Toronto Jewish Film Festival

PLEASE CLICK ON IMAGE TO VIEW FESTIVAL WEBSITE

PLEASE CLICK ON IMAGE TO VIEW FESTIVAL WEBSITE

Starting May 5, the 24th edition of the Toronto Jewish Film Festival will feature 4 World Premieres, 11 North American and 31 Canadian Premieres, while 12 films will be seen in Toronto for the first time.

CLICK IMAGE TO VIEW ATOMIC FALAFEL FILM PAGE

CLICK IMAGE TO VIEW ATOMIC FALAFEL FILM PAGE

The 24th TJFF boasts an impressive feature film slate, including: Atomic Falafel, which has been called an Israeli Dr. Strangelove as it tackles the Israel-Iran nuclear showdown; fresh off its Berlinale and Tribeca premieres, The Tenth Man, filmmaker Daniel Burman’s Lost Embrace low-key romantic comedy about a New York-based economist who returns to the old Jewish Buenos Aires neighbourhood where his father runs a charitable foundation that looks after the community’s needy; a Sundance hit, Princess, an audacious feature debut by newcomer Tali Shalom Ezer that offers a bold coming-of-age story; Freak Out, a playful Israeli horror comedy, part of the country’s growing wave of genre filmmaking; writer Sayed Kashua’s Dancing Arabs autobiographical TV series The Writer, a follow up to his very successful TV comedy Arab Labor; the screen adaptation of Amos Oz’ memoir, A Tale of Love and Darkness, starring and directed by Natalie Portman; and Raphael Nadjari’s Night Song, an elegant drama set in Montreal, starring Luc Picard.

CLICK IMAGE TO VIEW  IMAGINE...THE DIVINE MISS M FILM PAGE

CLICK IMAGE TO VIEW IMAGINE…THE DIVINE MISS M FILM PAGE

An equally compelling documentary selection will be presented at the 2016 edition of the Festival. The titles include: Hagiga – The Story of Israeli Cinema, a 2-part inside look at this young country’s rich cinematic history; Imaginary Feasts, a powerful exploration of the little-known phenomenon of prisoners secretly sharing their favourite recipes in Nazi concentration camps, Russian gulags and Japanese war camps; Last Folio, which follows Slovakian-Canadian photographer Yuri Dojc as he undertakes a personal, artistic and historical journey into the past and present of Slovakia’s Jewish community; and That Daughter’s Crazy, where Richard Pryor’s daughter, Rain, explores her experience as a Black-Jewish young woman in Los Angeles in the 1970s.

CLICK IMAGE TO VIEW BY SIDNEY LUMET FILM PAGE

CLICK IMAGE TO VIEW BY SIDNEY LUMET FILM PAGE

TJFF’s lineup will also tell the stories of some of the 20th century’s most interesting figures: Bette Midler’s journey from pineapple processing plant employee to film and stage star is told in Imagine…. The Divine Miss M; Albert Einstein’s unpublished journals written during his trip to Israel help retrace the famous physicist’s steps in Einstein in the Holy Land; showing at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival, By Sidney Lumet entertainingly covers the life and career of the director of Dog Day Afternoon, Network, and Serpico; in I, Dalio or The Rules of the Game, celebrated filmmaker Mark Rappaport (From the Journals of Jean Seberg, Rock Hudson’s Home Movies) examines the life and work of French-Jewish character actor Marcel Dalio (Casablanca, Grand Illusion); and Marcie Begleiter’s beautifully-constructed biography of a trailblazing artist, Eva Hesse offers a unique window onto the New York art scene of the Sixties.

Please visit Toronto Jewish Film Festival Website for more info on the festival and it’s titles and events.

Comments are closed.