaten by the police. People in the crowd shouted “gas them like the Jews!”. This is when Aro Korol decided to begin his film. Originally the idea was to make a film about homophobia, but the story became more complex for Korol. He understood much about irrational hatred from Jewish friends and was becoming outraged that after World War Two, his country could be making steps backwards. He met a transvestite in New York, Tina Benez. Korol listened to the music made by the flamboyant Benez and decided to use the track ‘Hitler’s Daughter’, as the title of his movie.

In 2008 Lewis Kaplan died and Korol wanted to get away from New York and start afresh. He left everything and came to London. Lewis left him an inheritance which Korol decided to use to create ‘Hitler’s Daughter’ in Lewis’s honour. He felt the best thank you he could give his long time friend was to expose the poison of anti-Semitism using film. He had used all the inheritance money; every penny has gone into the movie as it is so far. He has also received death threats from supporters of Radio Maryja.

Today Korol is living in London and looking for investors to help him finish his story of a conscience.

For more information contact Aro Korol at akorol@me.com

www.hitlersdaughtermovie.com

Popularity: 21% [?]

Jaffa

Posted by Basia On June - 26 - 2010

JAFFA directed by Keren Yedaya

The age-old story of clandestine, illicit wrong-side-of-the-tracks love is brought to modern day Israel when the Jewish daughter of a garage mechanic falls in love with her father’s Arab employee.

Set in Jaffa, an ages old city which sits cheek to jowl with ultra-modern, ultra-urbane Tel Aviv, this is one place where Jews and Arabs share the same streets and live together, as they have done for centuries, in an uneasy peace.

The two young lovers, Mali (Dana Ivgy) and Toufik, played by the drop-dead gorgeous Mahmood Shalaby, have been in love with one another since childhood and when Mali becomes pregnant, they secretly plan their wedding.

The tenderness of their love, the shocking separation that seems inevitable and the poignancy of the real-life, on-going situation in Israel, makes one wonder why, in the 21st century, people still are not allowed to fall in love with ‘just anyone’. This film is both thought-provoking and heartbreaking.

Jaffa is available to buy on DVD at  http://www.amazon.com/Jaffa-Dana-Ivgy/dp/B003DVLPQG/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=dvd&qid=1277109039&sr=1-1

Watch the trailer here: Jaffa

Popularity: 22% [?]

Ajami

Posted by Basia On April - 3 - 2010

One of the hottest and most critically acclaimed Israeli movies for years, Ajami, nominated for an Oscar at this year’s Academy Awards, is the work of two young directors from Tel Aviv, Yaron Shani and Scandar Copti, and tells the violent tale of life in the tough Jaffa neighborhood of Ajami, where Jews, Muslims and Christians live cheek-to-jowl.

Violent crime, an illicit liaison, a struggling (illegal) immigrant from the Palestinian territories determined to care for his sick mother are all strands in the mesmerising, fast-paced story. Human values, not politics, dominate the lives of people who want the same things, but who are rarely able to overcome conflicting views.

As well as being nominated for an Oscar, Ajami has won five Ophir Awards including Best Picture, Israeli Film and Television Academy 2009; Camera D’Or – Special Mention, Cannes Film Festival 2009 and the Wolgin Award for Best Feature at the Jerusalem Film Festival 2009.

Ajami is in Hebrew and Arabic with English subtitles.

Popularity: 20% [?]

Next Year In Bombay

Posted by Basia On January - 23 - 2010

In November 2008, terrorists stole the lives of over 170 people in the Indian city of Mumbai. Among those who died were Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg and his pregnant wife Rivka, tortured and executed with four others at the Chabad Mumbai House.

Cut to a few years previously, when two French students were travelling in India. One of them kept kosher and hadn’t eaten meat for four weeks during their travels so when they arrived in Mumbai, the first thing he did was do a Google search for ‘kosher Mumbai’ and was stunned when a Jewish centre popped up with Rabbi Holtzberg’s phone number. The rabbi invited them to shabbat dinner and the following day, in the synagogue, they were shocked and surprised to see the building full of Indian Jews.

On returning back to film school in New York, Jonas Pariente, the co-director and co-producer of Next Year In Bombay,  realised that no in-depth documentary had ever been made about this far-away Jewish community and he and documentary maker Mathias Mangin packed their bags and returned to India.

The Jewish community, known collectively as ‘Bene Israel’ settled in India 2000 years ago. Although they never faced anti-semitism, most of them moved to Israel in the 1950’s and today they are 4000 in Bombay and its region.

The film focuses on the last two educators of the community, Sharon and Sharona Galsulkar, who were trained in a yeshiva in Jerusalem and who have been relentlessly working towards a better Indian Jewish life. As their daughters are growing older, they have to decide whether they will stay with their shrinking community or if they will fly to Israel in order to provide their children a more Jewish life. The Bene Israel story, with its wonders and sorrows, may come to an end. “Today,” says Pariente, “because the majority of the Bene Israelis have moved to Israel, the Indian Jewish culture could evaporate within one generation. Many of the 4000 people left in and around Bombay are afraid they will have to choose between India and being Jewish. This is also the story of how the creation of Israel, in an odd trick of history, actually threatens a unique Jewish culture.”

In Alibag, an hour from the city, only five Jewish families remain, “a striking number,” says Pariente, “where one area is still named Israel Lane” and where a number of businesses and houses are decorated with the Magen David. There is still an active synagogue, but only on high holy days, and everyday the 74-year-old chazan prays alone amongst the Torah scrolls.

This is a visually stunning documentary film, bursting with Indians’ natural joie de vivre and sense of calm; it is fragrant with the smells of this bustling, over-populated yet beautiful city and while it celebrates the Bene Israel’s incredible 2,000 year history, it is tinged with a certain sadness.

To see the official Next Year In Bombay trailer go to: Next Year In Bombay

To read more about Jonas Pariente’s film making journey go to: http://nextyearinmumbai.blogspot.com/

Popularity: 41% [?]

Nosferajew

Posted by Basia On November - 20 - 2009

Nosferajew

It’s after sunset and I am alone in a room with two vampires. On paper, this does not sound good. But then, the vampires in question are Maury and Louis Feinstein aka Mitch Yapko and Allen Rueckert, directors and stars of Nosferajew, the soon-to-be-huge vampire comedy. Their short film about a suburban Jewish vampire who works in a dental lab and who never feeds on the Sabbath is deliriously kitsch and laugh-out-loud funny.

Vampires never go out of style. We can never get enough of them – from stiff necked Christopher Lee Draculas, to the swirly coated king of pain that was Angel to the recent hand-wringing Rhett Butler vamps of True Blood, it is to these illustrious ranks that Maury Feinstein brings his special skills and his lisp.

This mockumentary short, which recently showed successfully at the New Orleans Vampire Film Festival, should be a global sitcom success. Says co-creator Mitch Yapko: “What we’re trying to get is a weekly half hour show. We’ve had some interest from producers although today in Hollywood it’s difficult because no one is investing generally.”

Maury is 100% kosher, which is difficult to maintain. Yapko explains how his creation manages this: “He drinks only kosher blood, that’s why he killed Sheila’s mom (Sheila being Maury’s eye-patch wearing girlfriend, who is generally safe from Maury’s advances because she’s only half Jewish). “Sheila’s mom”, he is keen to impress, “tasted of gefilte fish and Maury really hates gefilte fish.” And well, who can blame him?

Other characters include Maury and his brother Louis’ (Allen Rueckert) mom, an oy vey Yiddishe mama in thigh-high boots, her curious Oriental boyfriend, and Maury’s co-worker Abigail, a vampire slayer who has been inadvertently glamored by Maury so that she doesn’t realise her co-worker, who files his fangs and pointy nails in the lab, isn’t a member of the undead tribe.

Says Rueckert: “We’ve written several episodes and have a lot of ideas about where we want the series to go. We’ll be following Maury on his search for his origins and his father in Eastern Europe – the Kabbalah will be introduced and will end up being Maury’s ultimate enemy. Louis will continue to research romantic comedies in order to woo Marcy (his imaginary girlfriend of three years) and Abigail will continue to unknowingly seek out Maury’s attention.

“Ultimately, we’ll explore the vampiric themes in the Jewish world.”

Contact Mitch Yapko and Allen Rueckert via email at maury@whoooproductions.com or on Twitter at twitter@mauryfeinstein

Have a peek at the trailer below:

Nosferajew Teaser Trailer

by Basia Ellen

Popularity: 20% [?]

Film: Night of the Living Jews

Posted by Reviews On September - 17 - 2009

notlj-poster1

Not Just Another Hasidic Zombie Movie…Ok, so it’s not the latest of films, but it’s such a cult piece of classic schlock, we felt we had to bring it to a wider audience.

So, if there are any dreidel spinners reading this, hang onto your yarmulkes because this is going to be bloody and sinister, all those things we Jews excel at!

Set in some backwater back woods, let’s call it some kind of re-shtetlment, the eating of some poisoned matzah (is there any other kind?) turns the locals into flesh eating zombies with added extras – killer peyos, zombie rabbis – and it’s up to a stranger to fight the rabid Hasids with some of the most unkosher food known to man and Moses.

Short and side-splittingly kitsch, The Night of The Living Jews is available to buy on DVD from www.nightofthelivingjews.com Horror and Hasidim won’t be the same again.

Popularity: 30% [?]