Archive for the ‘Films’ Category

MY MEXICAN SHIVAH (Loop)

May 25, 2011

 

Screening Co-Sponsored by Chicago’s Alliance of Latinos & Jews :-)

Date: July 7  (Thurs)

Time: 6:00 PM

Where: Harold Washington Library Center

An Ashkenazi family in Mexico City celebrates shiva for its patriarch, who had a Gentile mistress many years younger than him. The family is dysfunctional—almost beyond belief. The deceased has brought together family, friends and former lovers who have side-splitting stories, conflicts and rivalries that are catalogued over the seven-day shiva mourning period. The film is a consistently entertaining and wacky cinematic experience!  (2007, 98 minutes.)

From Tzivi’s Spotlight in the JUF News:

My Mexican Shivah is an artful blend of farce and philosophy. People come to Moishe’s funeral obsessed with private problems, but as the yahrzeit candle melts away, immersion in Jewish ritual has a purifying effect… Most of the dialogue is in Spanish, but all of the prayers (which are numerous) are in Hebrew, and two elderly Hassids function as a Yiddish-speaking “Greek chorus.”

Click HERE to read complete review.

MY MEXICAN SHIVAH (Skokie)

May 25, 2011

7/6/11 Update: Over 200 people laughed their heads off @ today’s Skokie Public Library screening of MY MEXICAN SHIVAH. Come to HWLC tomorrow & see why for yourself :-)

Co-Sponsored by Chicago’s Alliance of Latinos & Jews

Date: July 6 (Wed)

Time: 12:15 PM

Where: Skokie Public Library

An Ashkenazi family in Mexico City celebrates shiva for its patriarch, who had a Gentile mistress many years younger than him. The family is dysfunctional—almost beyond belief. The deceased has brought together family, friends and former lovers who have side-splitting stories, conflicts and rivalries that are catalogued over the seven-day shiva mourning period. The film is a consistently entertaining and wacky cinematic experience!  (2007, 98 minutes.)

From Tzivi’s Spotlight in the JUF News:

My Mexican Shivah is an artful blend of farce and philosophy. People come to Moishe’s funeral obsessed with private problems, but as the yahrzeit candle melts away, immersion in Jewish ritual has a purifying effect… Most of the dialogue is in Spanish, but all of the prayers (which are numerous) are in Hebrew, and two elderly Hassids function as a Yiddish-speaking “Greek chorus.”

Click HERE to read complete review.


A LETTER TO MOTHER (Skokie)

May 19, 2011

A Letter to Mother (A Brivele der Mamen)

Date: June 2 (Thurs)

Time: 12:15 PM

Where: Skokie Public Library

One of the last Yiddish films made in Poland before the Nazi invasion, this film tells the story of a mother’s persistent struggles to support her three children in pre-war World War II Polish Ukraine. After her family is pulled apart by severe poverty and the turmoil of war, she and her children make their way to New York and turn to the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society for help. 

Click HERE to read more about Brivele on the National Center for Jewish Film website.

NOTE: Brivele is one of the films prominently featured in the documentary film Mamadrama (shown at Northbrook Public Library  in March).

A LETTER TO MOTHER (Loop)

May 19, 2011

A Letter to Mother (A Brivele der Mamen)

Date: June 1 (Weds)

Time: 6:00 PM

Where: Harold Washington Library Center

400 South State Street (Chicago Loop)

One of the last Yiddish films made in Poland before the Nazi invasion, this film tells the story of a mother’s persistent struggles to support her three children in pre-war World War II Polish Ukraine. After her family is pulled apart by severe poverty and the turmoil of war, she and her children make their way to New York and turn to the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society for help.

Click HERE to read more about Brivele on the National Center for Jewish Film website.

NOTE: Brivele is one of the films prominently featured in the documentary film Mamadrama (shown at HWLC  in March).

MAMADRAMA in Chgo Loop

February 13, 2011

This year in honor of the 4th annual International SWAN Day, Chicago YIVO will sponsor multiple screenings of Monique Schwarz’ 2000 documentary Mamadrama.

Screening #1: Wednesday March 23

Time: 6:30 PM

Place: Harold Washington Library Center

JUF News critic/Chicago YIVO eMaven Jan Lisa Huttner will introduce the film & lead a Q&A discussion after the credits roll.

NOTE: This screening is FREE & open to the public!

Click HERE to read more about Mamadrama.

Click HERE for 3/24 screening in Northbrook. 

Click HERE for 3/27 screening in Des Plaines. 

Program Co-Sponsors:

* Chicago Festival of Israel Cinema

* Hadassah Chicago Chapter

* Limmud Chicago

* ORT Metro Chicago

MAMADRAMA in Northbrook

February 13, 2011

This year in honor of the 4th annual International SWAN Day, Chicago YIVO will sponsor multiple screenings of Monique Schwarz’ 2000 documentary Mamadrama.

Screening #2: Thursday March 24

Time: 1 PM

Place: Northbrook Public Library 

JUF News critic/Chicago YIVO eMaven Jan Lisa Huttner will introduce the film & lead a Q&A discussion after the credits roll.

NOTE: This screening is FREE & open to the public!

Click HERE to read more about Mamadrama.

Click HERE for 3/23 screening in the Chicago Loop. 

Click HERE for 3/27 screening in Des Plaines. 

Program Co-Sponsors:

* Chicago Festival of Israel Cinema

* Hadassah Chicago Chapter

* Limmud Chicago

* ORT Metro Chicago

MAMADRAMA in Des Plaines

February 13, 2011

This year in honor of the 4th annual International SWAN Day, Chicago YIVO will sponsor multiple screenings of Monique Schwarz’ 2000 documentary Mamadrama.

Screening #3: Sunday March 27

Time: 12:45 PM

Place: Oakton Community College 

JUF News critic/Chicago YIVO eMaven Jan Lisa Huttner will introduce the film & lead a Q&A discussion after the credits roll.

NOTE: This screening is open to all participants in Limmud Chicago.

Click HERE to read more about Mamadrama.

Click HERE for 3/23 screening in the Chicago Loop. 

Click HERE for 3/24 screening in Northbrook. 

Program Co-Sponsors:

* Chicago Festival of Israel Cinema

* Hadassah Chicago Chapter

* Limmud Chicago

* ORT Metro Chicago

MAMADRAMA Screenings

January 10, 2011

This year in honor of the 4th annual International SWAN Day, Chicago YIVO will sponsor multiple screenings of Monique Schwartz’ 2000 documentary Mamadrama.

Quote from filmmaker Monique Schwarz

(posted on the NCJF website):

“The Jewish mothers that I know and love are sexy, smart, and strong, but I have never seen this mother in Hollywood movies, and I set out to find out why.” 

Jewish mothers are the most easily maligned image of Jewish women found in movies and television today. You know who they are: the caricature of the overbearing, emasculating, long suffering mother ever-ready with mountains of food. Australian director Monique Schwarz takes a funny, penetrating look at how the loving and affectionate portrayals in early Yiddish and Hollywood silent movies developed into the Jewish Mother of modern Hollywood and, conversely, the more flesh and blood characterizations in contemporary Israeli cinema.

With characteristic Jewish humor, iconic filmmakers Paul Mazursky, Paul Bogart and Larry Peerce and actress Lainie Kazan reflect with disarming candor on their own Jewish mothers and how they influenced their on-screen portrayals. Critics J. Hoberman, Patricia Erens, Michael Medved and Sharon Rivo discuss the changing image of the Jewish mother on screen and Israeli directors Avram Hefner and Zepel Yeshurun and actress Gila Almagor illustrate the uniqueness of Israeli filmic images.

Mamadrama features hilarious film clips from Come Blow Your Horn, Goodbye Columbus, Next Stop Greenwich Village, The Jazz Singer, Portnoy’s Complaint, Where’s Poppa, Torch Song Trilogy, rare Yiddish films and recent Israeli features. Interspersed throughout is the story of Schwarz’s own mother, Berta, from her life in Vienna before World War II to her struggles as an immigrant in post-war Australia, a picture of a woman vastly different from the Jewish mothers seen in contemporary films.

Mamadrama: The Jewish Mother in Cinema

Written & Directed by Monique Schwarz

(Australia, 2001, 73 minutes, color)

Many thanks to the National Center for Jewish Film for working with us to bring Mamadrama to Metro Chicago for SWAN Day!

Celia Adler in WHERE IS MY CHILD?

 

The acronym “SWAN” stands for “Support Women Artists Now!” International SWAN Day is a collaboration between WomenArts (the Fund for Women Artists) & WITASWAN (Women in the Audience Supporting Women Artists Now).

“Traitor” Returns

August 18, 2010

Based on many requests, the Highland Park Theatre is bringing Lynn Roth’s film The Little Traitor back to metro Chicago for at least one more week (even though it ran for the entire month of June at the Landmark Renaissance).

From Tzivi’s May ’10 Spotlight in the JUF News:

Set in Jerusalem in 1947 (at the tail end of the British Mandate), The Little Traitor stars Ido Port (from Dear Mr. Waldman) as 12 year old “Proffy.”

One night, failing to make it home before curfew, Proffy is stopped and questioned by a soldier named “Sergeant Dunlop” (Alfred Molina). Proffy has lived his entire life surrounded by refugees and Holocaust survivors (including his emotionally damaged father), and he has absorbed their bone-deep fear of imminent annihilation, but he develops feelings for this gentle giant anyway. Secret meetings with Dunlop are soon discovered by Proffy’s school buddies, and their suspicions ultimately impact the entire neighborhood. Although historical circumstances drive Proffy and Dunlop apart, the film ends with a touching epilogue—a tiny, humanistic statement of hope for a beleaguered world.

The Little Traitor is based on Amos Oz’ 1995 novel Panther in the Basement, but readers of his award-winning memoir A Tale of Love and Darkness (2004) will also recognize many of his idiosyncratic characters and evocative locations. Note: Even though the film was made in Israel, the primary language is English (with some subtitled Hebrew).

Irena Sendler Screening Loop

June 8, 2010

In the Name of Their Mothers:

The Irena Sendler Story

When: Wednesday, August 25 at 6:30 PM

Where: Harold Washington Library Center

Co-Sponsors: Chicago’s International Women Associates is co-sponsoring for this important event.  Members of the Film Discussion Group & the Polish Group have been especially helpful in finalizing all plans & arrangements.  Welcome IWA!

 Description: A Polish Catholic social worker, Irena Sendler was 29 year old when the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939. Working with a trusted group of mostly female colleagues, she managed to rescue approximately 2,500 Jewish children from the Warsaw Ghetto, many of whom survived the war and some of whom were even reunited with family members after the war because of Irena’s meticulous record-keeping. On October 19, 1965, Yad Vashem recognized Irena Sendler as Righteous Among the Nations.

NOTE: This is the first Chicago screening of Mary Skinner’s newly completed documentary.  This is NOT the film Life in a Jar: The Irena Sendler Project (about the kids from Kansas).

Introduction and post-screening Q&A with Michael Traison: A widely recognized expert in helping businesses solve their commercial problems, Michael H. Traison represents clients with interests throughout the world, with special focus on Israel, Poland, the Czech Republic, & elsewhere in Eastern Europe.

Prior to entering the practice of law, Michael was a public school teacher for 15 years in Detroit, Michigan and in Essex County, Ontario.  His numerous civic, cultural, & social activities include: Chicago Jewish Federation, Israel/Poland Chamber of Commerce & North American/Israel Chambers of Commerce, Simon Wiesenthal Center, Polish American Jewish American Council, & Jewish Wysokie Mazowieckie.  His numerous awards & honors include: the Polish-American Heritage Award (Polish-American Heritage Council, 2003), & the International Humanitarian Award (Jerusalem Peace Dinner, 2008).

From Michael (in his own words): “During the last five years of Irena Sendler’s life, I had the tradition of visiting her on Shabbat afternoons in the convalescent home where she lived.  I often took with me one or two others, usually young Polish students, who could touch the face of history.  I feel that Irena lives on in these people, and I am glad I had the good fortune to facilitate the meetings which probably involved several dozen people over the years.”

Click HERE to read Michael’s article “Special occasion: Chicagoan at groundbreaking for Museum of Polish Jews” posted online by the Chicago Jewish News. 

Click HERE for photo of Jan Lisa Huttner (Chicago YIVO’s eMaven & documentary film series coodinator) with director Mary Skinner when she came to Chicago to show rough cut in 2009.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.