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Arts & Culture | Film

‘A Happy Childhood In A Sea Of Blood’

11/13/2012 | George Robinson | Special to the Jewish Week | Film
Niklis Frank has written a scathing book about his father, Hans Frank, head of the Nazi government in occupied Poland.

The Torah enjoins us to honor our parents. But if your forebears were monstrous criminals who killed hundreds of thousands, even millions, what is your responsibility?

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A New Perspective On ‘The Roundup’

11/13/2012 | George Robinson | Special To The Jewish Week | Film
Scene from “La Rafle,” in which Jews are rounded up and taken to a velodrome.

The degree to which European nations have acknowledged their complicity in the crimes of the Nazis varies wildly to this day. Allowing for the comparative size of its film industry, you can tell by the degree and number of feature films on the subject that a country produces just how willing it is to deal with guilt for the murder of six million Jews.

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‘Otherness’ Moves Beyond Israel

11/06/2012 | George Robinson | Special to the Jewish Week | Film
“One Day After Peace” centers on the work of Truth and Reconciliation Commission in post-apartheid South Africa.

Emmanuel Levinas, one of the central Jewish thinkers of the 20th century, argued that by seeing the face of another we are forced to acknowledge our involvement with the Other. As Levinas writes in one of the most famous passages in his work, such a vision involves recognition of a shared humanity and a shared mortality.

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The High Priestess of Anarchy

10/23/2012 | Ted Merwin | Film
Lorna Lable as Emma Goldman. Gayle Stahlhuth

“Anarchism,” the Lithuanian Jewish activist Emma Goldman predicted in her autobiography, “will make an end to the struggle for the means of existence.” In Lorna Lable’s one-woman show, “Emma Goldman: My Life,” a poor girl’s dream to free all of humanity from suffering and want comes vividly to life.

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Are You My Mother?

10/23/2012 | George Robinson | Special to the Jewish Week | Film
Scene from Julia Loktev’s “The Loneliest Planet.”

This weekend sees the theatrical opening of a rather oddly assorted trio of Jewish films: a thoughtful if rather conventional historical documentary, a melodrama that takes on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as literal family feud and a beautifully wrought mood piece that mixes lush visuals with starkly private emotional states to considerable effect.

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The Departed

10/16/2012 | George Robinson | Special to the Jewish Week | Film
A treasure trove of artifacts left behind by Goldfinger's grandmother.

Mishpokhe. Familia. Family. Oy.

Israeli documentary filmmaker Arnon Goldfinger knows from family. His first major film released in the United States was “The Komediant” (2002), about the great Yiddish entertainer Pesach Burstein and his extended family, seemingly all of which was also on the musical stage. His latest film, “The Flat,” which played Tribeca and opens theatrically on Oct. 19, forces him to focus closer to home, on his own (over-) extended family, and he does so to great effect.

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