December 2005


Last updated on December 1, 2005. Please check back later for additions.

Contents

Holiday Cheer at Coming Attractions
The 13th Annual Washington Jewish Film Festival
Claude Berri's The Two of Us
A Report from the 49th Annual London Film Festival
We Need to Hear From You
Calendar of Events

NEW! A printer-friendly version.



Holiday Cheer at "Coming Attractions--Winter 2005 Trailer Night"

By Cheryl Dixon, DC Film Society Member

What would get you and your family away from the Thanksgiving table and into the theatres? The promise of an exciting holiday season of movies, that’s what. Our ever-loving film co-hosts and critics, Joe Barber and Bill Henry, once again offered their endless, witty, insightful, commentary on what’s hot and what’s not in this upcoming holiday season’s picks at Film Society’s Coming Attractions--Winter 2005 Trailer Night program held on November 7 at Landmark’s E Street Cinema, 555 11th Street, N.W.

It’s Hollywood’s last chance to trot out its offerings in consideration for that coveted Oscar and our 100-strong spirited attendees eagerly and candidly made their remarks about the 35 film trailers shown. The audience rated each trailer on both its entertainment value and whether it more or less generated interest in seeing the movie. What was new, exciting, or different? In addition to our more informal applause-meter to capture the enthusiasm, the Film Society introduced a real ballot on which attendees could select from a 0-5 rating scale. Eight general film categories were chosen for the program, from which the audience selected the best trailer within each category, then voted for the “best of the best” trailer overall. The informal results indicated the finalists were: King Kong, Syriana, Glory Road, Memoirs of a Geisha, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Match Point, Transamerica, and V for Vendetta, with Syriana as the evening’s winner overall.

The formal balloted results confirmed that the top choices were Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Match Point, and Syriana. Not surprisingly, Walk the Line, was a top choice followed by King Kong, Jarhead, Memoirs of a Geisha, The Chronicles of Narnia, and Transamerica. No zeroes or perfect fives in this go-round, which proves that there’s always something that someone will at least like.

Of course, we brought back the usual crowd pleasers: lots of free movie promotional items, including movie posters, t-shirts, CDs, DVDs, and books; specials on soda and popcorn; and fabulous raffle prizes, including theatre and movie tickets.

Thanks to the DC Film Society Directors and Coordinating Committee for putting together this twice-annual event, especially Michael Kyrioglou, Jim Shippey, Karrye Braxton, Billy Coulter, Cheryl Dixon, Larry Hart, Ky Nguyen, Adam Spector, Tuan Tran. Special thanks to Joe Barber, Bill Henry, Allied Advertising, Landmark’s E Street Cinema and staff, Terry Hines & Assoc., Tom Grooms, and all the participating film studios.

Thanks also to our audience. Remember, film fans, if you liked what you saw in the trailers, go see the movies. You’re bound to find movies you’ll love to generate some holiday cheer. If you didn’t get a first look at some of the holiday season trailers, you’ll find below, by category, a quick summary of what you missed. As Bill observed, “the trailers cut out the drivel, you’re getting the best 90 seconds of every film!”


HERE WE GO AGAIN

Fun With Dick and Jane (Sony)
This movie features the comedic talent of Jim Carrey, and Tea Leoni, out to teach big business a lesson. Alec Baldwin, reprises his role as “the corporate boss.”

King Kong (Universal)
Adrien Brody, Jack Black, and Naomi Watts venture into the unknown territory and end up screaming for their lives amidst King Kong, the giant gorilla, and other Jurassic-Park looking animatronic creatures. Their characters, an ambitious Film Director, star, and crew, discover the legend of King Kong is real at great cost to all involved. Joe queried whether any of us were surprised to see that Director Peter Jackson’s version of this classic would be a period piece.

RENT (Sony)
Rosario Dawson, Taye Diggs, and Jesse L. Martin, are amongst the group of friends dealing with ups and downs of life and love and AIDS, while singing and dancing through NYC, in the Pulitzer and Tony-award winning adaptation of the Broadway musical phenomenon.

Underworld: Evolution (Sony)
Kate Beckinsale, Bill Nighy, Scott Speedman, and Derek Jacobi in this story of an immortal vampire, a new race battling, in the war between the vampires and the werewolves. Attendees wondered aloud what was Derek Jacobi doing in this one.


WOMEN LOVE BAD BOYS

Ballet Russes (Zeitgeist)
A group of ballet dance pioneers now past 70, reminisce about the glamour, elegance, ego, and politics of the dance. Archival footage highlights the men and women who created modern ballet.

Casanova (Buena Vista/Disney)
Aussie Heath Ledger is cast as the legendary lover in a comedic version of the love story story between Casanova and Francesca Bruni, portrayed by Sienna Miller, the only woman known to have refused him until he could prove his worth. With a supporting cast of Lena Olin, Oliver Platt, Omid Djalili, and Jeremy Irons, this movie features beautiful period costumes and the magnificent setting of the real Venice.

Derailed (Weinstein)
Clive Owen and Jennifer Aniston portray two business executives who have an affair although each is married to another. Vincent Cassel plays the “bad guy” who blackmails them. Joe and Bill observed that this is the first (or at least one of the first) of the Weinstein Company movies since the Weinstein brothers cut their ties with Disney.

Rumor Has It (WB)
A clever tale about a woman (Jennifer Aniston) who suspects that her family was the model for the Robinson Family (from The Graduate) since the hunk portrayed by Kevin Costner has slept with both her mother and grandmother. Mark Ruffalo, Shirley McClaine, and Mena Suvari round out the cast. This trailer scored high on the giggle factor.

Syriana (WB) -- Grand Winner!
Matt Damon, George Clooney, Jeffrey Wright, Chris Cooper, Christopher Plummer, in an interweaving political thriller involving a CIA operative, oil broker, corporate lawyer, and others. Joe and Bill debated over the significance of the title with Bill’s take, that Syriana was a composite of “Syria, Iran, and Lebanon” considered the more plausible. They also mentioned that the movie is from the Oscar-winning Director of Traffic.

Walk the Line (Fox)
In short, this season’s Ray. Joaquin Phoenix portrays Johnny Cash in this biopic, with Reese Witherspoon as June Carter Cash. You’ll be singing along with these two Oscar hopefuls.


SO WHO WANTS TO BE A FILM CRITIC NOW?

Annapolis (Buena Vista/Disney)
James Franco portrays an eager Naval Academy 1st year recruit with Tyrese Gibson, as a tougher than tough officer pushing him to reach his full potential. Outside the Academy, Annapolis has never looked better. Audience members were recalling Richard Gere and Lou Gossett, Jr. in An Officer and a Gentleman.

Glory Road (Disney)
This trailer looked like another of those stand up and cheer, inspiring Remember the Titans sort of movies. This is a Jerry Bruckheimer movie based on a true story of the college basketball team with the first-ever all African-American starting player lineup that led to an NCAA championship -- an event in 1966 that “changed the game forever.” Josh Lucas, Derek Luke, and Mehcad Brooks star.

Just Friends (New Line)
Ryan Reynolds, Chris Klein, Anna Faris, and Amy Smart star in what seems to be a teen flick romantic comedy: the unpopular fat guy gets a second chance at first love once he matures and slims down. Maybe there’s a lesson in there?

Pulse (Magnolia)
This is a very effective and creepy trailer. “Terror has a different master” goes the tagline. One attendee commented on the use of Chinese actors in this Japanese horror movie. I’m not sure if there is a connection.

The Ringer (Fox Searchlight)
Johnny Knoxville’s character plays witless in order to enter the Special Olympics. This type of adolescent humor proved too unsophisticated for our very sophisticated audience. This trailer got boos and hisses, groans and sighs. With the right target audience, the results could be very different.


WE WENT TO A BOOKSTORE AND A MOVIE BROKE OUT

Bee Season (Fox Searchlight)
Richard Gere and Juliette Binoche star in a family drama: as a marriage falls apart, a father gets closer to his daughter as he assists her in her bid to become the next spelling bee champion.

Freedomland (Sony)
Samuel L. Jackson and Julianne Moore portray an investigator assisting a frantic mother in her efforts to locate her missing child. The trailer effectively captures the intensity of the emotions involved in this type of situation and the haunted locale where they believe the child can be found.

Jarhead (Universal)
Jake Gyllenhaal and Jamie Foxx shine as the Marines recruit Swofford (a.k.a. “Swoff”) and Sgt. Sykes. Peter Sarsgaard and Chris Cooper are also part of the Marine Corps, which learns to have fun while avoiding dehydration and battle horrors in the desert. Jamie Foxx’s “hoo-ha” sounds a lot like Al Pacino’s in Scent of a Woman. The movie was based on the book recalling the actual experiences of former Marine Anthony Swofford’s service in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Great trailer and accompanying soundtrack.

Memoirs of a Geisha (Sony)
Ziyi Zhang and Ken Watanabe star in what has got to be one of the jewels of the season. The trailer shines beautifully and brightly. Gorgeously shot in vivid colors, this effectively depicts the engaging tale of a humble girl’s transformation into one of Japan’s most-celebrated geishas and entering the highest levels of society around World War II.


"ANY MAN WHO HATES CHILDREN AND SMALL ANIMALS CAN'T BE ALL BAD." (W.C. Fields)

Chicken Little (Disney)
Disney tackles a feature-length, computer-generated cartoon without Pixar Studio’s help. Bill commented that Jimmy Neutron bombed at the theatres. Can Chicken Little succeed? Is there more to the story where the sky is falling? Will Chicken Little and pals, Ugly Duckling, Fish out of Water, and Runt of the Litter, save the day? This trailer spurred further audience discussion about Pixar’s wise strategy of including material in its movies for every age group so even the smaller kids can get some of the inside jokes and not just “enjoy the pretty colors” Further, Joe and Bill pointed out that there’s some edgy stuff in this movie that pushes past the General Audience rating and leaves some kids scared.

The Chronicles of Narnia:: The Lion, The Witch & The Wardrobe (Disney)
The special effects in this movie based on C.S. Lewis’s classic book are stunning. The trailer depicts a cast of British unknowns as the children, Lucy, Peter, Edmund, and Susan, the main characters in the story, with a supporting cast of British well-knowns, including Tilda Swinton, Rupert Everett, and Jim Broadbent. The trailer depicting the children’s entry into the world of Narnia through a magic wardrobe received enthusiastic applause, a rousing second place in this group. Joe and Bill commented that this is being touted as a kids’ version of The Passion of the Christ for those familiar with the spiritual/religious underpinnings to these Narnia stories. However, they thought that the comparison was made more than likely to somehow conjure up similar box office success of this movie. Let’s hope that the magic and the children in the movie will snare some Harry Potter fans to make this so.

Curious George (Universal)
Ron Howard directs this tale of the adorable monkey who constantly gets into trouble all without saying a word. Will Ferrell, Drew Barrymore, and Joan Plowright lend their voices to the speaking characters. Cute trailer.

Eight Below (Disney)
This movie was inspired by a real story. The friendship bond between man and dog is surely tested as eight “amazing” dogs are left behind in the Antarctic by a U.S. research team. Will the dogs survive the ordeal? Will man, the master, return to rescue them in time? Paul Walker, Bruce Greenwood, Jason Biggs, and eight “amazing” sled dogs star.

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (WB)
This trailer received sound applause from the audience. Cheers and whistles also accompanied this depiction of the continued adventures of growing-up Harry, Hermione, and Ron as they return to Hogwarts and participate in a dangerous school competition. Of course, all of the usual suspense, adventure, and excitement are effectively captured. Get your tickets in advance, this is another “can’t miss” hit.


WE'RE GETTING TOO OLD FOR THIS

The Family Stone (Fox)
The family’s all here: Sarah Jessica Parker, Craig T. Nelson, Rachel McAdams, Dermot Mulroney, Diane Keaton, Claire Danes, and Luke Wilson, gather in this family drama/comedy at the holidays. Trouble ensues when the favorite son brings home the tightly-wound girlfriend (Sarah Jessica Parker) whom the family dislikes.

The Ice Harvest (Focus)
John Cusack, Oliver Platt, Billy Bob Thornton, and Randy Quaid star in a holiday caper. A lawyer tries to rob the mob of its money on Christmas Eve.

The Matador (Weinstein)
Another Weinstein company production featuring Pierce Brosnan, Greg Kinnear, and Hope Davis in a comedy “about friendship at point blank range.” A hit man and a businessman meet in Mexico City and the unlikely duo become fast friends. Check out Pierce Brosnan in his skivvies!

Match Point (Dreamworks)
Joe predicts this movie will be the BIG comeback for Woody Allen. It caused a sensation at Cannes and the trailer wowed our audience into thinking we had just seen another Fatal Attraction evocation. Jonathan Rhys “Elvis” Meyers and Scarlett Johansson sizzle as Meyers’s character falls for Johansson’s and a complicated love triangle follows.


THESE CRAZY DAMES

The New World (New Line)
Colin Farrell, Christopher Plummer, Irene Bedard, Q’Orianka Kilcher, and Christian Bale star in Writer/Director Terrence Malick’s depiction of the arrival of Captain John Smith (Colin Farrell) and his ships to the New World in 17th century America. His eventual friendship with Pocahontas in particular and tensions with Native Americans in general are explored as the English settle.

Pride & Prejudice (Focus)
Keira Knightley, Donald Sutherland, Brenda Blethyn, and Judi Dench star in a new adaptation of the Jane Austen classic tale of the five-marriage-minded Bennet sisters in pursuit of future husbands with the eligible Mr. Bingley and Mr. Darcy as possible suitors.

Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic (IDP)
Joe could not believe the laughter and applause level for this trailer! Bound to be controversial, the movie showcases comedienne Sarah Silverman’s act. It’s provocative, with the sensitive subjects of racism, sexism, and anti-Semitism in the mix.

Transamerica (Weinstein)
This trailer also got the audience roaring with laughter, edging out the previous selection. Felicity Huffman portrays a male to female transsexual who travels across the country with her troubled son. Bound to have elements of both drama and comedy.


THREE SURPRISE TRAILERS

Our audience was treated to a very early look at these movies, please note the release dates.

Open Season (Sony)- Sept. 2006
This trailer earned a few chuckles. Looks like a cartoon about the friendship between a beer and a deer with voices provided by Martin Lawrence, Ashton Kutcher, and Gary Sinise.

V For Vendetta (WB) - March 2006
This winning action-filled trailer seemed a bit puzzling. It’s done by the creators of The Matrix and features Natalie Portman in a DC Comics-type role as a freedom fighter challenging a dark, foreboding, totalitarian society. Hugo Weaving, John Hurt, and Hugo Weaving also star.

A Scanner Darkly (WB) - March 2006
Winona Ryder, Keanu Reeves, Robert Downey, Jr., and Woody Harrelson are featured in a trailer with cartoon-like effects. There’s an ominous tone: “everything you do will be recorded.” This is a movie about a future society where Americans hired by the government spy on each other, but you won’t get that from the trailer.



Forty Films from Nine Countries

The 16th Washington Jewish Film Festival

The 16th Washington Jewish Film Festival: An Exhibition of International Cinema presents 40 features, documentaries and shorts from 9 countries, in five venues, during the December 1 - 11, ten-day Festival. The Festival kicks off with the DC Premiere of the award-winning French/Israeli film Live and Become on December 1 at the Washington DC Jewish Community Center’s Aaron and Cecile Goldman Theater (1529 16th Street NW). Special guest Actor Sirak Sabahat will be in attendance. Winner of the Audience Award at the 2005 Berlin International Film Festival, Live and Become is the emotional story of one boy’s chance survival amidst the Ethiopian famine of the mid-1980s. A mother conspires to place her seven-year-old non-Jewish son (Sirak Sabahat) with a group of Falashas (Ethiopian Jews) bound for Israel as part of “Operation Moses.” Her parting words to her child are that he should never tell anyone his true identity. And so, the child grows up pretending to be both Jewish and an orphan in modern Israel, where he embraces Judaism and Western values but also feels the sting of racism. Though he maintains his secret, the tension between his truth and the reality of his situation builds to an emotional climax.

The Festival closes with the DC Premiere of the stunningly crafted Fateless (Hungary/Germany) on December 11, followed by a dessert reception with the filmmaker in attendance. The film is based on 2002 Nobel Prize-winner Imre Kertesz’ moving novel about a Hungarian Jewish boy’s (Marcell Nagy) experiences in German concentration camps and his attempts to reconcile himself to those experiences after the war. Kertesz wrote the screenplay himself, and in the process of adapting his novel, expanded it to include more of his personal experiences. Director Lajos Koltai, best known as Istvan Szabo’s long-time cinematographer, has created a film whose harrowing narrative is punctuated by moments of surprising beauty. Cinematically, Fateless distinguishes itself from other Holocaust films by its disinterest in the shock-value of life in the concentration camps. Instead, it focuses more on the internal struggle to fight for the soul’s survival in the midst of horrific circumstances where physical survival seems to depend on chance.

One of the largest Jewish film festivals in the world, the Festival opened 16 years ago with 8 films screened at the old Biograph Theatre in Georgetown, bringing in an audience of 1,500. Along with the increase in films presented throughout the years, the Festival grew its programs surrounding the films, increased its audience four-fold, moved to multiple venues, diversified its programming and increased its special guest roster. As of today, the Festival has presented more than 500 films on the Jewish experience from over 30 countries. An audience of 7,000-plus is expected to attend this year’s Festival.

According to Festival Director Joshua Ford, “It is has been great in recent years to see so many Jewish-themed films receive commercial releases and in many instances, like last year’s audience-award winner Walk On Water, achieve box office success. We’re proud that the Washington Jewish Film Festival has been the starting place for many of those films. But I am equally proud of the unique forum we provide for the foreign, independent and documentary films that will only find their audience through our Film Festival.”


Feature Film Highlights

  • Go For Zucker! is a critically acclaimed, award-winning German comedy from Dani Levi. Can two brothers, one a pool-shark from East Berlin, the other an orthodox Jew from the West make it through a week of sitting shiva together in order to inherit their mother’s fortune? Co-screenwriter Holger Franke will be in attendance.

  • Winner of six Israeli Academy Awards and Israel’s 2005 Oscar Nominee for Best Foreign Film, Joseph Cedar’s Campfire is a personal and political tale of a widow and her two young daughters.

  • Director Karin Albou’s impressive first feature, La Petite Jerusalem, studies the lives of a working-class Tunisian-Jewish family in the suburbs of Paris.

  • “Roots” tours of Eastern Europe are all the rage and Edouard is looking to cash-in on Jews eager to visit their shtetl of origin, in Pavel Lounguine’s Russian/French comedy Roots.

  • Based on the book by Georges-Marc Benamou, The Last Mitterand is the story of the President of France and Antoine, a young Jewish journalist charged with the writing of the President’s biography, during the last days of his life. Antoine interrogates the charismatic leader with unresolved questions about his actions during the Vichy Period of World War II.

  • Local Call is Arthur Joffe’s latest comedy about a man whose cell phone bills suddenly become astronomical when his deceased father begins calling him from heaven.

  • Two of Israel’s best comedic actors, Moshe Ivgy and Avi Koushnir, star in Metallic Blues, a buddy road-trip film that is one part get-rich-quick scheme and one part an encounter with modern Jewish-German relations.

  • French Director Lorraine Levy introduces her charming film The First Time I Was Twenty, adapted from Susie Morgenstern’s autobiographical coming-of-age novel of the same name.

  • In a classic slice-of-life comedy, Checking Out, Peter Falk stars as a veteran of the Yiddish stage who summons his three adult children to announce his “final performance.”

  • In When Do We Eat?, the Stuckman family’s Passover Seder turns into a comedic journey, spiraling from an Ecstasy trip, and leading to family forgiveness.

  • The Two of Us -- The first feature by Claude Berri (1967), based on his own wartime childhood in 1944 occupied France, will screen at the AFI. See below for a mini-review.

  • Veteran actor Seymour Cassel stars as the patriarch of the dysfunctional Schaffer family, in director Alexandra Brodsky’s first feature film Bittersweet Place.


    Documentary Highlights

  • A Cantor’s Tale follows Cantor “Jackie” Mendelson as he revisits the golden days of Chazzanut (Jewish liturgical music) in Boro Park, New York. With colorful commentary by Alan Dershowitz and Jackie Mason.

  • Join Aharon Barnea, Anchorman and Senior Correspondent, Channel 2 TV News, Israel, as he discusses 10 Days in Gaza, the coverage of an event that divided a nation.

  • Frozen Angels faces the moral and ethical decisions with which we are now faced thanks to the advancement of technology and genetic engineering. Post-screening panel discussion: “Jewish Bio-Ethics and New Technology” - with: Rabbi Barry Freundel, consultant to the United States Presidential Commission on Cloning, Michael Levy, reproductive endocrinologist and Joan Rabinor, clinical social worker specializing in mental health challenges of infertility and reproductive technology.

  • In Marti: The Passionate Eye, Marti Friedlander recounts her life and career in award-winning Director Shirley Horrocks’ stunning film about the renowned New Zealand photographer.

  • Directors Marianne Bernstein and Judy Gelles will introduce their moving doc From Philadelphia To The Front, a film that explores the stories of six Jewish American WWII vets from Philadelphia, now in their 80’s. A post-screening discussion with local vets sharing their memories of WWII, will follow.

  • Hineini: Coming Out In A Jewish High School tells the story of Shulamit Izen, a ninth grader who sets out to organize a gay-straight alliance at her Jewish school. What begins as one student’s mission, engages an entire community in an open discussion concerning a culture of tolerance and inclusion. Director Irena Fayngold will attend the screening and the post-film discussion: “Coming Out In The Jewish Community.”

  • The Israeli punk scene is small but passionate and the fascinating doc Jericho’s Echo: Punk Rock In The Holy Land efficiently provides a comprehensive look inside the issues and music that drive it. With bands that range the political spectrum, from left to right to no politics at all, Jericho’s Echo presents a sub-culture of punks that are outwardly identical to their cohorts worldwide, while at the same time being uniquely Israeli. Director Liz Nord in attendance.

  • Winner of the 2004 Israeli Oscar for Best Documentary and the Best First Feature Documentary in DocAviv, Tel-Aviv Int’l Doc Film Fest, Keep Not Silent: Ortho-Dykes documents the clandestine struggle of three women fighting for the right to love women within the confines of their Orthodox communities in Jerusalem.

  • Sentenced To Marriage is a shocking exposé of the Israeli Orthodox women forced to fight for a divorce (referred to as “Agunot”). These women are struggling for a chance for freedom from their husbands and the system that protects the men who are contesting the divorces and refusing to pay child support, as they have already begun new lives with new families.

  • Local Filmmaker Ed Askinazi introduces A Synagogue on Broome Street, a film that explores Askinazi’s heritage, while uncovering a little known community of Greek Jews, also known as Romaniotes, with 2,000 years of history, their own language, and the Kehila Kedosha Janina -- the only remaining Romaniote synagogue in the Western Hemisphere.

  • Directors Laurie Stern and Lu Lippold introduce Wellstone!, a heartfelt and surprisingly funny biography of former Minnesota Senator Paul Wellstone - documenting his life from his childhood in Alexandria, Virginia as the son of Russian-American immigrants, through his political career, up until his tragic death in an airplane crash days before the 2002 election.

  • Winner of the 2005 Israeli Award for Best Documentary is 39 Pounds of Love. Despite his diagnosis with Muscular Dystrophy at the age of 6, Ami, a 3D animator, is now 34 and determined to leave Israel and travel across America. His incredible journey is an inspiration for those who accompany him, proving anything is possible with enough courage, humor and love.

  • The beautiful Odessa, Odessa discovers the remnants of the once thriving Odessan Jewish community from the Ukraine, and follows it into “exile” amidst the environs of Brighton Beach, Brooklyn and Ashdod, Israel.

  • The Ritchie Boys is a fascinating doc about a group of German-Jewish émigrés that returned to Germany during WW II, as members of a unique Army unit in charge of interrogation, located in Camp Ritchie, Maryland. A post-screening discussion: “Camp Ritchie Veterans Share Their Experiences.”

  • For 300 years, rural, Catholic communities in Northeastern regions of Brazil have been practicing unique customs in their homes, unaware of the startling similarities to Jewish customs and traditions. Director Elaine Eiger will introduce A Star Hidden in the Backlands and discuss this amazing community.

    For Festival Catalog: The Festival Catalog will be available at the Washington DCJCC and other fest locations, and can be downloaded from the web site. Order tickets from Box Office Tickets or call 800-494-8497.



    The Two of Us

    The Two of Us, at the AFI for a one-week run December 9-15 in a new 35mm print with new subtitles, is Claude Berri's autobiographical excursion into his own childhood memories of WWII France. When nine year old Claude (played by "100% kosher" Alain Cohen) is beaten up at school and called a "dirty Jew," his parents decide to pack him off to the countryside to live with an elderly gentile couple, the parents of their friend. Little Claude is taught the Lord's Prayer and given the usual instructions about hiding his Jewishness. The great Michel Simon, a sort of French Emil Jannings, plays "Grandpa," described as "an anti-Semitic old man." But, although Grandpa rails against the Bolsheviks, Jews, and Masons, he's clearly just a peasant who parrots the slogans he's heard all his life; as he says in the movie, "I am behind the times." We never think for a moment that Grandpa would turn anyone in; in fact, he immediately endears himself to us by feeding his bib-wearing dog at the table with a spoon and espousing vegetarianism. Grandpa and Claude soon grow to need and love each other and are soon engaging in theological discussions: "Wasn't Jesus a Jew? If he was the Son of God, then God must be Jewish." Simple Grandpa is no match for the impish Claude who also teases him about his Jewish appearance--big nose, curly hair--after Grandpa claims expertise in that subject. Claude enrolls in school where he is soon beaten up again and now called a "Paris brat."

    Finding a child actor to play your younger self can't be easy, and Claude Berri (real name Claude Langmann) said that he visited a Hebrew school, observing the students, and noticed an "unruly child... truly ugly... rowdy... unbearable. Worse than me. Well, I myself had been a good looking child." The rowdy one and a quiet boy were tested, but Alain had "tremendous screen presence." Alain Cohen appeared in two more autobiographical films by Claude Berri, Le Cinema de Papa (1970) and The First Time (1976). Other than the three films directed by Claude Berri and last year's Happily Ever After in which Claude Berri appeared as an actor, Alain Cohen didn't make any other screen appearances. He lived in Israel for a time, worked for a time in the field of architecture, and is now involved in supplying French restaurants.

    Michel Simon (1895-1975) entered the entertainment profession via the music hall as a clown-acrobat-dancer, acted in theater and eventually in silent movies. He appeared in several films directed by Jean Renoir who said, "What happens with great actors, and consequently with Michel Simon, is that great actors reveal and bring to life the dreams a director had in precedence but did not manage to formulate or understand. In a way, it is like the mystery of Creation..." Michel Simon hadn't made a film in several years when Claude Berri talked to him (his face had been paralyzed due to a makeup dye) about the role. Michel Simon loved animals so much that Claude Berri modified the script to make him a vegetarian.... On the first day of shooting, Claude Berri, who had originally just wanted Michel Simon to play himself, was dismayed by Simon's strange tone of voice. "I ask him to re-do the take and play more naturally, be himself... He howls, 'Nobody directs Michel Simon!' Magnificent! I'll never forget that! In a few seconds, he'd given me the best lesson on directing actors... You don't direct an actor. You choose him."

    The film, released in the US in 1968, received favorable press reviews: "Writer-Director Claude Berri tells it simply--without jerking a tear, hoking a climax, or ringing in the alarums and excursions that a wartime setting had ready at hand."

    Michel Simon won the Best Actor award at the Berlin Film Festival for his performance. The Two of Us is shown with Claude Berri's short film Le Poulet, which won the Academy Award for Best Short Subject.



    The 49th London Film Festival

    By James McCaskill, DC Film Society Member

    The London Film Festival has been called "the world's most sophisticated cinematic showcase." It may not have the glitz and hoopla of Cannes but it does offer stars and top films. It comes in late October, after all the major film festivals, but Sandra Hebron, festival artistic director, has made great effort in garnering top films from 2005 international film festivals. Those standout films from Berlin, Cannes, Venice and Toronto were here, a few exceptions like Ang Lee's Brokeback Mountain (which took home Venice's Golden Lion and high praise in Toronto) and Stephen Frears' Mrs. Henderson Presents (which has the potential to be a UK mega hit). The top Toronto films were covered in the
    November Storyboard article and won't be covered here.

    Faced with the dilemma at least fourteen films (including the opening, Fernardo Meirelles' The Constant Gardner, and the closing film, George Clooney's Good Night, and Good Luck already opening in Washington and having seen about the same number at other festivals, I could focus on films missed the first time round and those arriving with good advance word. I was not disappointed as, for the first time at any festival, I did not see a single rubbish film.

    The London Film Festival (LFF) had at least eight directors, who with a well-received first film, were back againwith an equally good second film. Some took their time coming out with film number two. The Brothers Quay took ten years between Institute Benjamenta and their second film, Piano Tuner of Earthquakes. Ira Sachs (The Delta released in 1997 and Forty Shades of Blue, 2004) and Yuan Le Moine (The Red Dwarf, 1998 and Friday or Another Day, 2005) took seven years each. Most took only two years. Faith Akin won great acclaim with Head On and did a complete change of pace with the second film focusing on Istanbul's music scene in Crossing the Bridge. Mohsen Makhmalbaf's Kandahar, 2001, and Sex and Philosophy, 2005. Dagur Kari made my top film list in 2003 with Noi Albinoi and is back with another collection of characters in Dark Horse.

    The task of festival director has not been made easy in recent years as the rising cost of festivals and the need to fill every seat can bring an odd assortment of films to any festival. You now must schedule international blockbusters along with small artistic wonders; you can't just schedule art house films from unknown directors from countries you did not even know made films and balance the books. There are those films out there. One such small film, which may come to our area, was Kim Longinotto and Florence Ayis's Sisters in Law, from Cameroon. They have turned the cinematic spotlight on brave women in this small African country whose work in a magistrate's court is bringing about social change.

    I had the opportunity to chat with Longinotto about making this film. "We went first to Kenya," she said, "and found stories about attempting change in the legal system. In one case 16 girls took their families to court. They had walked for days to get to court only to find that the magistrate had taken off. In Kumba, Cameroon, they found State Prosecutor Vera Ngassa and Court President Beatrice Ntuba were working to change things." In one case a woman was suing her father and husband who had kidnapped her child. The woman did not want to marry but her father had sold her for $80 and a pig. "When the judge asked the woman what should be done with these two men," Longinotto said, "I knew she was a true democrat. The judge would not listen to praise when I tried. 'I have to get back to my paper work,' she said. We did not want to film land disputes as they are so sophisticated. We wanted stories about ordinary lives. We needed resolution to the stories. Lots of beginnings were filmed." In the end this documentary looks at four real life situations. Six-year old Manka who is covered with sores and ran away from an abusive aunt; in another, a woman is seeking a divorce over the objections of her community and family from a wife beating husband; in the last segment pre-teen Sonita has accused her neighbor of rape." If all you know of Africa comes from headline after headline of tragedy and misery, see Sisters in Law. You will see two women whose humanity and humor could have stepped from the pages of Alexander McCall Smith's The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency. Sisters in Law has been a hit at Cannes, Toronto and London. The director told me that the film is scheduled for a spring release by a new distribution service run by five women, "Women Make Movies."

    The following are my top pick at the 49th London Film Festival. Keep in mind that films ranked in last month's article on Toronto are excluded.

    Must See:
    Blood and Bones (Yoichi Sai, Japan, 2005); Black Sun (Gary Tarn, UK, 2005), Sisters in Law (Kim Longinotto and Florence Anisi, UK, 2005), Working Man's Death (Michael Glawogger, Austria, 2005).

    Very Good:
    Based on a True Story (Walter Stokman, Netherlands, 2004), Crossing the Bridge: Sounds of Istanbul (Fatih Akin, Germany-Turkey, 2005), Portrait of a Lady Far Away (Ali Mosaffa, Iran, 2005), Unknown White Male (Rupert Murray, UK, 2005).

    Good, Worth a Look:
    Dark Horse (Dagur Kari, Denmark-Ireland, 2005), Election (Johnnie To, Hong Kong, 2005). I Saw Ben Barker Get Killed (Serge LePeron, France/Morocco/Spain, 2005), Proposition (John Hillcoat, Australia-UK, 2005), Sergeant Pepper (Sandra Nettelbeck, Germany/UK, 2004), Song of Songs (Josh Appignanesi, UK, 2005), Viva Cuba (Juan Carlos Cremata, Cuba/France, 2005), A Perfect Day (Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, France/Lebanon, 2005).


    AWARDS:

    The Sutherland Trophy went to Kan Paljakka, director of The Living And The Dead and honorable mention was given to both Estamira by Marcos Prado and Murderball by Henry Alex Rubin and Dana Adam Shapiro. Washingtonians saw the latter last summer.

    8th FIPRESCI International Critics Award went to Ramin Bahrani for Man Push Cart. George Perry, jury member said, "Man Push Cart is a beautiful study of an exiled Pakistani living in New York, a rock star in his homeland but now a man selling bagels and coffee from a street stall. The film is not only visually excellent but has a powerful central performance from Ahmad Razvi."

    The Alfred Dunhill UK Film Talent Award winner was producer Gayle Griffiths' Song of Songs. The award is given for new and emerging UK film talent. Christopher Colfer, CEO of Alfred Dunhill said, "It is a pleasure to be supporting this award and we congratulate Gayle Griffiths." The award comes with fifteen thousand pounds.

    The 10th Annual Satyajit Ray Award winner was Pavee Lackeen, directed by Perry Ogden. The Satyajit Ray Foundation gives an annual award to a first feature film premiered in the UK at the LFF. "The Jury acknowledges the high standard of many of the first features in this year's Festival, and particularly admired Bouli Lanners" Ultranova, Lee Youn-Ki's This Charming Girl and Maria Prochazkova's Shark in the head," said Jury President Clyde Jeavons. The Irish film Pavee Lackeen portrayed the traveler community in Dublin and its struggle with bureaucracy, poverty and prejudice.

    The Times bfi London Film Festival Grierson Award went to Glawogger's Workingman's Death. "A harrowing and visually stunning excursion into the brutal realities of life for manual laborers across the world, this is a truly original and thought provoking documentary and a deserving winner of our inaugural presentation of The Times bfi London Film Festival Grierson Award," said Festival Artistic Director Sandra Hebron.


    SYNOPSES OF TOP FILMS
    Besides Sisters in Law the other three "must-see" films offer different takes on the starkness of human existence. Two are documentaries and the fourth is based upon a real person. Reality Film easily beats Reality Television. Blood and Bones stars 'Beat' Takeshi Kitano as an astonishingly brutal character. In Yoichi Sai's adaptation of Yan Sogiru's best selling novel, Chi to Hone, Takeshi offers an unflinching, unsympathetic man who in 1923 leaves his isolated southern Korea island to seek his fortune in Osaka, Japan. Based on a actual person, Kim Shun-pei takes on a brutal life of discrimination and hard labor and with his physical strength, determination and ruthlessness, beats it. Starting with a steamed fish paste factory he soon makes his fortune but his obsession drives him on. Shun-pei becomes a hardened loan shark. His wife, mistress, children, and relatives all become targets of his rage. He is so uncaring of the feelings of others that he moves his mistress into the house across the street from his wife. The director said, "It took six years for Blood and Bones to actually get started into production. It was fraught with difficulty, both personal and budgetary and, like its protagonist we had to overcome many difficulties to reach our goals." Blood and Bones is Japan's official entry for the Best Foreign Film Academy Award.

    In 1978 a French documentary maker was blinded in a senseless mugging in New York City. A lesser mortal might have spent his reaming years warped by self pity. Not de Montalembert. Based on his writing and travels (a year and a half after the assault he traveled alone to Indonesia. Director Gary Tarn's Black Sun is a brilliant documentary. Huges de Montalembert's brain, used to visual stimulation, began to create its own world. In Bali, among old friends, he was reborn. There he began to write about the exquisite visual images his brain conjured. Tarn's mesmerizing images cascade across the screen giving you a glimpse of the creativeness of this blinded artist.

    Last of the must-see films is Workingman's Death. Michael Glawogger's documentary on physical labor in the modern era brings forward that harsh existence that usually is out of our sight. His five studies pay honor to those in harsh crafts. From Krasni Lutsch, Ukraine, he found three who mind coal in a home made pit that is only 16 inches high and always in danger of collapsing and killing them.

    Dog Day Afternoon ranks high on most film fanatics all time best lists. Based on a True Story takes its title from that film's opening statement. Sidney Lument was afraid the film was too unbelievable. Dutch director, Walter Stokman, wanted to know the real story behind that film and what happened to the principals. What happened on August 22, 1972 in the hold up of a Brooklyn Chase branch? We may remember that John Wojtowicz needed money to pay for his male lover's sex change operation. His lover was in Belleview Mental hospital after attempting suicide because he could not afford the surgery. It turns out that Wojtowicz was not in favor of the operation but did not want his lover to commit suicide. The irony in all this is that the lover got the sex change operation but it was financed by the money Warner Brothers gave him for the film rights. After the operation they never met again. Wojtowicz went to jail, and his boyfriend married a teenager and recently died of AIDS. Wojtowixcz is still taking hostages, trying to hijack the documentary by demanding more and more money and at one time telling the director, "The documentary is not yours, the documentary is mine." Using interviews and news reel footage, Based on a True Story is a fascinating story of the individuals caught in a Hollywood classic.

    What sounds come to mind when you think of Turkish music? Istanbul is a lively, cosmopolitan city and as such as a diverse music scene. Fatih Akin and musicologist Alexander Hacke (he did the soundtrack for Head On) invite you along on a musical odyssey in the Turkish capital. From modern electronic sounds, rock, hip-hop and back to classical "Arabesque" music join in and enjoy the cultural clashes of modern Istanbul in Crossing the Bridge. The band Baba Zula may be more accepted in Europe than in Turkey, at least their records sell better there. Their mix of jazzy psychedelic rock and oriental sounds make them a bit too avant-garde for many Turks and their over-the-top costumes don't help. Orient Express has their own take on history. For them the orient begins in India and ends in Istanbul. The occident begins in Istanbul and ends in Los Angeles so everything comes together in Istanbul. Radio Oxygen spreads their tunes to the young and hip. Want punk rock? Try Duman or for the more sophisticated there is Replikas. Fear that Western decadence is creeping in? Erkin Koray kicked that off 40 years ago with their covers of Top of the Pop hits. Ceza (translation: The Punishment) is Public Enemy moved to Eurasia and his fast pace has been described as "a preacher on speed." Mercan Debe brings sufi music to club sounds. Ever think you would hear rock played on a ney? In Sufism the ney, a bamboo pipe, is philosophically important as Sufism is based on equal parts transparency and tolerance, all questions and answers of being can be found in the heart of each person. Think whirling dervish reaching a state of emptiness. The beat and music of Istanbul goes on.

    Ali Mosaffa, actor turned director, was cautioned not to make a film. He told me that, "It is an experience, as a first film everyone said, 'You are digging your own grave with your own hands.' Then I said I didn't know if I would live another day so why not make this film. It was like trying to break through some norm I had learned. I had to break through the films of my own country. For 7 or 8 years I was an actor. Then what the director was doing became more and more important to me than what I was doing." In his film, Portrait of a Lady Far Away, he has broken through and has made a very different Iranian film. An unknown woman leaves a message on the answering machine of an aging architect. She says she dialed his number a random and wants someone to know that she is planning her own death. Thus a search for her begins. The address given turns out to be an empty apartment where he meets the caller's friend who takes him on a night long search for the potential suicide. It is a journey not only to find the unknown caller but deep into the protagonists own interior world. This dreamlike film is a brave film for a first time director. Portrait of a Lady will be seen in Washington at the Freer in February.

    What would you do if given the chance to jettison your past? All knowledge of events, family, friends wiped away in one second. Doug Bruce was given that option sometime between 8pm on July 1st and 7am on July 2, 2002. Waking that morning on a New York City subway headed towards Coney Island, Bruce could not recall his name or anything else about himself. Two MRTs, two CAT scans, 26 blood tests and a battery of psychiatrists could not make a diagnosis. Turns out he had the rarest form of memory lost, Retrograde Amnesia. Rupert Murray, a long time friend of Bruce, has made a documentary that asks the right "How did that happen" questions but does not always find an answer. Unknown White Male allows you to ride along as Murray examines Bruce's unfolding world. The documentarian brings a skillful touch in combining the bits and pieces of his friends past using home-video from their younger days combined with interviews with people in his present life. We watch as he rebuilds his world, keeping the best parts and letting go of the unwanted. The ultimate question is: Does Bruce want the old Bruce back? Would you want the old you back?

    Stars are all over London. On the screen at the London Film Festival and on stage in West End plays. The London Film Festival is indeed the most sophisticated cinematic showcase.



    We Need to Hear From YOU

    We are always looking for film-related material for the Storyboard. Our enthusiastic and well-traveled members have written about their trips to the Cannes Film Festival, London Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, Telluride Film Festival, Toronto Film Festival, Edinburgh Film Festival, the Berlin Film Festival, the Munich Film Festival—and for the first time the Locarno Film Festival. We also heard about what it's like being an extra in the movies. Have you gone to an interesting film festival? Have a favorite place to see movies that we aren't covering in the Calendar of Events? Seen a movie that blew you away? Read a film-related book? Gone to a film seminar? Interviewed a director? Read an article about something that didn't make our local news media? Send your contributions to Storyboard and share your stories with the membership. And we sincerely thank all our contributors for this issue of Storyboard.



    Calendar of Events

    FILMS

    American Film Institute Silver Theater
    "Risks and Reinvention: The Cinema of Louis Malle" concludes in December with Lacombe, Lucien (1974), Black Moon (1975), Pretty Baby (1978), Atlantic City (1980), Damage (1992), May Fools (1990), and Au Revoir les Enfants (1987). A few are in January: Viva Maria! (1965) and The Thief of Paris (1967). See the website for dates and times. Other Louis Malle films can be seen at the National Gallery and the French Embassy.

    Also concluding in December is "The Lubitsch Touch, Part 2" with To Be or Not To Be (1942) and The Shop Around the Corner (1940). For another Lubitsch film see below.

    The AFI also takes part in the Washington Jewish Film Festival with La Petite Jerusalem (2005), The Last Mitterand (2005), and Metallic Blues (2004). A week-long run of Claude Berri's The Two of Us (1967) begins December 9.

    Christmas films include the great classic It's A Wonderful Life (Frank Capra, 1947), A Christmas Story (Bob Clark, 1983), and A Muppet Christmas Carol (1992).

    "Ernest Lehman Remembered" showcases the screenwriting talents of Ernest Lehman who died this year. Films include the musicals The Sound of Music, West Side Story, The King and I and Hello Dolly (in 70mm!). Two Hitchcock films are North by Northwest and Family Plot. Plus Sabrina, The Sweet Smell of Success, and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?.

    Check the AFI's website for more December films including Felicidades (2000), a Christmas tale from Argentina and films by Jim Henson including Labyrinth, The Dark Crystal and a program of shorts.

    Freer Gallery of Art
    Films from Vietnam rarely get shown in our country. On December 2 at 7:00pm is Glorious Time in Me Thao Hamlet (Nguyen Viet Linh, 2002); on December 4 at 2:00pm is Sandy Lives (Nguyen Thanh Van, 1999); on December 11 at 2:00pm is King of Rubbish Dumps (Do Minh Tuan, 2002); on December 16 at 7:00pm is Lost and Found (Vuong Duc, 2003); and on December 18 at 2:00pm is Deserted Valley (2002) with director Pham Nhue Giang present for discussion after the film.

    National Gallery of Art
    "Cine Chileno: Forty Years of Films from Chile" concludes in December with Julio Begins in July (Sylvio Caiozzi, 1979) on December 3 at 4:00pm; The Borderland (Ricardo Larrain, 1991) on December 10 at 4:00pm; Amnesia (Gonzalo Justiniano, 1994) shown with Chile Obstinate Memory (Patricio Guzman, 1997) on December 11 at 4:00pm; Coronation (Silvio Caiozzi, 2000) on December 17 at 2:30pm; The Sentimental Teaser (Cristian Galaz, 1999) on December 18 at 4:30pm; and Machuca (Andres Wood, 2004) on December 31 at 2:00pm.

    "Risk and Reinvention--The Films of Louis Malle" at the AFI, the Embassy of France, and the National Gallery of Art concludes in December. On December 4 at 2:00pm is Human, Too Human (1972) and at 4:00pm is Calcutta (1969) both introduced by Margarita de la Vega. On December 10 at 2:00pm is Vanya on 42nd Street (1994). The 6 hour Phantom India (1968-69) will be shown in three parts: on December 1 and 2 at 2:00pm is Part 1, 2, and 3. On December 8 and 9 at 2:00pm is Part 4 and 5. On December 15 and 16 at 2:00pm is Part 6 and 7. Phantom India is also at the French Embassy. More Malle films are at the AFI.

    Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
    Chilean-born artist Alfredo Jaar will introduce his film Muxima on December 7 at 7:30pm. Arranged into cantos revealing the rise of AIDS and the legacy of civil war, each canto is set to a different version of the popular folk song Muxima (Heart).

    National Museum of African Art
    On December 4 at 1:00pm is A Young Man's Dream, a documentary about sculptor Efaimbelo in Madagascar.

    National Museum of the American Indian
    House Made of Dawn (Richard Morse, 1972), shown on December 8 at 6:00pm is adapted from the Pulitzer-Prize winning novel by N. Scott Momaday. The director, author, and lead actor will be present to introduce their film. On December 10 and 16 at noon is a documentary about the 21st Annual Eskimo-Indian Olympics.

    National Museum of Women in the Arts
    Two Miranda July programs are scheduled for December. On December 1 at 7:00pm is Me and You and Everyone We Know (see the Storyboard interview). On December 12 at 7:00pm is a program of short videos. Call 202-783-7370 for reservations.

    Films on the Hill
    On December 9 at 7:00pm is one of Laurel and Hardy's first features, The Devil's Brother (1933), with the boys as inept bandits who hook up with the fearsome Fra Diavolo who robs the rich and gives to himself. On December 14 at 7:00pm is a silent (with music) double feature of The Last Performance (Pal Fejos, 1929) with Conrad Veidt as a magician whose love for Mary Philbin is unrequited which shown with Eternal Love (Ernst Lubitsch, 1929) with John Barrymore and Camilla Horn as thwarted lovers stalked by others. On December 16 at 7:00pm is Ten Gentlemen From West Point (Henry Hathaway, 1942) about the first class to graduate from West Point, overcoming the politicians who try to prevent the school's establishment.

    Washington Jewish Community Center
    The 16th Washington Jewish Film Festival takes place this month. See above.

    Pickford Theater
    A number of Bette Davis films are shown this month including Bad Sister (1931) and The Golden Arrow (1936) on December 13 at 6:30pm; Now Voyager (1942) on December 15 at 6:30pm, Front Page Woman (1935) on December 16 at 7:00pm, and In This Our Life (1942) on December 20 at 7:00pm.

    Goethe Institute
    "Young and German" is a film series in which German directors portray the young generation in contemporary Germany. On December 5 at 6:30pm is Kroko (Sylke Enders, 2004) in which a tough blonde is sentenced to do community service in a housing project. On December 12 a 6:30pm is En Route (Jan Krueger, 2004), a road trip to Poland.

    French Embassy
    The Embassy of France also takes part in the Louis Malle retrospective. On December 1 at 7:00pm is Phantom India (parts 1, 2 and 3); on December 6 at 7:00pm is Phantom India (parts 4 and 5); and on December 15 at 7:00pm is Phantom India (parts 6 and 7). Phantom India is not only a remarkable document on a place and a time, it is also a meditation on the difficulty of truly knowing the Other, the way that a camera's "view" always betrays an attitude, beyond an objective recording.

    National Archives
    A series of films complements the exhibit "The Way We Worked." On December 9 at 7:00pm is The Phantom of the Operator about telephone operators place in the development of global communications. Filmmaker Caroline Martel will be present to introduce and discuss her film. On December 15 at 5:30pm is a program of shorts, newsreels and film clips documenting various occupations, working environments and labor-saving practices. On December 16 at 7:00pm is Roll on Columbia: Woody Guthrie and the Bonneville Power Administration, the story of the balladeer's temporary job with the Bonneville Power Administration where he wrote 26 songs in 30 days to promote the dam.

    Loews Cineplex "Fan Favorites" Film Series
    Five holiday films for December include Scrooged on December 1, How the Grinch Stole Christmas on December 8, All I Want For Christmas on December 15, It's a Wonderful Life on December 22, and White Christmas on December 29. All begin at 8:00pm.

    The Avalon
    As part of Asia Cinevisions is Long Life, Happiness, and Prosperity (Mina Shum, 2002) starring Sandra Oh as a single mother whose daughter begins to dabble in magic potions to improve her mother's life on December 11 at 8:00pm.

    Smithsonian Associates
    The final two films in the program "Cinema of Norway" can be seen this month. On December 7 at 7:00pm is Hawaii, Oslo (Eric Poppe, 2004) in which five strangers cross paths in a road accident. This was Norway's Academy Award nominee for Best Foreign Film. On December 14 at 7:00pm is "An Evening of Animated Shorts," fun for the whole family. NOTE: DCFS members are offered a discount on these films; for details refer to your e-mail.



    FILM FESTIVALS

    The Washington Jewish Film Festival
    The 16th Washington Jewish Film Festival takes place December 1-11. See the story above.



    Previous Storyboards

    November, 2005
    October, 2005
    September, 2005
    August, 2005
    July, 2005
    June, 2005
    May, 2005
    April, 2005
    March, 2005
    February, 2005
    January, 2005
    December, 2004
    November, 2004


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