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Film

What movie boycott? The Israelis are coming

The 13th UK Jewish Film Festival opens next month with a strong line-up of features from Israel, but few home-grown offerings.

October 15, 2009 10:31
Dana Ivgy and Moni Moshonov in the gritty Jaffa.

By

Nick Johnstone,

Nick Johnstone

4 min read

Israeli films have been showered with international praise over in the past 18 months. Jellyfish, The Band’s Visit, Waltz With Bashir, Beaufort all won prizes or huge acclaim, and most recently, Samuel Maoz’s Lebanon won the Golden Lion Prize at the Venice Film festival. So anyone surveying the jam-packed, barmitzvah-themed 13th UK Jewish Film Festival programme, will be casting bets on which of the 15 feature-length and short Israeli films are destined for the big time.

“The Israeli film industry is now very strong,” says festival director, Judy Ironside. “Their feature films and documentaries are world-class and winning prizes at international film festivals. This is very good news as we aim to bring new Israeli films of high quality to our audiences.“

Top of the pile at this year’s festival is Keren Yedaya’s gritty Jaffa, the long awaited follow-up to her critically acclaimed 2004 debut film, Or, which also starred Ronit Elkabetz and her younger, husky-voiced protégé, Dana Ivgy. Behind its charged resituating of the Romeo and Juliet tragedy lurks a poignant meditation on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

“Jaffa is a very powerful film,” says Ironside. “It has an iconic story which is entertaining and memorable.” Elkabetz will be talking about the film at the festival’s screening — an “honour” is how Ironside describes her presence.