Culture Film Film festivals bring Israel to armchair American travelers Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | July 27, 2012 Sign up for Weekday J and get the latest on what's happening in the Jewish Bay Area. A majority of American Jews has never set foot in Israel, according to the 2012 survey of American Jewish Opinion conducted by the American Jewish Committee. So outside of news items about the latest political machinations and security threats, how does this group form impressions of Israel? Over the past two decades, Jewish and Israeli film festivals showcasing Israel’s growing output of both feature and documentary films seem to be filling the bill. This year 79 North American cities will host Jewish or Israeli film festivals, with estimated audiences in the tens of thousands. In the Bay Area alone, there’s the current S.F. Jewish Film Festival, as well as Jewish film fests in Silicon Valley and Sonoma County. Directors of a number of those festivals gathered at the recently concluded Jerusalem Film Festival to determine what North American audiences will be seeing from Israel on their big screens next year. Many U.S. Jewish film festivals screen the popular Israeli sitcom “Arab Labor,” featuring Norman Issa (above). Isaac Zablocki, executive director of the Other Israel Film Festival and program director of the Israel Film Center of the JCC of Manhattan, watched six films a day over the 10-day stretch of the prestigious Jerusalem Film Festival that takes place every July at the Jerusalem Cinematheque. Together with Other Israel Film Festival founder Carol Zabar, Zablocki is looking for films at the Jerusalem festival that convey the complexity of Israeli society and help close the gaps of “cultural misunderstandings” between American Jews and Israelis. The Other Film Festival, now in its fifth year, was set up to focus on Israel’s Arab minority, but over the past two years, Zablocki explains, films dealing with “anything non-mainstream Israel” are gaining in popularity. Israel’s diverse religious community has become the focus of a number of recent documentaries and features, but they don’t always translate well for American audiences, according to Zablocki. Take “God’s Neighbors,” winner of the Anat Pirchi Feature Award at the Jerusalem festival. The film portrays the uglier side of three newly religious Breslov Hassids who terrorize their neighborhood in Bat Yam. “I don’t think a U.S. audience will connect,” Zablocki says. The Manhattan audience for Israeli films has changed over the years, he says. “It used to be just Zionists who came to the old Israeli films. Now, due to the quality of Israeli film, we get a younger crowd. It used to be falafel, now it’s hummus,” he quips. It’s the unaffiliated young Jews that every Jewish outreach organization is trying to reach that turn up to see Israeli films, Zablocki adds. The audience for the Chicago Festival of Israeli Cinema is quite different from the progressive young crowd in Manhattan. “Chicago is conservative. Jews here love to see Israel in a good light, so I have to be careful what we bring,” explains Beverly Braverman, a founding member of the Chicago festival. The Chicago festival generally screens 15 or 16 films, including six features and nine documentaries plus one popular Israeli TV show. Most of the shows are sellouts, according to Braverman. However, when Braverman included the popular TV series “Arab Labor,” which pokes fun at Israeli Arabs trying to fit into Israeli society, “there was an empty auditorium,” she says. “The majority of our audience is people in their 50s. Many in the older crowd have trouble with the subtitles.” Braverman says. The festival does organize special screenings for groups of Jewish teens. “That’s what I care about the most,” Braverman admits. She is perplexed by the absence of members of the large observant community in the Chicago area and disappointed by the low interest of the non-Jewish community. Nevertheless, according to Braverman, moving the festival to a suburban theater has meant there are more sold-out films every year. Braverman has come to the Jerusalem film festival since 2005 to select movies for her audience. Like Zablocki, Braverman packs in many films per day. “It’s the only place to see so many great Israeli films,” she explains. For Braverman, who has made many friends over the years among Jerusalem festival regulars, the Jerusalem festival is where she connects with distributors to negotiate deals for her low-budget independent festival and to share notes with film festival directors from around the world. “I call it film camp,” she says with a laugh. Tony Jassen scouts films for Seattle’s Jewish Film Festival, sponsored by the local chapter of the American Jewish Committee. Jassen, a former Seattle resident now living in Jerusalem, says he tries to look for films that are not “on the circuit” and that will appeal to the diverse Seattle audience. Last year, more than a third of the Seattle festival’s offerings had a Sephardic theme, reflecting the fact that Seattle is home to the third-largest Sephardic community in the U.S. “There’s no doubt the Jerusalem Film Festival is the big showcase for films and directors,” Jassen says. “Films give voice to the wide range of the Israeli experience, and that’s what it’s all about.” J. Correspondent Also On J. 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