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Last 7 Days Catalog Additions

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  • 1
    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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  • 2
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Pages: 27 Min. , NTSC , s/w
    Year of publication: 2007
    Keywords: Russland ; Israel ; Auswanderung
    Abstract: This short documentary chronicles a 90 year old man's emigration to Israel from his native shtetl in Bessabaria. Yakhnis' beautifully photographed film poetically captures the end of a rich Jewish heritage in Russia.
    Note: Orig.: RU, 1992
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  • 3
    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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  • 4
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Language: Yiddish
    Pages: 60 Min. , s/w
    Edition: Reissue of "Tkies Kaf/The Vow / directed by Zygmund Turkow", 1924
    Year of publication: 2007
    Abstract: Few reminders are left of the vibrant Yiddish theatrical world that flourished in Warsaw in the 1920s. This film is one of them. Jewish producers were preeminent in the interwar Polish film industry but, due to the pervasive antisemitism of the early '20s, they shied away from films dealing with Jewish themes. It was not until 1924 that amateurs, Henryk Bojm and Leo Forbert, adapted a Peretz Hirshbein play for the screen. Ambitiously mounted, professionally cast, it was one of the most successful Jewish cinematic efforts undertaken up to that time. In 1933, a group of New York Yiddish actors decided to give the original 1924 gem a new lease on life. They added a narration and several new scenes (those in the tavern) which gave dramatic justification to the narrative form. A precursor to the 1937 classic, The Dybbuk, A Vilna Legend features the same classic tale of frustrated love and destiny and the breaking/fulfillment of vows. A yeshiva student and an orphan girl who are deeply in love face eternal separation even though their parents promised them to each other before birth. Only the prophet Elijah's miraculous intervention allows their parents to fulfill their vow and the couple their love.
    Note: Orig.: USA 1933. - Engl. Untertitel
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  • 5
    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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  • 6
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Language: Yiddish
    Pages: 10 Minuten , NTSC , s/w
    Year of publication: 2007
    Keywords: Filmkomödie ; Kantor
    Abstract: This short gem features Louis "Leibele" Waldman playing three different parts - first an old-world Eastern European, then a German, each auditioning to be the synagogue cantor. Displeased with what they've heard and unable to agree, the synagogue committee is visited by Leibele's agent who offers them a third alternative: a modern an American Chazan, with "pep and jazz," who can do Kol Nidre with a "two-step" and Netaneh Tokef with a "black bottom."
    Note: Original: USA, 1931; englische Untertitel
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