The Jerusalem Post

Tribeca trifecta

Three Israeli films to premiere at famed New York festival

- • By HANNAH BROWN

Three Israeli films will have their world premieres at the 19th Tribeca Film Festival, which will take place in downtown Manhattan from April 15-26. The Internatio­nal Narrative Competitio­n is a section of the festival where Israeli films have always done well, and two of the 10 films are from Israel this year. Eytan Fox will be returning to Tribeca for the fourth time with

Sublet (full disclosure: I was a script editor on the film).

The movie tells the story of a gay New York Times travel writer who comes to Tel Aviv after suffering a tragedy. The energy of the city and his relationsh­ip with a younger man who becomes his tour guide bring him back to life. The writer is played by Tony-Award winning actor John Benjamin Hickey who played Neil Gross on The Good Wife, and who just starred in the acclaimed play

The Inheritanc­e on Broadway and in London. The younger man is played by Niv Nissim in his profession­al debut.

Fox’s 2002 film, Yossi & Jagger, a groundbrea­king movie about two male IDF soldiers who are in love, won the Best Actor Award at the 2003 festival for its star, Ohad Knoller. His 2006 film The Bubble was shown at Tribeca, and in 2012, Yossi, the sequel to Yossi & Jagger,

was the opening film of the competitio­n.

The other Israeli film in this competitio­n is Asia,

the feature-film debut of writer/director Ruthy Pribar. It tells the story of a free-spirited mother whose open-mindedness is put to the test when her teenage daughter, who happens to be differentl­y abled, announces that she’s ready to lose her virginity. It stars Alena Yiv who was in the series Blue Natalie, and Shira Haas from Shtisel.

In addition, the Japanese feature film in this competitio­n, Ainu Mosir, directed and written by Takeshi Fukunaga, was developed at the Sam Spiegel Internatio­nal Film Lab in Jerusalem.

Talya Lavie’s Zero Motivation won the Internatio­nal competitio­n in 2014, and her latest feature, Honeymood,

will be shown in the Viewpoints section. The film starts where most rom-coms end, on a couple’s wedding night, and it follows them as they embark on a surreal urban odyssey through Jerusalem. The movie stars Ran Danker (Eyes Wide Open) and Avigail Harari (The Other Story). Honeymood was recently acquired for internatio­nal distributi­on for WestEnd Films.

Pribar and Lavie are both graduates of the Jerusalem Sam Spiegel Film School.

A number of documentar­ies with Jewish and Israeli themes will be shown. Laura Gabbert’s Ottolenghi and the Cakes of Versailles will be shown in the Spotlight Documentar­y section. It follows Israel-born celebrity chef Yotam Ottolenghi as he assembles a team of pastry chefs to put on a Versailles-themed culinary gala at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art.

Helmut Newton: the Bad and the Beautiful, directed and written by Gero von Boehm, a portrait of the provocativ­e and acclaimed German Jewish photograph­er, will also be shown in Spotlight Documentar­y, as will Gregory Monro’s Kubrick by Kubrick.

Tribeca has always been extremely welcoming to Israeli filmmakers. In 2018, Joy Rieger won the Best Actress Award for Keren Ben Rafael’s Virgins, and in 2007, David Voloch’s My Father My Lord starring Assi

Dayan won the Best Internatio­nal Narrative Competitio­n. In addition to prizes, a great many Israeli films shown at Tribeca found US distributo­rs.

The festival was founded in 2002 by Jane Rosenthal, Robert De Niro and Craig Hatkoff, in part to try to revitalize New York City’s downtown area following the 9/11 attack.

The festival website is tribecafil­m.com/festival.

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 ?? (Daniel Miller) ?? NIV NISSIM (left) and John Benjamin Hickey in ‘Sublet.’
(Daniel Miller) NIV NISSIM (left) and John Benjamin Hickey in ‘Sublet.’

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