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Pleasantville, New York Look Inside for Our Tribute: Experimenter “Celebrating Elaine May” Nonprofit. Film. Education. Community. Westchester Jewish Film Festival 2016 MARCH 30–APRIL 20 All Festival Tickets: $10 (members), $15 (nonmembers) unless otherwise noted. A Letter From This Year’s Festival Programmer I’ve been a passionate fan of the Jacob Burns Film Center since it opened 15 years ago, and I’ve even had the chance to introduce some wonderful documentaries over the years. Now I’m thrilled to return in a more formal role, as the new programmer of the Westchester Jewish Film Festival. It was exhilarating to put this year’s offering together, and I thank Brian Ackerman and Karen Goodman, who gave me free rein. This year we’ll feature 34 films from Israel and around the world—both documentaries and narratives—along with a rich slate of guests. We’re excited to include a special look at the films of the hilarious, uncompromising, and brilliant director Elaine May, who will join us on March 31. And don’t miss the sensational Presenting Princess Shaw, which kicks things off on Opening Night! — Bruni Burres Presenting Princess Shaw OPENING NIGHT with Q&A and Reception Presenting Princess Shaw Mar. 30, 7:00 The sensational Presenting Princess Shaw, directed by former JBFC Artist-in-Residence Ido Haar and coproduced by none other than our own JBFC Founder Steve Apkon, kicks off this year’s festival. It’s the extraordinary Cinderella story of an artistic collaboration between an Israeli remix artist, Kutiman, and an obscure, supremely talented New Orleans–based vocalist, Princess Shaw. Kutiman practices his art by sampling bits from amateur YouTube postings—a little girl’s piano recital, a cellist playing Bach, an electric guitar solo—and assembling them into original works in a project called “Thru You” that’s earned millions of hits. The film has thrilled audiences virtually everywhere it has played along its triumphant festival route: at Jerusalem, Toronto, Amsterdam, and others. 2015. 80 m. Ido Haar. Israel. NR. OPENING NIGHT Q&A coproducer/JBFC Founder Steve Apkon and RECEPTION Tickets: $20 (members), $25 (nonmembers) ALSO SHOWING: Apr. 2, 2:30 • Apr. 7, 1:00 New York Premiere! Fauda Part I: 144m. Mar. 23, 7:00*(Preview) • Apr. 1, 7:30 Part II: 146 m. Apr. 3, noon • Apr. 6, 7:45 Part III: 139 m. Apr. 10, 4:45 • Apr. 17, noon For over 20 years, Bruni Burres has worked at the intersection of arts, culture, and human rights as a festival director and curator, media educator, creative producer, and social media strategist. Burres is the cowriter and associate producer of Beyond My Grandfather Allende, which won Best Documentary at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival. From 1991 to 2008, she was the director of the Human Rights Watch Film Festival. Film descriptions by Bruni Burres If you loved Showtime’s Homeland—which was the US adaptation of the sensational Israeli TV series Hatufim (Prisoners of War)—get ready to binge-watch all 12 episodes of Israel’s latest hit TV political thriller. Fauda was co-created by The Times of Israel’s Middle East analyst Avi Issacharoff. His deep knowledge of the region brings undeniable street cred to the show, which follows undercover Israeli agents searching for a Hamas terrorist in the West Bank. 2015. Avi Issacharoff/Lior Raz. Israel. With subtitles. NR. Tickets: $12 (members), $17 (nonmembers) *Pre-Festival Screening with Reception Mar. 23, 7:00 Tickets: $15 (members), $20 (nonmembers) Fauda In Search of Israeli Cuisine The Kind Words Papirosen Mar. 31, 2:30 • Apr. 17, 7:15 Apr. 1, 2:30 • Apr. 16, 7:00 • Apr. 18, 5:00 Apr. 2, 4:30 • Apr. 7, 5:15 • Apr. 14, 3:00 In Search of Israeli Cuisine is a mouthwatering portrait of the Israeli people told through their food. Our guide, Michael Solomonov, the James Beard Award–winning chef/owner of the Philadelphia restaurant Zahav, introduces us to the farmers, vintners, cheesemakers, bakers, and chefs who are influenced by the traditions of the more than 100 cultures (Jewish, Arab, Muslim, Christian, Druze, Russian, Moroccan, and others) that comprise Israel today. It’s a delight to be in the hands of this master chef and storyteller. 2015. 97 m. Roger Sherman. Israel. With subtitles. NR. In the wake of their mother’s death, three Jewish-Israeli siblings happen upon some startling news—their mother’s ex-husband, the man who raised them, the man they call “Father,” is not related to them biologically. Played by the divine Sasson Gabai, he joins their search for the mysterious Muslim the siblings learn is their real father. The beloved writer/director Shemi Zarhin (Aviva My Love) has created a wonderfully paced, entertaining film, spiced with wry humor, that asks us to confront our own ideas around identity and walking the emotional tightrope between lies and truth. 2015. 118 m. Shemi Zarhin. Israel. With subtitles. NR. Gastón Solnicki’s tour-de-force documentary portrait of four generations of his wildly volatile Jewish-Argentine family—culled from almost 200 hours of 8mm home videos, a VHS bar mitzvah, and original observational material—takes home movies to an entirely new level. His father, Victor, a debonair, successful businessman, emerges as the lead figure, but Solnicki highlights the entire clan. Pola, his grandmother, who escaped from Poland and the Nazis as a teenager, now spiritedly takes sides in family squabbles. His eternally unhappy sister shops too much and has marital problems, and an overwhelmed brother announces his intention to withdraw from his kin’s “constant pressure.” Simultaneously epic and intimate, Papirosen is an extraordinary meditation on family, history, the importance of storytelling, and the power of cinema. 2011. 74 m. Gastón Solnicki. Argentina. With subtitles. NR. What Our Fathers Did: A Nazi Legacy Mar. 31, 4:30 • Apr. 9, noon • Apr. 12, 5:30 “Imagine what it must be like to grow up as the child of a mass murderer.” That’s the first sentence spoken in David Evans’ searing and provocative What Our Fathers Did: A Nazi Legacy. While researching the Nuremberg trials, eminent human rights lawyer Phillippe Sands came across the sons of two high-ranking Nazi officials who were indicted as war criminals for their roles in World War II. Sands was astonished to learn that the younger men held diametrically opposed views about their fathers. This powerful film explores those feelings, the complicated connection between the two sons, and the story of Sands’ own grandfather, who escaped from the town where the fathers carried out mass killings. 2015. 92 m. David Evans. US. NR. The Midnight Orchestra Mamele Apr. 2, noon • Apr. 6, 2:30 Newly restored! Mamele features the iconic Yiddish actress Molly Picon as a dutiful daughter who promises her dying mother that she’ll take care of the family, no matter what. Her father is too busy kibitzing and playing cards with his friends to bother working, and her small-time gangster brother, who is always either running from the law or to the ladies, can’t even begin to help keep the family on course. The young woman is so busy cooking, cleaning, and matchmaking for everyone else that she almost fails to notice the attractive violinist across the courtyard. This classic musical comedy embraces the entire gamut of interwar Jewish life in Lodz, Poland, in all its diversity, and includes the musical number that became Picon’s trademark, “Abi Gezunt.” 1938. 97 m. Joseph Green/Konrad Tom. Poland. With subtitles. NR. Apr. 1, 5:15 • Apr. 2, 8:45 • Apr. 4, 4:45 The Midnight Orchestra uses humor and compassion to smash stereotypes about Jewish/ Muslim relationships. It’s the fictional story of a Moroccan man who’s been living abroad since he was a child, who returns to see—and eventually bury—his father. Along the way, he must find and bring together the remaining members of his father’s once-renowned orchestra, and come to terms with his own surprising family history. 2015. 102 m. Jérôme Cohen-Olivar. Morocco. NR. Mr. Kaplan Apr. 2, 6:30 • Apr. 5, 2:00 • Apr. 15, 3:30 Writer/director Álvaro Brechner, who’s been called the Uruguayan Woody Allen, brings us the delightful and poignant Mr. Kaplan, his country’s entry for Best Foreign Film in 2015. After fleeing Europe for Uruguay during WWII, Jacob Kaplan (played by acclaimed Chilean actor Héctor Noguera) built a stable but rather boring life for himself and his family. Now 76, grumpily questioning his worth, he seizes an opportunity to achieve greatness. Learning of a mysterious German café owner prowling the shores of a nearby beach, Kaplan is convinced that he’s found a Nazi in hiding and plans to expose him. Expertly distilling a potent mixture of emotional depth and deadpan comedy, Mr. Kaplan is a beautifully directed comedy-drama with winning performances. 2014. 98 m. Álvaro Brechner. Uruguay. With subtitles. NR. All Festival Tickets: $10 (members), $15 (nonmembers) unless otherwise noted. Mr. Kaplan In Search of Israeli Cuisine COMMUNITY NIGHT Everything Is Copy Apr. 3, 5:15 Jacob Bernstein creates a stunning, engaging portrait of his mother, Nora Ephron, the no-holds-barred, hilarious, and extremely talented essayist turned novelist, playwright, screenwriter, and film director. Deftly edited, this portrait combines home movies, interviews, and wondrous video and audio clips of Ephron herself expounding on writing, movies, and her I’m-always-right opinions. Bernstein allows us to see how Ephron continually struggled to balance the personal and the private while ostensibly operating by her own mother’s motto that everything was fair game for her work. 2015. 89 m. Jacob Bernstein. US. NR. Q&A filmmaker Jacob Bernstein and JBFC Board President Janet Maslin and RECEPTION Everything Is Copy SPONSORED BY THE JEWISH WEEK Tickets: $15 (members), $20 (nonmembers) ALSO SHOWING: Apr. 11, 3:00 Censored Voices Aliyah Dada Apr. 3, 2:50 • Apr. 5, 4:00 • Apr. 8, 5:00 Apr. 4, 2:00 • Apr. 7, 2:45 • Apr. 9, 2:30 Mor Loushy’s superb Censored Voices snagged the 2015 Israeli Academy Award for Best Documentary. This candid, shattering film is based on renowned Israeli author Amos Oz and editor Avraham Shapira’s revelatory 1967 audio interviews with Israeli soldiers one week after their return from the Six-Day War. At a moment in history in which some believe Israel turned from David to Goliath, the soldiers expressed mixed feelings, and worse, which clashed with the accepted narrative. The Israeli army censored the conversations, allowing only a fragment of them to be released. Censored Voices reveals the original recordings for the very first time. A shocking and profound re-examination of Israeli history—a film not to be missed. 2015. 84 m. Mor Loushy. Israel. With subtitles. NR. Renowned Romanian producer Oana Giurgiu’s (Child’s Pose) directorial debut is a witty and frank exploration of Jewish Romanians’ emigration to the Holy Land. Surprisingly eloquent and intimate, it’s made in a Dadaesque style as a tribute to Tristan Tzara and Marcel Janco, who pioneered the radical art movement. Reveling in the absurdities and contradictions embedded in the story, Aliyah Dada also reveals the hidden horrors of World War II in Romania, the Communists’ secret deals for trading Jews to Israel, and the influence of 400,000 Romanians (now the fourth largest group of immigrants in the population) on Israeli culture. 2015. 116 m. Oana Giurgiu. Romania/Israel. With subtitles. NR. The Muses of Isaac Bashevis Singer Apr. 3, 8:00 • Apr. 9, 5:00 The Prime Ministers II: Soldiers and Peacemakers Apr. 4, 7:30* • Apr. 15, 1:00 Academy Award winner Richard Trank (The Long Way Home) returns to the WJFF with this sensational documentary based on the best-selling book by Ambassador Yehuda Avner (The Prime Ministers). It’s a West Wing–esque behind-the-scenes look at key historical events, such as Avner’s experiences with prime ministers (Yitzhak Rabin, Menachem Begin, Shimon Peres), his service as Israel’s ambassador to England, and epic events (the rescue at Entebbe, Anwar Sadat’s visit to Jerusalem, the Camp David peace process, the war in Lebanon, the Oslo Accords). Written and produced with Rabbi Marvin Hier, this is a stunning follow-up to The Prime Ministers I: The Pioneers (WJFF 2013). 2014. 111 m. Richard Trank. US. NR. Experimenter Apr. 6, 5:00 • Apr. 8, 2:45 Writer/director Michael Almereyda (Hamlet, starring Ethan Hawke) paints an idiosyncratic and edgy dramatic portrait of Stanley Milgram, the Yale University–based social scientist who in 1961 set out to determine how and why people could be pushed to extremes. The son of Holocaust survivors, Milgram created the “obedience experiments,” in which ordinary people were commanded to inflict pain on others by an authority figure. He asked, “Could it be that Eichmann and his million accomplices in the Holocaust were just following orders? Could we call them all accomplices?” A fascinating look at an unnerving subject with an all-star cast that includes Peter Sarsgaard and Winona Ryder. 2015. 98 m. Michael Almereyda. US. PG-13. Rabin in His Own Words Apr. 7, 7:30* • Apr. 12, 3:00 • Apr. 16, noon Winner: Best Documentary, 2015 Haifa International Film Festival This courageous, penetrating film gives us a previously unseen view of Yitzhak Rabin—his own. Erez Laufer skillfully threads together rare archival footage, home movies, and private letters that enable Rabin’s personal and professional dramas to unfold before our eyes. We watch the young man rise through his stellar military career and his years as a brilliant diplomat. He entered politics as the Israeli ambassador to the United States and then served as prime minister, opposition leader, minister of defense, and prime minister once more—making moves that often enraged many, until the horrific moment when his political career and life were violently ended. 2015. 100 m. Erez Laufer. US/Israel. With subtitles. NR. *Q&A Apr. 7, 7:30: Ambassador Aaron Jacob (AJC Associate Director of International Relations) and the Honorable Amir Sagie (Deputy Consul General of Israel in New York) SPONSORED BY AJC The Yiddish writer and Nobel Prize–winner Isaac Bashevis Singer (Gimpel the Fool, Yentl the Yeshiva Boy, and Enemies, A Love Story) was a romantic charmer both on the page and in real life. This delightful, candid documentary explores the little known history of his most vital source of creative inspiration, his “harem” of women translators. The talented codirectors Asaf Galay and Shaul Betser skillfully combine intimate, poignant interviews with nine of the remaining translators with exclusive archival material to portray the unknown story of an author who enchanted his employees and his audiences alike. 2014. 72 m. Asaf Galay/Shaul Betser. Israel. With subtitles. NR. *Q&A Apr. 4, 7:30: Steve Bayme (AJC Director of the Contemporary Jewish Life Department and of the Koppelman Institute on American Jewish-Israeli Relations) and RECEPTION SPONSORED BY AJC Tickets: $12 (members), $17 (nonmembers) The Muses of Isaac Bashevis Singer Raise the Roof Apr. 10, noon* • Apr. 11, 5:00 Raise the Roof follows the extraordinary decadelong effort by Massachusetts-based sculptors and teachers Rick and Laura Brown to reconstruct the elaborate roof and painted ceiling of what was one of the most magnificent 18th-century synagogues ´ in Poland. The Gwozdziec, along with nearly 200 other wooden synagogues, was destroyed by the Nazis during World War II. With their team of more than 300 students and professionals from 16 countries, the Browns grapple not just with echoes of this horrific period of history, but also with warped timbers, tricky paints, and period hand tools. And when their work is finished, it’s evident that they’ve done more than rebuild a lost synagogue—they have recovered a lost world. In ´ 2014, the Gwozdziec roof was unveiled as the centerpiece of the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw. 2015. 85 m. Yari and Cary Wolinsky. US. NR. JeruZalem Youth Apr. 8, 7:15 • Apr. 10, 7:45 Alejandro González Iñárritu (Birdman, The Revenant) says: “As soon as you see the eyes and features of both main young actors in Youth, you recognize the deep sight and nobility of [filmmaker] Tom Shoval.” Teen brothers Yaki and Shaul live with their parents in Petah Tikva, near Tel Aviv. Their father has lost his job, and the family is on the brink of losing their home. The boys feel they must do something—and using the gun Yaki carries (he is doing his military service), they kidnap one of Shaul’s wealthy classmates. They then place a call demanding a huge ransom for her release. But they’ve forgotten that today is Shabbat and their victim’s orthodox family will not answer the phone. Soon, time starts to run out… 2013. 107 m. Tom Shoval. Israel. With subtitles. NR. Junun Apr. 8, 9:30 • Apr. 15, 8:45 • Apr. 16, 9:30 Academy Award nominee Paul Thomas Anderson (Inherent Vice, There Will Be Blood) takes us on a mind-blowing musical journey to Jodhpur, India. In spring 2015, the Maharaja of Jodhpur hosted acclaimed Israeli composer/poet Shye Ben Tzur, who has lived in India for over 15 years, along with Anderson’s friend and collaborator, Jonny Greenwood (Radiohead’s lead guitarist), and his producer, Nigel Godrich. They joined a group of India’s finest musicians, and over the following three weeks joyously made music together. With long, unbroken takes, Junun is a cross-cultural meeting point between the mystical Islam of Sufi, Qawwali, and devotional poetries in Urdu, Hebrew, and Hindi—and an extraordinary visual and sensory experience that will capture your imagination. 2015. 54 m. Paul Thomas Anderson. US/India. With subtitles. NR. Raise the Roof Baba Joon Apr. 9, 7:00 • Apr. 12, 7:30 Winner: Best Film, Israeli Academy Awards Yuval Delshad’s fiction-feature debut deftly chronicles the escalating conflict between father and son in a hard-working Iranian-Israeli family in the Negev during the early 1980s. Yitzhak (the extremely talented Navid Negahban, who played Abu Nazir in Homeland) is proud of the turkey farm his father built, and is determined to keep it going with the help of his 13-year-old son, Moti. But farming turkeys is the last thing Moti wants to do. When Yitzhak’s older, successful brother returns from America for a short visit, Moti’s rebellion against what he believes are his father’s old-fashioned ways explodes. Baba Joon is a beautifully acted, astute glimpse into the immigrant experience, and a universal story of intergenerational tension. 2015. 91 m. Yuval Delshad. Israel. With subtitles. NR JeruZalem Apr. 9, 9:00 • Apr. 15, 10:00 This crowd-pleaser—the Audience Award winner at the 2015 Jerusalem Film Festival—is a Spring Break/Dawn of the Dead horror mash-up set in the Holy Land! Sarah, who is mourning the death of her older brother, reluctantly agrees to travel to Tel Aviv for a beach vacation with fun-loving Rachel (Yael Grobglas from Jane the Virgin). On their flight to Israel, the two best friends meet a cute archaeologist who convinces them to head to Jerusalem for the Yom Kippur break—and their Middle East holiday soon descends into a nightmare on Judgment Day. Will they escape before all hell breaks loose and the Dark Angels turn off the lights? The Paz brothers (perhaps Israel’s answer to the Coen brothers), keep you at the edge of your seat until the very end. 2015. 94 m. Yoav Paz/ Doron Paz. Israel. R. A selection of books related to many festival films is available across the street at The Village Bookstore, 10 Washington Avenue, Pleasantville. *Q&A Apr. 10, noon: Gosia Weiss (AJC Senior Associate for Polish-Jewish Affairs) SPONSORED BY AJC Twilight of a Life Apr. 10, 3:00 • Apr. 13, 5:00 Sylvain Biegeleisen’s enchanting, affecting portrait of his 95-year-old bedridden mother—who laughs, smokes, sings, and drinks (just a little)—won Best Documentary at last year’s DocAviv and almost every other festival where it’s been screened. As the elderly woman slides between complete lucidity and moments of confusion, she constantly reminds her son that she’s a fighter and that “there is always something worth holding on to.” It is a privilege to see this love letter to a beloved parent. 2015. 70 m. Sylvain Biegeleisen. Israel/ Belgium. With subtitles. NR. Rosenwald Apr. 11, 7:15 From the award-winning director of The Life and Times of Hank Greenberg and Yoo-Hoo, Mrs. Goldberg, this is the captivating story of Julius Rosenwald, the son of an immigrant peddler who became one of America’s most effective philanthropists and social activists. Deeply influenced by the writings of Booker T. Washington, Rosenwald partnered with Washington to construct 5,400 schools in African American communities throughout the south at the height of the Jim Crow era. He also built YMCAs and housing for African Americans to address the pressing needs of the Great Migration, giving away $62 million in his lifetime. Interviews with civil rights leaders and Rosenwald school alumni including Maya Angelou help paint a picture of this modest, generous man. Special note: Two of Julius Rosenwald’s three children moved to Westchester and became principal benefactors of the remarkable Teatown Lake Reservation. 2015. 96 m. Aviva Kempner. US. NR. Q&A Peter Ascoli, grandson of Julius Rosenwald. Peter is the son of Marian Ascoli—Julius’s daughter—who donated 150 acres to Teatown Lake Reservation and was a leader in that institution for many years. The Grüninger File Apr. 13, 7:30* • Apr. 18, 2:30 On August 19, 1938, Switzerland ordered the closing of its border to refugees from the Third Reich, constituting a death sentence for many Jews. But Swiss Police Commander Paul Grüninger—the “Oscar Schindler of the Swiss-German border region”—used bureaucratic loopholes to allow more than 3,000 Austrian Jews to enter the country. This drama, based on the true story, unfolds like a suspense thriller as we witness the war of wits between the commander and his superiors in the police force of officially neutral Switzerland. It’s almost impossible to watch The Grüninger File and not think about the difficult moral questions around today’s refugee asylum seekers. 2014. 92 m. Alain Gsponer. Switzerland/Austria. With subtitles. NR. *Q&A Apr. 13, 7:30: Jason Isaacson (AJC Director of the Office of Government and International Affairs) and RECEPTION Rock in the Red Zone SPONSORED BY AJC Tickets: $12 (members), $17 (nonmembers) Women in Sink Apr. 14, 4:40 • Apr. 17, 2:45 Emerging Israeli director Iris Zaki takes a job washing hair at a popular Haifa salon, which caters to Arab-Christian, Jewish, and Muslim women alike. Recording the candid conversations that take place when the clients literally let their hair down, Zaki has created a beautiful short film that reminds us of our shared humanity. 2015. 36 m. Iris Zacki. Israel. With subtitles. NR. with Partner with the Enemy Codirectors Chen Shelach and Duki Dror draw us into the ever-fraught Israeli-Palestinian conflict by following two gutsy women—one Israeli and one Palestinian—building a business together. Can their success and friendship endure in the face of social pressures, anti-normalization currents, and a male-dominated industry? 2015. 60 m. Duki Dror/Chen Shelach. Israel. With subtitles. NR. The Grüninger File I Don’t Belong Anywhere: The Cinema of Chantal Akerman Apr. 15, 5:45 • Apr. 19, 3:00 Chantal Akerman was one of the leading experimental filmmakers of her generation. When her celebrated Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles was released in 1975, the Times declared that it was the “first masterpiece of the feminine in the history of the cinema.” In I Don’t Belong Anywhere, Marianne Lambert, one of Akerman’s longtime colleagues, delicately portrays the artist as a nomad, always traveling, always creating, and always searching for an elusive emotional home. Lambert deftly explores Akerman’s 40-film oeuvre to create a profound and loving portrait of the Jewish-Belgian pioneer, who abruptly ended her life last autumn. 2015. 67 m. Marianne Lambert. Belgium. With subtitles. NR. Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah Apr. 15, 7:30 • Apr. 16, 5:30 • Apr. 19, 5:30 Adam Benzine has created a stunning portrait of Claude Lanzmann, whose nine-and-a-half-hour magnum opus, Shoah, is considered by many to be one of the greatest films ever made about the Holocaust. Benzine goes behind the scenes to discuss the masterwork with Lanzmann, delving into the secret filming of former Nazis, the process of persuading survivors to candidly tell their stories to the camera, the film’s financial and technical complications over more than 11 years of production, and Lanzmann’s obsessive moral commitment that almost drove him to suicide. Marking the 30th anniversary of Shoah’s release, as well as the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, this is a decisive portrait of a singular artist. Academy Award Nominee for Best Short Documentary 2015. 2015. 40 m. Adam Benzine. With subtitles. NR. Tickets: $8 (members), $13 (nonmembers) Rock in the Red Zone Apr. 17, 4:45 • Apr. 20, 2:30 Documentary filmmaker Laura Bialis (Refusenik) returned to Israel in 2007 looking for a great story, and ended up in Sderot, on the edge of the Negev Desert bordering Gaza. The small, besieged city was established in the 1950s as a transit camp for immigrants coming first from Arab countries and later from Ethiopia. Today, it’s a city of factory workers and rock musicians, the children of refugees who seek solace from rocket fire in music. Together, in underground bomb shelters, they create magical rhythms, transforming contemporary Israeli music using North African and Western beats. As Bialis films the pulsating music scene, she crosses the line from observer to participant in this dramatic, touching, and unflinchingly real view of a life led by people coping with the seemingly impossible. 2014. 87 m. Laura Bialis. Israel. With subtitles. NR. Karski & the Lords of Humanity Apr. 18, 7:30 Emmy Award–winning director Slawomir Grünberg (Praying with Lior) turns his lens on his homeland, Poland, to tell the story of Jan Karski, one of the most courageous and least known underground activists during World War II. Often working for the Polish government in exile in London, Karski risked his own life on many assignments, including an incognito mission to the Warsaw Ghetto. He presented his eyewitness account to British officials and President Franklin D. Roosevelt—whom he called the lords of humanity—hoping to spur them to action. Grünberg uses potent animated sequences to illustrate several compelling events in Karski’s life, including brutal torture by the Gestapo, a daring hospital escape, and his disguising of his Polish accent through medical means. 2015. 72 m. Slawomir Grünberg. US. With subtitles. NR. Q&A David Harris (AJC Chief Executive Officer) and RECEPTION SPONSORED BY AJC Tickets: $12 (members), $17 (nonmembers) The Jacob Burns Film Center is a community-supported art house cinema. Karski & the Lords of Humanity Celebrating Elaine May Elaine May is an iconic comedian (blazing trails in the 1950s with Mike Nichols in the Nichols and May improvisational comedy duo), an Oscar-nominated screenwriter (Heaven Can Wait), and a stellar actress (among other films: Small Time Crooks by Woody Allen, who just revealed that she will costar in his new series for Amazon!). She is also one of America’s most uncompromising and daring film directors. May can create a hilarious moment in one scene, and shatter the audience emotionally in the next. She’s never politically correct. Fierce with her actors, she has realized some of Charles Grodin’s, Warren Beatty’s, Dustin Hoffman’s, John Cassavetes’s, and Peter Falk’s greatest and boldest performances. It’s an extraordinary privilege to honor this singular artist in the 2016 Westchester Jewish Film Festival. Ishtar The Heartbreak Kid Mar. 31, 7:00 Apr. 5, 7:00 with special guest Elaine May Pauline Kael and Richard Brody (who calls Ishtar “one of my favorite films…a masterwork”) are only two of the many critics who’ve lined up behind Elaine May’s woefully misunderstood film. “Ishtar is a really good movie that suffered, in its infancy, from very bad press,” added A.O. Scott recently in the Times. “A slow but steady tide of revisionism has taken hold, and Ishtar has been rehabilitated by critics and cinephiles…. It is a sly absurdist farce with keen psychological insights and prescient geopolitical implications.” This hilarious story features Warren Beatty and Dustin Hoffman as two incredibly untalented past-theirprime lounge singers who end up with a gig in a Moroccan hotel, of all places. Before they know it, they become pawns in a power play between the CIA, the Emir of Ishtar, and the rebels trying to overthrow his regime. Be sure to join us—and filmmaker Elaine May—to see this cinematic gem for yourself. 1987. 107 m. Elaine May. US. PG-13. with special guest Charles Grodin The outrageously funny but ruthless The Heartbreak Kid was an instant hit. Critics loved the film—The Saturday Review deemed it “a triumph of New York Jewish humor”—and it is still widely considered to be one of the funniest American movies ever made. Scribed by Neil Simon, it tells the story of sporting-goods salesman Lenny Cantrow (Charles Grodin, in the role that made him a star), who takes his new bride (played to perfection by Elaine May’s real-life daughter Jeannie Berlin) to Miami for their honeymoon. After their disappointing first official night together, Lenny meets—or, rather, is met by—a determined, gorgeous blonde shiksa goddess wonderfully played by Cybill Shepherd. What happens next? Don’t ask! 1972. 106 m. Elaine May. US. PG. Print courtesy of the Academy Film Archive. Q&A actor Charles Grodin and JBFC Board President Janet Maslin. Interview will start at 7:00, followed by the film screening. Q&A filmmaker Elaine May and Julian Schlossberg (veteran film, theater, television, and radio producer who has worked with Elaine May for many years) Tickets: $15 (members), $20 (nonmembers) Tickets: $15 (members), $20 (nonmembers) Apr. 14, 7:15 Mikey and Nicky Mikey and Nicky is “The great gangster movie of the 1970s, a welcome corrective to The Godfather” (Richard Brody, The New Yorker). Set over a long, tense night, this is the story of small-time thug Nicky (played with determined and fragile ferocity by John Cassavetes) holing up in a fleabag hotel, convinced that he’s next on his boss’s hit list. Desperate and unhinged, he reaches out to a fellow gangster, Mikey (a cunningly nervous Peter Falk). Mikey turns up to ostensibly help Nicky sneak out of town, but is he doing right by his old friend? This is a stirring and unequivocal portrait of small-time Jewish mobsters in mid-1970s Philadelphia, a world that has rarely, if ever, been shown on the big screen. 1976. 119 m. Elaine May. US. R. Elaine May directing A New Leaf in New York City A New Leaf Apr. 20, 7:30 Forty-five years ago, Elaine May’s luminous directorial debut, A New Leaf, opened at Radio City Music Hall to rave reviews, which were soon followed by award nominations (including two Golden Globes). The film, which May also wrote, is a romantic black comedy of the highest order. The self-absorbed Henry Graham, played masterfully by Walter Matthau, knows how to do only one thing—be rich—but one morning wakes up and discovers he’s broke, and his childhood guardian, Uncle Harry (a deliciously mean-spirited James Coco), refuses to give him another dime. Desperate, Henry turns to his enterprising valet (played by the divine character actor George Rose), who tells him to make money the old-fashioned way, “Marry it.” Will the meek, mega-rich botanist Henrietta (played sublimely by Elaine May herself, who received a Best Actress nomination from the Golden Globes) be his ticket to happiness? 1971. 102 m. Elaine May. US. G. Join the JBFC! The Heartbreak Kid You’ll be supporting our nonprofit and the film programming you enjoy, plus you’ll receive a variety of benefits including a member ticket discount, complimentary ticket offers, and special members-only opportunities. Join at the theater to get the member price today. You can also join online at burnsfilmcenter.org or call us at 914.773.7663, ext. 6. A New Leaf 2016 Westchester Jewish Film Festival At A Glance Wednesday, March 23: Fauda Part I: 7:00 (Preview) Wednesday, March 30: Presenting Princess Shaw: 7:00 (Steve Apkon) reception Thursday, March 31: In Search of Israeli Cuisine: 2:30 What Our Fathers Did: A Nazi Legacy: 4:30 Ishtar: 7:00 (Elaine May, Julian Schlossberg) Friday, April 1 The Kind Words: 2:30 The Midnight Orchestra: 5:15 Fauda Part I: 7:30 Saturday, April 2 Mamele: noon Presenting Princess Shaw: 2:30 Papirosen: 4:30 Mr. Kaplan: 6:30 The Midnight Orchestra: 8:45 Sunday, April 3 Fauda Part II: noon Censored Voices: 2:50 Everything Is Copy: 5:15 (Jacob Bernstein, Janet Maslin) reception The Muses of Isaac Bashevis Singer: 8:00 Tuesday, April 5 Sunday, April 10 Wednesday, April 6 Monday, April 11 Mr. Kaplan: 2:00 Censored Voices: 4:00 The Heartbreak Kid: 7:00 (Charles Grodin, Janet Maslin) Mamele: 2:30 Experimenter: 5:00 Fauda Part II: 7:45 Thursday, April 7 Presenting Princess Shaw: 1:00 Aliyah Dada: 2:45 Papirosen: 5:15 Rabin in His Own Words: 7:30 (Aaron Jacob, Amir Sagie) Friday, April 8 Experimenter: 2:45 Censored Voices: 5:00 Youth: 7:15 Junun: 9:30 Saturday, April 9 What Our Fathers Did: A Nazi Legacy: noon Aliyah Dada: 2:30 The Muses of Isaac Bashevis Singer: 5:00 Baba Joon: 7:00 JeruZalem: 9:00 Monday, April 4 Aliyah Dada: 2:00 The Midnight Orchestra: 4:45 The Prime Ministers II: Soldiers and Peacemakers: 7:30 (Steve Bayme) reception MARCH 30–APRIL 20 Raise the Roof: noon (Gosia Weiss) Twilight of a Life: 3:00 Fauda Part III: 4:45 Youth: 7:45 Everything Is Copy: 3:00 Raise the Roof: 5:00 Rosenwald: 7:15 (Peter Ascoli) Tuesday, April 12 Rabin in His Own Words: 3:00 What Our Fathers Did: A Nazi Legacy: 5:30 Baba Joon: 7:30 Wednesday, April 13 Twilight of a Life: 5:00 The Grüninger File: 7:30 (Jason Isaacson) reception Thursday, April 14 Papirosen: 3:00 Women in Sink/Partner with the Enemy: 4:40 Mikey and Nicky: 7:15 Friday, April 15 The Prime Ministers II: Soldiers and Peacemakers: 1:00 Mr. Kaplan: 3:30 I Don’t Belong Anywhere: The Cinema of Chantal Akerman: 5:45 Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah: 7:30 Junun: 8:45 JeruZalem: 10:00 Saturday, April 16 Rabin in His Own Words: noon Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah: 5:30 The Kind Words: 7:00 Junun: 9:30 Sunday, April 17 Fauda Part III: noon Women in Sink/Partner with the Enemy: 2:45 Rock in the Red Zone: 4:45 In Search of Israeli Cuisine: 7:15 Monday, April 18 The Grüninger File: 2:30 The Kind Words: 5:00 Karski & the Lords of Humanity: 7:30 (David Harris) reception Tuesday, April 19 I Don’t Belong Anywhere: The Cinema of Chantal Akerman: 3:00 Claude Lanzmann: Spectres of the Shoah: 5:30 Wednesday, April 20 Rock in the Red Zone: 2:30 A New Leaf: 7:30 Sponsored by Joseph & Roberta Rosenblum Paul Willensky & Harriet Blumencranz In association with With support from A NONPROFIT CULTURAL ARTS CENTER GANER GANER CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS PLLC Thank you to the following for their generous support SPONSORS Anonymous Froma and Andrew Benerofe Emily and Richard Cohen Dorian Goldman and Marvin Israelow Susan and Dr. Elliott Rose The Schleifer Family Foundation Elisabeth and Gary Schonfeld Katja Goldman and Michael Sonnenfeldt PATRONS Susan and Mark Alcott Bet Torah Gail A. Binderman Vivienne and George Bruckman Paula Blumenfeld and Joseph Gantz Debra and Jeffrey Geller Lisa and Stuart Ginsberg Goetz Fitzpatrick LLP Ruth S. Greer Helene and Harvey Kaminski Michele and Judah Kraushaar Lynn and Jules Kroll Denise and David Levine Amy and Frank Linde Cheryl and Lloyd Pine Plaza Jewish Community Chapel, Inc. Yvonne and Leslie Pollack Heidi and Richard Rieger Beverly and Michael Rosenbaum Linda and Norton Rosensweig Dawn and Thomas Rush Susan and Joel Schwartz Deborah and Stephen Schwartz Silverweed Foundation Janice and Ira Starr Judith and Jack Stern 364 Manville Road Pleasantville, NY 10570 Saw Mill Parkway North Exit 30/South Exit 29 Ticket Information $10 (members) $15 (nonmembers) except where noted Box Office opens noon weekdays and 11:00 am weekends Tickets also available at burnsfilmcenter.org For group sales call 914.773.7663, ext. 6 Info-line 914.747.5555