The opening-night selection at the Jewish Film Festival is Israeli writer-director Dror Shaul's worldwide prizewinner, Sweet Mud. It views 1974 kibbutz life from a 12-year-old's perspective, but don't expect rosy childhood nostalgia. Though it doesn't lack humor or adventure, it takes on backstabbing and conservatism in kibbutzim.
On a lighter note, the closing-night film Making Trouble: Three Generations of Jewish Funny Women is a TV-style documentary enjoyable simply for its episodic homage to six famous funny ladies, including Ziegfeld Follies star Fanny Brice, brassy belter Sophie Tucker, and Saturday Night Live's Gilda Radner. Though the career of still-breathing subject Joan Rivers has skewed toward tacky celebrity-culture exploitation, she's sharp and candid discussing an uphill climb from being the most-hated female sassmouth on the Catskills circuit.
There are several culture-clash comedies at this year's JFF, and one sure bet is French actor Roschdy Zem's charming directorial debut, Bad Faith. He and Cécile de France play Parisians of wholly secular Muslim and Jewish backgrounds, respectively. Their romance goes swimmingly until she becomes pregnant, sparking all kinds of familial strife. The fest's sidebars include a miniretrospective for Berlin-based Jewish director Dani Levi, who made a splash with 2005's farcical Go for Zucker. Levi is the winner of the fest's Freedom of Expression award; alas, his latest, My Fuehrer: The Truly Truth about Hitler, strains mightily and uselessly to burlesque the Third Reich's waning days.
Among the JFF's Israeli documentaries, one delight is Shlomo Hazan's hour-long Film Fanatic. It follows entrepreneur Yehuda Grovais' attempts to create a commercial ultra-Orthodox cinema even though his constituency is explicitly banned from watching theatrical films. Among US documentaries, one winner is Ilana Trachtman's world-premiere feature Praying with Lior, a family portrait that illuminates issues of faith, disability, and self-sacrifice.
Also from this author
YEAR IN FILM 2012: Dennis Harvey's top narrative films and documentaries
'Honk If You're Horny' brings retro porn to the YBCA
A delightful series shines a new spotlight on French comedian Pierre Étaix
Also in this section
'The Central Park Five' examines a shocking crime — and its troubling outcome
Make time for sensitive indie drama 'In the Family'
Who, exactly, is the target audience for Red Dawn?
Most Commented On
Recent comments
- Who gets hit by Muni switchbacks? - May 18, 2013
- True, but the problem is ever worse than that since some - May 18, 2013
- The issue isn't whether a worker is illegal but - May 18, 2013
- Offering up a verbal taxonomy is hardly hate speech. - May 18, 2013
- Oh? - May 18, 2013
- Share a cab - May 18, 2013
- Winograd went on to leave the Dem party - May 18, 2013
- Some more analysis of the SF recycling boondoggle - May 18, 2013
- How do we know what laws to obey? - May 18, 2013
- The law doesn't support that interpretation. - May 18, 2013








