The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Jewish film fest offers 75 movies over 23 days

- By Bo Emerson bemerson@ajc.com

There will be seven venues, dozens of films, and a jury handing out prizes at the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival, which begins Jan. 24.

The 23-day festival will offer 75 films at seven venues, including a batch of Atlanta premieres and some world premieres.

The opening night film, “Alone in Berlin,” featuring Emma Thompson and Brendan Gleeson, will be screened at the mammoth Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre, which seats 2,750 moviegoers.

Opening night, Jan. 24, is staged as a gala event with refreshmen­ts, speakers and other add-ons that increase the desirabili­ty of those tickets, and put a remarkable number of people in those seats.

Another big event will be closing night, Feb. 15, which will be held in the 1,700-seat Symphony Hall at the the Woodruff Arts Center. The featured film will be “The Women’s Balcony,” a comedy that pokes sharp fun at patriarcha­l standards.

One change in this year’s festival is the awarding of jury prizes by a panel of experts, a convention that is a regular part of other independen­t festivals such as the Sundance Film Festival.

The prizes don’t come with cash, “but we’re giving out a lot of prestige,” said the festival’s executive director, Kenny Blank.

Judges will award prizes in six categories, including a “Building Bridges” prize, for films that foster understand­ing between religious, ethnic and cultural groups.

Such recognitio­n will help boost the reputation of films that premiere here, and will also increase the prominence of the festival, Blank said. “It is a nod, like many things, to bring us in line with what our peers are doing in the field.”

In another change, the festival will, for the first time, screen movies on Saturday afternoons. “Traditiona­lly we have gone dark from Friday night to Saturday at night, out of respect for Jewish tradition,” Blank said, “but the reality is for most people the time they can get out to take in culture and entertainm­ent is on the weekends.”

Films presented on Saturdays will also be shown on other days of the festival, he said.

Opening night, Jan. 24:

In “Alone in Berlin,” Emma Thompson and Brendan Gleeson are an ordinary working-class German couple who quietly wage a personal campaign of anti-Nazi resistance.

Directed by Vincent Pérez, “Alone

in Berlin” is inspired by a true story and adapted from Hans Fallada’s best-seller.

A gala party will precede the screening.

Closing night, Feb. 15:

The women’s balcony at a Jerusalem synagogue collapses during a bar mitzvah party, injuring a few but also causing a rift in the congregati­on. This will be an Atlanta premiere of the comical narrative, “The Women’s Balcony,” which was nominated for five Israeli Academy Awards.

The event, held in Symphony Hall at the Woodruff Arts Center, includes a postscreen­ing dessert.

Young Profession­als Night, Feb. 11:

Ethnic identity, family dysfunctio­n and an unexpected pregnancy complicate the planned wedding of an ArabJewish gay couple in “Family Commitment­s,” a film from Germany. Aimed at younger attendees, the event includes a pre-show party.

The screening will take place in the Rich Auditorium, at the Woodruff Arts Center.

In addition to new movies, the festival always brings a few classics back into circulatio­n. This year, visitors will see the 1982 Peter O’Toole romp, “My Favorite Year,” along with the 1987 Woody Allen comedy “Radio Days.”

“We always want to honor Hollywood and make that an element of the festival,” Blank said. “Many people have seen (these movies) but have never seen them on the big screen. This gives people a chance to see them the way they are meant to be seen.”

The festival will amuse, but it will also unsettle, Blank added. There are at least two films sure to spark disagreeme­nt.

“Mother With a Gun” recounts the violent history of the Jewish Defense League through the eyes of its current leader.

Shelley Rubin left behind an affluent Los Angeles upbringing to marry JDL leader Irv Rubin; she took over the organizati­on after his suicide in prison. This documentar­y tells of personal pain and violent activism.

Filmmaker Shimon Dotan immerses himself in the culture of the West Bank settlement­s in “The Settlers.” Viewed by the internatio­nal community as a roadblock to the peace process, these Jewish settlers have been establishi­ng and expanding outposts in the occupied territorie­s since Israel’s victory in the 1967 Six-Day War.

“We want to move people out of their safe spaces,” Blank said. “I think the audience wants to be provoked and challenged a bit. … When they choose to walk through the doors to the theater, they know the festival will take them to new places and challenge their thinking on things.”

Venues

This year, the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival will take place at seven venues located around the metro area.

They include the 2,750-seat Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre (2800 Cobb Galleria Parkway, Atlanta); GTC Merchants Walk (1301 Johnson Ferry Road, Marietta); UA Tara Cinemas 4 (2345 Cheshire Bridge Road, Atlanta); Regal Cinemas Perimeter Pointe 10 (1155 Mount Vernon Highway, Atlanta); Lefont Sandy Springs (Parkside Shopping Center, 5920 Roswell Road N.E., Atlanta); Regal Atlantic Station (261 19th St. N.W., Atlanta); Woodruff Arts Center (1280 Peachtree St. N.E., Atlanta).

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ATLANTA JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL ?? The Atlanta Jewish Film Festival will open Jan. 24 with a screening of the World War II drama “Alone in Berlin,” starring Emma Thompson (right) and Brendan Gleeson.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ATLANTA JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL The Atlanta Jewish Film Festival will open Jan. 24 with a screening of the World War II drama “Alone in Berlin,” starring Emma Thompson (right) and Brendan Gleeson.
 ?? ATLANTA JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL CONTRIBUTE­D BY ?? A mishap at a Jerusalem synagogue causes a rift in a devout community in “The Women’s Balcony,” a comical feminist narrative that is part of the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival, which begins Jan. 24. “The Women’s Balcony” will be the closing night feature...
ATLANTA JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL CONTRIBUTE­D BY A mishap at a Jerusalem synagogue causes a rift in a devout community in “The Women’s Balcony,” a comical feminist narrative that is part of the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival, which begins Jan. 24. “The Women’s Balcony” will be the closing night feature...

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