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  • AV-Medium  (5)
  • 2005-2009  (5)
  • National Center for Jewish Film  (5)
  • Sowjetunion  (5)
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  • AV-Medium  (5)
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  • 2005-2009  (5)
Year
  • 1
    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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  • 2
    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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  • 3
    AV-Medium
    AV-Medium
    Waltham, Mass. : National Center for Jewish Film
    Language: Yiddish
    Pages: 100 Min. , NTSC , s/w
    Year of publication: 2007
    Keywords: Sowjetunion ; Stummfilm
    Abstract: Jewish Luck was among the first Soviet Yiddish films to be released in the US during the 1920s. Based on Sholem Aleichem's series of stories featuring the character Menakhem Mendl, Jewish Luck revolves around the daydreaming entrepreneur Menakhem Mendl who specializes in doomed strike-it-rich schemes. Despite Jewish oppression by Tsarist Russia, Menakhem Mendl continues to pursue his dreams and his continued persistence transforms him from schlemiel to hero as the film uncovers the tragic underpinnings of Sholem Aleichem's comic tales. Notes Village Voice critic Georgia Brown, "The movie's best intertitle translated from Isaac Babel's Russian: `What can you do when there is nothing to do?'" A dramatized version of the Menkhem Mendl stories was first staged by the Moscow Yiddish State Theater, under the direction of Alexander Granovsky, who later made this silent film. Jewish Luck features some of the finest artistic talents of Soviet Jewry during this period. It has been speculated that the cinematography done by Eduard Tissé inspired the filming of particular scenes in one of his later projects, Sergei Eisenstein's The Battleship Potemkin. The original Russian intertitles were written by Soviet Jewish writer Isaac Babel, who later became a victim of the Stalinist purges in the late 1930s.
    Abstract: TITLE: Jewish Luck / Yevreiskoye Schastye / Menakhem Mendl YEAR: 1925 DIR/PROD: Alexander Granovsky COUNTRY: USSR LANGUAGE: Silent with English intertitles Source: www.brandeis.edu/jewishfilm Text: Restored by The National Center for Jewish Film. One of the first Soviet Yiddish comedies to be released in the U.S.A., Jewish Luck is based on Sholom Aleichem's stories about a daydreaming entrepreneur who specializes in doomed strike-it-rich schemes. The film is an adaptation of the GOSET stage production.
    Note: Original: UdSSR, 1925. - Englische Zwischentitel , Ex. b: Nur für den internen Gebrauch
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  • 4
    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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  • 5
    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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