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  • 2005-2009  (18)
  • 1925 - 1929
  • Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film  (18)
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  • 1
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Language: Russian
    Pages: 84 Min. , NTSC
    Year of publication: 2007
    Keywords: Film ; Birobidschan
    Abstract: During the late 1920s, many impoverished Jews searching for a better life made their way to Birobidzhan, the Soviet Jewish Autonomous Region on the Chinese border. This melodrama tells the story of a Jewish family's immigration to Birobidzhan and their experiences as settlers on a collective farm in the area. While the family encounters hardships in adjusting to this new way of life (including son-in-law Pinya's greedy, misguided search for gold) their search for assimilation is ultimately shown as positive. While the film is essentially a Soviet propaganda piece emphasizing the utopian dream of Birobidzhan as a socialist Jewish homeland, the reality of the area was harsh and inhospitable.
    Note: Orig.: UdSSR 1934. - Engl. Untertitel
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  • 2
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    ISBN: 158587227x
    Language: Russian
    Pages: 6 Min. , s/w
    Year of publication: 2007
    Keywords: Michoėls, Solomon M. ; Markiš, Perec D. ; Ejzenstejn, Sergej M. ; Sowjetunion ; Antifaschismus
    Abstract: In 1941, a group of the Soviet Union's most prominent Jewish writers and artists signed an appeal to Jews throughout the world, asking them to join the Soviet people "in the holy war against Fascism ... to destroy the enemy of humanity and of the Jewish people." The group included actor Solomon Mikhoels, poet Peretz Markish and film director Sergei Eisenstein. This newsreel footage captures their eloquent, impassioned appeals. Tragically, Mikhoels and Markish later fell victim to the Stalinist purges in the 1940s and '50s (Eisenstein died of natural causes in the 1940s.) This film stands as an important record of how the Soviet government relaxed its ethnic policies in order to appeal to anyone who could help fight fascism and the Nazis.
    Note: Orig.: UdSSR, 1941. - Engl. Untertitel
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  • 3
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Language: English
    Pages: 50 Min. , NTSC , s/w
    Year of publication: 2006
    Keywords: Palästina ; Siedlung ; Zionismus
    Abstract: Spectacular rare archival film footage of Palestine in the tumultuous 1920s forms the heart of this documentary by Israeli filmmaker and scholar Ya'akov Gross. Considered lost for more than 70 years, these early films taken by Ya'akov Ben Dov, the father of Hebrew cinema, depict settlements and activities in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, Rishon le Zion and Old Jaffa; visits by Albert Einstein and Winston Churchill; the funeral of Eliezer Ben-Yehuda; and early Zionists who pioneered the Third and Fourth Aliyahs. A vital and accessible look at a formative period in Israeli history. Dreamers and Builders includes material from three rare films by Ya'akov Ben Dov: Return to Zion (1920-21), The Rebirth of a Nation (1923), and Romance of Palestine (1926) - preserved in a joint project by the National Center for Jewish Film and the Israel Film Archive.
    Note: Orig.: Israel, 1996
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  • 4
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Language: English
    Pages: 80 Min. , NTSC , s/w und Farbe
    Year of publication: 2007
    Keywords: Russland ; Sowjetunion ; World ORT Union
    Abstract: Produced for the Women's American ORT and narrated by Eli Wallach, this highly acclaimed documentary describes more than a century of Jewish life in Russia. Stills and archival footage recreate the life of the Russian-Jewish community from the shtetl through the first World War, the Holocaust, the Warsaw Ghetto, the displaced persons camps and the establishment of the State of Israel. L'Chaim: To Life also examines the origins and activities of the ORT, a movement dedicated to the vocational training and education of the Jewish people.
    Note: Original: USA, 1973
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  • 5
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Language: Yiddish
    Pages: 72 Min. , s/w
    Year of publication: 2009
    Keywords: Sowjetunion ; Arbeiter
    Abstract: This rare, newly restored feature was originally advertised as "the first Yiddish talkie from Soviet Russia." The plot centers on Nathan Becker, a Jewish bricklayer who returns to Russia after twenty-eight years in America. After reuniting with his father (played with comic eccentricity by Solomon Mikhoels) Nathan leaves the shtetl to work in the new industrial center of Magnitogorsk. There, he soon finds that the work habits he acquired in America conflict with the Soviet system. While the film's resolution emphasizes the triumph of socialist productivity, the screenplay by Yiddish author Peretz Markish reflects the warmth and humor of the Jewish spirit.
    Note: Orig.: USSR 1932. - Engl. Untertitel
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  • 6
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Language: English
    Pages: 18 Min. , NTSC , s/w
    Year of publication: 2006
    Keywords: Sowjetunion ; Propagandafilm
    Abstract: This short propaganda film (or agitka) tells the tale of a Jew who survives a pogrom and becomes a leader in the Red Army. Intended to indoctrinate Soviet citizens by showing heroic examples of conversion to the Revolutionary cause, the agitka ('agitation pieces') were originally screened on Russian 'film trains.' A rare portrait of a Jewish character in early Russian cinema.
    Note: Orig.: UdSSR, 1919. - Engl. Zwischentitel
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  • 7
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Language: Yiddish
    Pages: 66 Min. , NTSC , s/w
    Year of publication: 2006
    Keywords: Antisemitismus ; Judenverfolgung ; Nationalsozialismus ; Film ; Jiddisch ; Ewiger Jude
    Abstract: The Wandering Jew tells the story of Arthur Levi (Jacob Ben-Ami), a German-Jewish artist who experiences the new German anti-Semitism when his masterpiece, a portrait of his Polish-born father entitled The Eternal Wanderer is rejected by the Berlin Academy of Art, which also asks his resignation as professor. Later in the film the figure in the painting comes to life and tells Levi the story of the persecution of the Jewish people. The film ends with footage of an anti-Hitler rally at New York City's Madison Square Garden and Levi's resolve to bear onward in the face of adversity. The Wandering Jew is a unique find: the first American feature film to depict the situation of Jews in Nazi Germany, and the only Yiddish-language film of its era to address this subject. The film, which dramatizes the situation of German Jews, was an American-Jewish response to the Nazi regime. It was produced by Jewish American Film Arts at the Atlas Studio on Long Island, NY during the summer of 1933, just months after the Nazi rise to power in Germany. In the wake of the violence of Kristallnacht the film was given a December 1938 re-release under the title Jews in Exile, screening in RKO theaters all over the New York area. The NCJF restoration features new subtitles and represents the most complete version of the film in existence. Darsteller: Jakob Ben-Ami: Prof. Arthur Levi Natalie Browning: Gertrude M.B. Samuylow: Spirit of Arthur's father Ben Adler: Paul von Eisenon Jakob Mestel: Levi family valet Abraham Teitelbaum: Arts reporter William Epstein: Messenger
    Note: Orig.: USA, 1933. - Engl. Untertitel
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  • 8
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Pages: 85 Min. , NTSC , s/w
    Year of publication: 2006
    Keywords: Filmkomödie
    Abstract: This delightful comedy opens as Morris Brown, a New Yorker better acquainted with his checkbook than his prayerbook, returns to Galicia with his very American daughter, Mollie (Molly Picon) for a family wedding. The bride, daughter of his traditionally observant brother, and Mollie, whose exuberant antics fill the film, could not be more different. But Mollie unexpectedly meets her match, an engaging young yeshiva scholar who forsakes tradition and joins the secular world to win her heart. East and West features classic scenes of Molly Picon lifting weights and boxing, teaching young villagers to shimmy and stealing away from services to gorge herself before sundown on Yom Kippur. Underlying these hijinks is veteran filmmaker Goldin's affectionate appreciation of differences, for good-natured comedy shapes his portrayal of worldly Jews encountering traditional shtetl life.
    Note: Orig.: AT, 1923. - Engl. und jidd. Zwischentitel , Ex. b: Nur für den internen Gebrauch
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  • 9
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Pages: 76 Min. , NTSC , s/w
    Year of publication: 2007
    Keywords: Sowjetunion ; Stummfilm
    Abstract: His Excellency was the first Soviet-Jewish film to be produced after a demand by the Central Committee's Department for Agitprop that fictional films be made "... in a way that an be appreciated by millions." In the tradition of brilliant Soviet directors Eisenstein and Pudovkin, His Excellency features stylized cinematography and stars Leonid Leonidov, a star of the Moscow Art Theater, and in a small part, Nikolai Cherkasov, who would later play the lead roles in Eisenstein's Alexander Nevsky and Ivan the Terrible. With J. Untershlak and Tamara Edelheim as Hirsh and Rivele Lekert, and the Moscow Art Theater's Leonid Leonidov as both the Tsar's governor and the community's rabbi. According to Director Roshel the subject matter of this film was so delicate that the Soviet Commissar of Enlightenment oversaw production of this film personally. The film is based on the life of Hirsch Lekert, a shoemaker and militant Jewish Labor Bund member, who attempted to assassinate the Vilna governor in 1902 to avenge the flogging of workers who participated in a May Day rally. Although the film was intended "as a tract against individualism,... a greater emphasis is placed on class stuggle within the Jewish community." Bourgeois Jewish Zionists find themselves pitted against fellow Jewish proletariats and the government.
    Note: Orig.: UdSSR, 1928. - Engl. Zwischentitel
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  • 10
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Language: English
    Pages: 84 Min. , NTSC , s/w
    Year of publication: 2006
    Keywords: New York, NY ; Stummfilm ; Einwanderung ; USA ; Osteuropäische Juden
    Abstract: Based on the short stories of Anzia Yezierska, the first writer to bring stories of American Jewish women to a mainstream audience, Hungry Hearts focuses on the members of the Levin family who emigrate from Eastern Europe to New York City's Lower East Side. Abraham, the pious father learned in religion but uninterested in business, has difficulty making a living and adjusting to life in America. The daughter Sara scrubs floors in the tenement in order to earn money and "become a somebody." The mother Hannah, a noble matriarch, scrimps and saves to paint her dingy kitchen white only to have her landlord raise the rent because of the improvements. Filmed on location on the Lower East Side, this bittersweet classic captures the hopes and hardships of Jewish immigrants in the New World.
    Note: Orig.: USA, 1922. - Engl. Zwischentitel
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