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Of course I couldn't go to all of the events, but here are the films I did see. Watch out for spoilers!
Moos
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She's supposed to be lovable in all of her awkwardness, but honestly, I found her character very unlikable. She's the kind of person who lies to her father, gets angry with him for having a girlfriend even though her mother has been dead for some time, sleeps with her teacher...I would NEVER be friends with someone like that! The film has no real romance (they show a couple having sex in a restaurant bathroom...), and it starts off with fart jokes. I should have known right then I picked the wrong film to see.
People That Are Not Me
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Okay, moving on. So, this film is about a 25-year-old girl named Joy (played by Hadas ben Aroya, also the director) whose identity is clearly formed by the men in her life. The movie starts off with her crying and naked, filming a love confession to a man she's clearly no longer dating. While that drama is going on, she hangs out a lot with her friend Nir (played by Hagar Enosh [I think]). They sort of have a friends-with-benefits situation, but they never have sex, and he doesn't like that she's starting to have feelings for him. She's also looking for a new roommate, and when Oren (played by Meir Toledano) stops to see the place, he doesn't want to live there, but he wants to go out with her. They go out ONCE for drinks, she asks him up to her apartment, and they get naked; he can't get it up, so nothing happens. But later he calls her to say he has gonorrhea, and suggests she get tested. The movie ends with her sneaking into her ex's apartment and crawling into his bed, and then latching herself so tightly to him that he can't get her off. It would have been comical if the entire story weren't so pathetic.
I saw Moos and this film in the same night, so it was discouraging to see young women portrayed in this manner. Both of them are lost young women who aren't sure of who they are and use men for comfort even though that doesn't actually help anything. Why can't films show young, beautiful women who are succeeding in life and maybe don't even have boyfriends at all? Strong independent women who have their s**t together? Would that be so difficult to make a character like that for a movie? I think not.
Thank You for Calling
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I thought this was a pretty interesting movie, and the fact that a lot of it comes from real life makes it an even stronger film (much like Captain Phillips). I would recommend it, but I'm not sure I'd watch it more than once.
A Classy Broad
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The Big Chill, Rocky, Carrie, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Exorcist, Apocalypse Now, Coming Home, Invasion of the Body Snatchers
You'll notice that she helped make a lot of movies that were about the Vietnam War. Her son was in the war, and I think that had a big impact on the kinds of stories she wanted to tell.
A big point of the movie was to show how many people in showbiz she has touched. Whether she helped someone get a job as a reader (i.e. reading scripts before the higher-ups see them), or advocated for a certain script or actor, it seems like everyone in Hollywood knows Nasatir. She was especially helpful for other women, and like she said, if she were still at her prime right now, more doors would have been open to her. BUT she is the one who helped open those doors for the next generation of women who wanted to work in the industry.
On a funny note, she and Lorenzo Semple, Jr., another Hollywood veteran, have a YouTube channel called "Reel Geezers," in which they discuss movies (from serious films like Revolutionary Road to silly ones like Superbad). Here's the Superbad video:
I really liked this movie. Even in her 90s, Nasatir is quick-witted and sharp. She's definitely a great role model, and she has been an incredible asset to Hollywood for decades. I'm happy she now has her own story to share with the world!
Want to learn more? Visit the film's website here.
On the Map
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The team was mostly made up of Americans who either didn't make it into the NBA, or they amazingly gave up the chance to play in the NBA to join Maccabi Tel Aviv (like team captain Tal Brody). The film has tons of old footage, some of which was archived and most likely never seen before. The movie also includes interviews with several of the players, as well as sports announcers of the time, Bill Walton (a close friend of Brody's and a member of the Basketball Hall of Fame), and the wife of teammate Jim Boatwright. Boatwright had already passed away, so he is not featured in the film. Actually, his death helped get this movie made: the director of the film, Dani Menkin, wanted to tell this story before all of these men were gone.
Menkin was at the screening, and he mentioned that the story wouldn't have been believable as fiction:
- Brody was able to get on an airplane from JFK back to Israel without a ticket because a security guy recognized him
- Rabin postponed his resignation until after this big basketball game was over so his televised resignation wouldn't interrupt the game
- The team's coach was a Holocaust survivor and later was asked to coach a German team
- AND the fact that the team won the championship in the first place.
So where does the title come from? After the Israeli team beat the Soviets, American Brody said in Hebrew, "We are on the map and we will stay on the map! Not only in sports but in everything!" This statement means so much: not only was he saying that the Israeli basketball team was a real competitor, but that Israel as a nation was here to stay. How prophetic! This was a defining moment for Israel, and I get chills just thinking about it. This really is a great, inspirational sports story, and I'm not sure how I've never heard of it before. I highly recommend this film. Here's the trailer in case you need more convincing:
Want to support more heartwarming and uplifting stories from Israel? You can donate to the On the Map Foundation here.
Lasciati Andare ("Let Yourself Go")
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Supergirl
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Cabaret
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This is also a beautiful film to watch, with the vibrant colors and a variety of sets/scenes. I can see why this is a classic! I would totally recommend it, and I'd watch it again, too!
A Jew Must Die
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This disturbing story is based on real life. The tale was first a book written by Jacque Chessex, who as a young boy saw the inner-workings of a local Nazi group in Switzerland (which is always known as neutral during World War II), including the murder of a well-known townsman (which is a very gory scene in the movie). The film mixes up time: we're supposed to be in the 1940's during WWII, but some of the cars and costumes in the movie are modern-day; we see Chessex as a little boy like a flashback, but then Chessex as an old man is inserted here and there into the older scenes. I believe the book came out just as some of the criminals were getting out of jail, and some people thought the book was just bringing back the past and was unnecessarily "morbid." But Chessex' point is that 1. we should never forget the horrible things that happened in the past and 2. that history repeats itself, and antisemitism lives on today. A moving story, but certainly depressing.
1945
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This movie is in black and white, even though it was filmed this year. Again, this movie takes place around the World War II time-period (hence the title). There's a small town, and word gets around that two Jews have arrived. Because people had taken over the lands, houses, and belongings of Jews once they had left, the townspeople are worried that the Jews are back to claim their things, as well as to take back the pharmacy they had owned before the war. Some feel guilty about what they had done (to the point of hanging themselves), while others feel like the houses and such are rightfully theirs. In the end, you see that the Jews only came back to bury what was left of their dead: tiny children's shoes, toys, books. This film shows the spectrum of feelings that people had just after the war. Most of those feelings seemed to be negative, which is probably why I didn't enjoy the film that much.
Angry Harvest
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This film was made in 1985, which is not the oldest movie I saw, but the rendering was quite bad, especially when I'm used to watching everything in HD. The movie is about the single Mr. Wolny (played by Armin Mueller-Stahl) who houses a Jewish woman (Elisabeth Trissenaar) on the run; even though she is married, he falls in love with her, and keeps her as his woman. There are many forces between the two of them: she doesn't love him, but she is thankful for his help, while still feeling dead inside without her family; he's Catholic and disrespects her Jewish faith, but he's never been with a woman before, and he likes that he's not alone anymore. There are many stressful moments throughout the film, the culminating of which takes place when he is letting another woman stay with him, so the first has to leave. He sets up another hiding spot for her, but she is already so worried about her situation that she doesn't want to go. She pleads with him to stay, but he is adamant that she leave. She asks for a bucket of hot water, and the next thing we know, she has slit her wrists and died. Soon after, her husband who also escaped is there asking about her. If only he had shown up sooner, or if she could have stayed just one more night! There's a lot of hurt in this film, and it does an excellent job of showing all the tension at that time between everyone.
After the screening, the director Agnieszka Holland did a talk/Q&A. She is very funny, especially when she was talking about how she went about learning English (she had several teachers, each of which moved on in some form or fashion before she could learn very much). She is clearly very talented, and is a role model for women who are interested in directing movies.
Unrelated to the film festival but during the same time, I also got to see a preview screening of Rough Night.
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This is a very silly chick-flick about a bachelorette night gone wrong. Scarlett Johansson is the bachelorette, and she gets together with her college friends to celebrate her coming nuptials. You've got the fun blonde whom she met while studying abroad in Australia (Kate McKinnon), the two college friends who are actually in love with each other (Zoë Kravitz and Ilana Glazer), and then the crazy chubby one who is super-obsessive and insists on being the "best friend" (Jillian Bell). They go to Miami to celebrate, order a stripper, and then everything goes wrong: they accidentally kill the guy, try to lose his body in the ocean, then the REAL stripper comes and the other guy's criminal buddies show up; all the while her fiancé (Paul W. Downs) is driving to her rescue, and wears a diaper so he won't have to stop on the way. It's all so over-the-top and ridiculous. One star*.
SO MANY MOVIES! What have you seen lately? Anything good?
*I did get to go to the screening for free and got two glasses of wine on the house, so watching this dumb movie was kind of worthwhile. You should just wait to see it on Redbox or Netflix.
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