CULTURE
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Jacqueline Nicholls — Jewish Renaissance
I am a Jew in London, watching from afar what is happening to close friends and family in Israel. Where do I stand? I am outside, trying to follow what is happening over there. I am in a city and fearful of the chants on the streets here. I am caught up in these dark times, but uncertain of my…
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Rock ’n’ Roll ★★★★ — Jewish Renaissance
What makes this extraordinarily multifaceted drama worth close attention is the debate, ongoing over decades, between the two protagonists. Jan (Jacob Fortune-Lloyd) in 1968 is an idealistic young Czech Cambridge PhD student intent on returning home for the Prague Spring; and Max (Nathaniel Parker), his Marxist professor, sees all that is good in the Soviet ideal. They represent perhaps not…
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One Life ★★★★ — Jewish Renaissance
The film, directed by James Hawes, shifts between two separate time frames: one set in 1939 and the other in the 1980s. It opens with the older Winton counting coins from charity tins. He pockets a button dropped into the collection, telling his wife it might come in useful. Sometime later, the button does the job when an additional coin…
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The Soldier on Smithdown Road — Jewish Renaissance
As well as telling an exciting story, I wanted to make a film that both explores the precarious nature of being a British Jew and complex questions of identity. Most Jews are painfully familiar with the feeling that their loyalty will always be questioned, and their Judaism will always make them a target in the context of geopolitical events. I…
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Pacific Overtures ★★★★★
Small is beautiful in this intimate iteration of Sondheim’s inspired musical in which East meets West When Japan famously featured in Puccini’s opera Madam Butterfly in 1904, the Treaty of Kanagawa – which opened up Japan to the West – was 50 years in the past. Fast forward to 1976 and the events took centre stage once again in Stephen…
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Queen of the Deuce ★★★★ — Jewish Renaissance
Born into a Sephardi Jewish family in Salonika (now Thessaloniki), Greece, in 1908, Wilson was forced into an arranged marriage, with her ferocious temperament at the forefront even then. Having escaped the clutches of unconsensual matrimony, she then avoided Auschwitz by boarding the last boat to America out of Greece before the onset of World War II. This first part…
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Less Than Kosher ★★★ — Jewish Renaissance
Although there’s scope here for plenty of hilarity, many of the jokes don’t land. Often the scenes feel tonally oblivious, like when Viv finds herself flirting with the rabbi’s son by using Holocaust quips. It’s the classic Jeremy Clarkson theory of outrage first, think about substance later. But the finished product relies on being funny, else it strays into shock-for-the-sake-of-shock…
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The Goldman Case ★★★★★ — Jewish Renaissance
Cédric Kahn’s account of the little-known trials of Pierre Goldman is both gripping and pertinent The trials of Pierre Goldman are little known in the UK, but infamous in France and inevitably draw comparisons with the Dreyfus Affair. Goldman was imprisoned for life in 1974 for the murder of two women in a Paris pharmacy in 1969. France’s death penalty…
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Vishniac ★★★★★ — Jewish Renaissance
Vishniac’s self-promotion was also self-preservation. When the family immigrated to America, he had to support himself and his family. He took a job with Life magazine, reinventing himself as a scientific microscopic photographer. This unique technique was one he had practised since childhood; using a microscope to capture living organisms. Until then, samples were only photographed when flattened between two…
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Red Riding Hood and the Big Bad Pig ★★★★ — Jewish Renaissance
Josh Glanc’s Pig is neither nice nor Jewish, but he sure is good at being bad. He looks and acts the part of the unapologetic, unscrupulous entrepreneur to perfection; expensively and nattily dressed, putting his feet up on his desk. Making it clear he’ll stop at nothing to cash in on the search for renewables, he is the natural antithesis…
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