Tag: Zeitgeist

  • Film Review: Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen

    Film Review: Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen

    STUDIO: Zeitgeist | DIRECTOR: Daniel Raim
    THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: April 29, 2022
    SPECS: NR | 88 min. | Documentary

    RATINGS (out of 5 dishes):
    Movie

    Nearly 60 years after its theatrical premiere and 50 years following the release of its 1971 film adaptation, the musical Fiddler on the Roof remains as beloved, fresh and vital as it did when it first opened at Broadway’s Imperial Theater in New York City in 1964.

    Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen, directed by Daniel Raim (Harold and Lillian: A Hollywood Love Story), focuses on the film version of the landmark show, which won a Tony Award for Best Musical and eight other Tonys back in ’65.

    Fiddler on the Roof is based on the story Tevye and his Daughters and other tales by Sholom Aleichem, the central figure of early 20th century Yiddish literature. It tells of the lives of the poor dairyman Tevye and his family in the village of Anatevka in the Western region of the Imperial Russian Empire circa 1905.

    Norman Jewison, director of the 1971 film version of Fiddler on the Roof (which he deems a “spiritual and creative quest”), leads the charge of interviewees and vintage footage and stills in this  insightful and very entertaining doc, which is narrated by Jeff Goldblum. The non-Jewish Canadian-born filmmaker Jewison got his start helming live television in the Fifties and Doris Day movies in the early Sixties, before moving on to such substantial films as the Oscar-winning In the Heat of the Night (1967) and The Thomas Crown Affair (1968). Regarding Fiddler, he only has positive memories of the production, which was largely shot outside the city of Zagreb in the former Yugoslavia production and at London’s Pinewood Studios.

    Director Norman Jewison (r.) and actor Topol on the set of 1971’s Fiddler on the Roof as seen in Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen

    Jewison’s pleasant remembrances are seconded by other recent interviews with Israeli-born actor Topol, who portrayed Tevye, and actresses Rosalind Harris, Michele Marsh and Neva Small, who played his daughters. Harris has the most vivid recollections of the group, particularly as she recounts Jewison’s reaction to the time she and her celluloid sisters decided to “go Method” and groom themselves like early 20th century Russian women. (“Go shave those pits right now!” was Jewison’s bellowing on-set reaction.)

    Other insightful commentary on the show’s origin and film’s production is offered by lyricist by Sheldon Harnick, who was one-third of Fiddler‘s creative triumvirate along with the composer Jerry Bock and book writer Joseph Stein. (Of the three, Harnick is still alive and kicking at 97.)

    Fiddler on the Roof was a box office hit and nominated for eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director for Jewison, Best Actor for Topol, and Best Music and Scoring Adaptation for John Williams, who won the award and is also on board to comment on his work on the film.

    Jewison would be awarded an Oscar years later (an Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award in 1999) but based on what he says here, Fiddler‘s production appears to have been an even more rewarding experience for him. 

    His best story: As Jewison has recounted many times over the years, in 1970, he was summoned to a meeting with United Artists studio chief Arthur Krim, who asked him if he would direct the film version of Fiddler on the Roof.

    Jewison took a breath and responded, “What would you say if I told you I was a goy?”

    After a moment’s hesitation, Krim told him that the offer was still good.

    The punchline to that infamous exchange is that the not-quite-Jewish Jewison went on to further prove his diversity with his very next film project: 1973’s Jesus Christ Superstar.

    Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen opens at New York City’s Angelika Theater on Friday, April 29 while also rolling out to theaters and Jewish film festivals across the country.

  • Blu-ray, DVD, Digital Release: Recorder: The Marion Stokes Project

    Digital, Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: March 10, 2020
    Price: DVD $19.99, Blu-ray $27.88, Digital (rental) $4.99
    Studio: Kino Lorber


    For over 30 years, Marion Stokes obsessively and privately recorded American television news twenty-four hours a day.A civil rights-era radical who became fabulously wealthy and reclusive later in life, her obsession started with the Iranian Hostage Crisis in 1979—at the dawn of the twenty-four hour news cycle. It ended on December 14, 2012 as the Sandy Hook massacre played on television while Marion passed away. In between, Marion filled 70,000 VHS tapes, capturing revolutions, wars, triumphs, catastrophes, bloopers, talk shows and commercials that show us how television shaped the world of today and in the process tell us who we were.

    A mystery in the form of a time capsule, Recorder: The Marion Stokes Story delves into the strange life of a woman for whom home taping was a form of activism to protect the truth (the public didn’t know it, but the networks had been disposing their archives for decades into the trashcan of history) and though her visionary and maddening project nearly tore her family apart, her extraordinary legacy is as priceless as her story is remarkable.

    Bonus features include an audio commentary track by director Matt Wolf and episodes of Marion’s late-1960s local Philadelphia television show Input.

    Buy or Rent Recorder: The Marion Stokes Project
  • Blu-ray: The Quay Brothers: Collected Short Films

    Blu-ray: The Quay Brothers: Collected Short Films

    QuayBluSTUDIO: Zeitgeist/Syncopy | DIRECTORS: Brothers Quay
    RELEASE DATE: 11/24/15 | PRICE: Blu-ray $34.99
    BONUSES: commentaries, booklet with introduction by Christopher N0lan
    SPECS: NR | 240 min. | Animation | 1.78:1 and 1.33:1 | DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0

    RATINGS (out of 5 dishes): Movie | Audio | Video | Overall

     

    Though the Brothers Quay have been creating their uniquely stylized stop-motion animated productions for nearly 40 years now and can be considered as influential as any other animators to emerge over the past three decades, they’re still outsider artists who aren’t known beyond the circle of those who like their animated stories dark, non-linear and avant-garde.

    That said, The Quay Brothers: Collected Short Films serves as both a fine compendium for fans of the Philadelphia-born, London-based twin brothers Stephen and Timothy Quay and an excellent introduction for those unfamiliar with the Quays’ inimitable, unforgettable work.

    QuayBrothers_optUsing wildly esoteric source material that ranges from the writers Konrad Bayer, Robert Walser and Stanislaw Lem to the Babylon’s King Gilgamesh to French artist Jean-Honoré Fragonard, the Quay Brothers’ steady output of animated short films featuring puppets, doll parts and all manner of organic and inorganic materials (metallic dust and cotton, anyone?) are actually easier to experience than they are to describe. Set to unconventional, ambient musical scores, they are fluid works of stop-motion animation that play like the underside of a dark dream, uneasy fantasies filled with images that are at once vivid and ambiguous, arcane and accessible, and creepy and strangely sublime.

    Heady enough? The truth is that though there are whole lot of wild animators out there, the Quays are singular in their field—there isn’t anybody out there doing what they do, creating what they create.

    The Blu-ray collection offers 15 Quay Brothers shorts, including their best-known film films The Cabinet of Jan Svankmajer (1984), Street of Crocodiles (1986), and the Stille Nacht series (1988-94) that was originally commissioned by MTV. All look wonderful in their Blu-ray incarnation—detailed, textured, archaic and instantly recognizable as the work of the Quays. There are also three recent Quay productions that are making their disc debuts here: Maska (2010), Through the Weeping Glass (2011) and Unmistaken Hands (2013).

    Also included is the new short film Quay by Christopher Nolan (Interstellar), a dedicated fan of the Quays who here observes the twins in their sorcerer-like workshop alongside their puppets, miniatures and, of course, a camera.

    ‘There’s just the two of us and this beautiful machine—frame by frame, we complicitly work,” intones Stephen Quay into the camera of Hollywood filmmaker Nolan, who in his accompanying essay describes his first taste of the Quays’ work “like an electric shock—like nothing I’d ever seen.”

    Buy or Rent The Quay Brothers: Collected Short Films
    Amazon graphicBlu-ray Movies Unlimited graphic Netflix graphic
  • DVD, Digital, VOD Release: The Galapagos Affair: Satan Came to Eden

    DVD Release Date: Sept. 9, 2014
    Price: DVD $29.99
    Studio: Zeitgeist


    Darwin meets Hitchcock in the true-crime tale The Galapagos Affair: Satan Came To Eden, a documentary portrait of a 1930s murder mystery that’s as strange and alluring as the famous archipelago itself.

    The Galapagos Affair: Satan Came to Eden scene
    A true-life murder mystery unspools in The Galapagos Affair: Satan Came to Eden

    Fleeing conventional society, a Berlin doctor, Friedrich Ritter, and his younger mistress, the also married Dore Strauch, start a new life on uninhabited Floreana Island. But after the international press sensationalizes the exploits of the island’s “Adam and Eve”, others flock there—including a self-styled Swiss Family Robinson and a gun-toting Viennese Baroness and her two lovers. Things would never be the same.

    To bring this incredible story to life, filmmakers Dayna Goldfine and Dan Geller (Ballets Russes) interweave newly unearthed home movies of the original settlers, footage of native flora and fauna, testimonies of modern day islanders, and voice performances by  Cate Blanchett, Diane Kruger, Connie Nielsen, Thomas Kretschmann, Josh Radnor and others. Macabre yet inspiring, The Galapagos Affair is a gripping parable of Robinson Crusoe adventure and utopian dreams gone awry.

    Bonus features on the DVD of the critically lauded movie include the following:

    • Fourteen deleted scenes
    • Telluride Film Festival directors Q&A
    • Original theatrical trailer
    Buy or Rent The Galapagos Affair: Satan Came to Eden
    Amazon graphic
    DVD | Instant Video
    DVD Empire graphic Movies Unlimited graphic Netflix graphic
  • DVD, Digital Release: One Track Heart: The Story of Krishna Das

    DVD & Digital Release Date: Sept. 24, 2013
    Price: DVD $29.99
    Studio: Zeitgeist


    The former Jeffrey Hagel (r.) jams in One Track Heart: The Story of Krishna Das.
    One Track Heart: The Story of Krishna Das movie scene

    The music-filled documentary One Track Heart: The Story of Krishna Das chronicles the life of Jeffrey Kagel…and how his life path ultimately resulted in his emergence as Krishna Das—the world-renowned spiritual teacher, chant master and Grammy-nominated recording artist.

    It begins in 1970, when young musician Kagel turned down the lead singer slot in the band that would become Blue Oyster Cult. He sold all his possessions and moved from the New York suburbs to the Himalayan foothills in search of happiness and a little-known saint named Neem Karoli Baba (Maharaj-ji).

    One Track Heart: The Story of Krishna Das follows Kagel’s journey to India and back, his struggles with depression and drug abuse, and his eventual “return” as Krishna Das.

    Directed by Jeremy Frindel, the movie features interviews with Be Here Now author Ram Dass, music producer Rick Rubin (Beastie Boys, Metallica), well-known writers Sharon Salzberg, and Daniel Goleman, along with a score by Dinosaur Jr.’s J Mascis and Devadas

    The unrated One Track Heart received a limited release to U.S. theaters in May of this year following a well-received roll-out to festivals in 2012.

    The DVD includes the following features:

    • HD transfer, enhanced for widescreen viewing
    • Deleted Scenes with Krishna Das, Ram Dass, Dr. Larry Brilliant and others
    • Additional Krishna Das concert footage
    • Original theatrical trailer
    • 5.1 and stereo soundtracks
    • Optional subtitles for the deaf and hearing impaired (SDH)

    Buy or Rent One Track Heart: The Story of Krishna Das
    Amazon graphic
    DVD
    DVD Empire graphicDVD Movies Unlimited graphicDVD Netflix graphic
  • DVD Review: Let My People Go!

    STUDIO: Zeitgeist | DIRECTOR: Mikael Buch | CAST: Nicolas Maury, Carmen Maura, Jean-François Stévenin, Jarkko Niemi
    BLU-RAY & DVD RELEASE DATE: 6/18/2013 | PRICE: DVD $29.99
    BONUSES: production design featurette, set designer commentary
    SPECS: NR | 87 min. | Foreign language comedy | 2.35:1 widescreen | stereo | French with English subtitles

    RATINGS (out of 5 dishes): Movie  | Audio  | Video  | Overall

     

    I hereby put my critical reputation on the line: Mikael Buch’s 2011 comedy Let My People Go! is the best French-Jewish comedy about a gay man studying comparative sauna cultures I’ve ever seen! (Shades of Andrew Sarris/Lola Montes?)

    Actually, by any criteria, LMPG is a delicious, heartwarming, romantic, laugh-out-loud confection.

    Let My People Go! movie scene
    Mother Carmen Maura knows best when it comes to son Nicolas Maury in Let My People Go!

    Ruben (Nicolas Maury), a French Jew, having moved to Finland for his sauna studies, is now working as a postman and living with a handsome Finn (Jarkko Niemi). An unexpected windfall leads to a domestic dispute and our hero heads home to Paris in time for Passover. There, sexual hijinks collide with Jewish tradition and a dollop of French “knowing.’

    The performances couldn’t be better. Maury is a born farceur with a Chaplin-esque demeanor (yes, he’s a bit of a Little Tramp). Almodovar muse Carmen Maura (The Women on the 6th Floor) is superb as his mother, working out under a poster of Golda Meir and dreaming of “Jew-You,” a spray that can turn Gentiles into Jews. All the performers are honest in sentiment and glorious in broad physical comedy.

    The visuals capture a picture postcard Finland and, even with a glimpse of the base of the Eiffel tower, avoid Parisian clichés.

    Forget the niche marketing– Let My People Go! is a great comedic ride. And at a lean 87 minutes, there isn’t a wasted nanosecond! I’ve giving it five Jewish stars!

     

    Buy or Rent Let My People Go!
    Amazon graphic
    DVD | Instant Video
    DVD Empire graphic Movies Unlimited graphicDVD Netflix graphic
  • DVD Release: Koch

    DVD Release Date: Aug. 27, 2013
    Price: DVD $29.99
    Studio: Zeitgeist


    Koch movie scene
    Hizzoner Edward I. Koch

    Koch is a 2012 documentary film on Edward Irving Koch, the mayor of New York City from 1978 to 1989.

    Former Mayor Ed Koch was the quintessential New Yorker. Ferocious, charismatic, and hilariously blunt, Koch, who died in February, 2013 at the age of 88, took office in ’87 and ran the show until ’89—a down-and-dirty decade of grit, graffiti, near-bankruptcy and rampant crime. The tumult of his three terms included a fiercely competitive 1977 election, an infamous 1980 transit strike, the burgeoning AIDS epidemic, landmark housing renewal initiatives, and an irreparable municipal corruption scandal.

    Directed by first-time filmmaker (and former Wall Street Journal reporter) Neil Barsky, Koch employs candid interviews and archival footage to craft a portrait of the notoriously private Koch, his legacy as a political titan and the town he helped transform, for better or worse.

    Koch received a very small release to 16 screens in February, 2013 to mixed reviews and a tidy gross of $350,000.

    The DVD offers more than an hour of bonus features, including the following:

    • Witnesses NYC: A new film by director Neil Barsky, featuring more extraordinary 1980s archival footage plus interviews with New Yorkers—graffiti artist, Wall Street trader, crack dealer, restaurateur, peepshow employee, artist/squatter and others—who lived though the Koch years (29 min)

    • Director interview by filmmaker Ondi Timoner (Dig), for BYOD: Bring Your Own Doc (35 min)

    • Ed Koch Q&A at the New York Jewish Film Festival, his final public appearance (17 min)

    • Original theatrical trailer

    Buy or Rent Koch
    Amazon graphic
    DVD 
    DVD Empire graphic Movies Unlimited graphicDVD Netflix graphic
  • DVD Release: Gregory Crewdson: Brief Encounters

    Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: May 21, 2013
    Price: DVD $29.99
    Studio: Zeitgeist


    Gregory Crewdson: Brief Encounters scene
    One of the many photographs seen in Gregory Crewdson: Brief Encounters.

    The 2012 documentary Gregory Crewdson: Brief Encounters chronicles the work of acclaimed Brooklyn-born photographer.

    With his filmmaker-like sense of visual composition, Crewdson has created some of the most striking and gorgeously haunting pictures of the past two decades. His meticulously mounted, large-scale images offer strong narratives of small-town American life—elaborately detailed moviescapes crystallized into a single frame. While the photographs are staged with crews that rival many feature film productions, Crewdson takes inspiration as much from his own dreams and fantasies as the worlds of Alfred Hitchcock, David Lynch, Edward Hopper and Diane Arbus. Crewdson’s imagery has also infiltrated the pop culture landscape—including his memorable ads for HBO’s Six Feet Under and his album art for the band Yo La Tengo.

    Directed by Ben Shapiro and shot over a decade with ready access to Crewdson, Brief Encounters received a small but well-reviewed release to U.S. theaters in October, 2012.

    Bonus features on the DVD include the following:

    • Deleted scenes of Gregory Crewdson photo shoots
    • Additional interviews with Crewdson, Russell Banks, Rick Moody, and others
    • Q&A with director ben Shapiro, Crewdson and writer Jonathan Lethem
    • Theatrical trailer
    Buy or Rent Gregory Crewdson: Brief Encounters
    Amazon graphic
    DVD 
    DVD Empire graphicDVD Movies Unlimited graphicDVD Netflix graphic
  • DVD, Digital Releases: Tatsumi & Alois Nebel

    DVD & Digital Release Date: March 26, 2013
    Price: DVD $26.99 each
    Studio: KimStim/Zeitgeist


    Alois Nebel movie scene
    Ghosts from Central Europe's past haunt a train station worker in the animated feature Alois Nebel.

    Alois Nebel (2011) from the Czech Republic and the Singapore/Japan animated co-production Tatsumi (2011) are two gorgeously animated, award-winning film dramas.

    Inspired by classic film noir and rendered in mesmerizing black-and-white rotoscope animation (à la Richard Linklater’s Waking Life), Tomás Lunák’s Alois Nebel traces the haunted memories and mysterious visions of a troubled train dispatcher through the shifting cultural and political landscape in the waning days of the Cold War. It focuses on the experiences of a quiet man  at a remote railway station on the Czech-Slovak border whose life is disrupted bu a fog that brings hallucinations of trains from the previous 100 years. These ghosts from Central Europe’s dark past ultimately send him on a nightmarish and ominous journey.

    The biographical drama Tatsumi (2011) celebrates the life and work of Yoshihiro Tatsumi—a manga pioneer who transformed the genre with cinematic inspiration and psychological depth. In 1957,  Tatsumi redefined the manga landscape with an adult-oriented genre that grappled with the darker aspects of Japanese life, which he called gekiga (dramatic pictures). In Tatsumi, Singaporean filmmaker and former comic artist Eric Khoo (Be With Me) brings Tatsumi’s 2010 graphic memoir A Drifting Life and five of his classic stories to life.

    Alois Nebel is presented in Czech with optional English subtitles, while Tatsumi is  presented in Japanese with optional English subtitles.

    There are no bonus features on the discs.

    Buy or Rent Alois Nebel
    Amazon graphic
    DVD
    DVD Empire graphic Movies Unlimited graphicDVD Netflix graphic

     

    Buy or Rent Tatsumi
    Amazon graphic
    DVD
    DVD Empire graphic Movies Unlimited graphicDVD Netflix graphic
  • DVD Review: Silent Souls

    STUDIO: Zeitgeist | DIRECTOR: Aleksey Fedorchenko | CAST: Yuri Tsurilo, Igor Sergeyev, Yuliya Aug, Viktor Sukhorukov
    BLU-RAY & DVD RELEASE DATE: 2/26/2013 | PRICE: DVD $29.95
    BONUSES: none
    SPECS: NR | 78 min. | Foreign language drama | 2.35:1 widescreen | stereo | Russian with English subtitles

    RATINGS (out of 5 dishes): Movie | Audio | Video | Overall

     

    Russian filmmaker Aleksey Fedorchenko’s 2010 film Silent Souls is a spectacularly photographed combination of the modern road movie and ancient ritual drama.

    Silent Soul movie scene
    Igor Sergeyev takes it on the road in Silent Souls.

    Aist (Igor Sergeyev) and Miron (Yuri Tsurilo) are co-workers in the Russian village of Neya, a remnant of the Meyrans, a Finnish tribe that, centuries ago, was assimilated into the dominant Slavic culture. When Miron announces that his young wife, Tanya (Yuliya Aug), has died suddenly, the two men remove the body and embark on a journey to dispose of it according to ancient Meyran tradition. No road trip, of course, is complete without animal companions, in this case two buntings (or plain birds).

    Along the way, Miron begins “smoking,” a custom of compulsively talking about the deceased to reveal one’s true feelings. The trip becomes a journey into the collective Meyran unconscious as when they pass their great city of Molachai (“our Paris”), which has been absorbed into the suburbs of a larger modern city.

    The performances in Silent Souls capture the stoic, hardened nature of the people that are depicted, mystical undertone aside. The real stars, however, are cinematographer Mikhail Krichman and his magnificent visuals of West-Central Russia; misty landscapes, dirt roads, modern superhighways and, most importantly, the waterways (“Rivers carry away grief.”)

    Silent Souls is a fascinating look at how civilizations are layered on top of each other. Clocking in at a lean 75 minutes , it is poetic and painterly in the Russian art film style and works as an easy, accessible introduction to that style.

     

    Buy or Rent Silent Souls
    Amazon graphic
    DVD
    DVD Empire graphicDVD Movies Unlimited graphicDVD Netflix graphic