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David Aaronovitch

ByDavid Aaronovitch, David Aaronovitch

Opinion

Menashe’s surprising triumph over sectarianism

Can this film help to change perceptions, asks David Aaronovitch

December 13, 2017 20:32
Menashe Lustig as Menashe lights a yahrzeit candle
3 min read

My late mother was a film buff. Given her politics, one aspect of this was her liking for Russian movies, from 20s’ agitprop to 60s’ art-house. But another was her capacity to enjoy what might be called “elegiac” or “sedate” films, from Bergman to Antonioni. And she passed on this predisposition to her children. Almost the first grown-up films that I took myself to as a young teenager were Pasolini’s Oedipus Rex and Bertolucci’s The Conformist. In those days, in London, the Academy in Oxford Street and the Everyman in Hampstead joined the National Film Theatre in screening challenging movies. The Academy is no more and the Everyman was saved by becoming a chain and showing Paddington Bear and Star Wars on a wine-softened loop. Thank God for the Curzon.

So it was a surprise to discover last weekend that a local Everyman was carrying a film in which there were no explosions, no sex and no CGI. A foreign-language film with sub-titles. And that the foreign language was Yiddish (see my last column), the language my grandmother spoke, and that we mistook for bad English as delivered by someone who’d forgotten to put her teeth in.

Since you’re reading this in the JC, you are already 10,000 times more likely than anyone else to go and see Menashe. And also, fast it isn’t! Menashe, a recently widowed middle-aged Charedi man living in Brooklyn, wants effective custody of his ten-year-old son but the community is reluctant to allow the child to live in a house in which there is no married couple. And that’s more or less it.

Despite the charm of the lead actor and the boy playing his son, and despite the Yiddish, I came out of the cinema thinking that I had been bored. It hadn’t really gone anywhere and nothing much had happened. There was some opportunity to see what Strictly Orthodox life might be like for men (women hardly figured), with their arcane costume, their suffocated prayer mumblings, their strangled singing and their “ruv”-centred religiosity, but in terms of plot? Meyle.