Saturday, October 22, 2022

34th Annual Boston Jewish Film Festival 2022

In theaters: November 2–9; Virtual: November 10–13; visit: bostonjfilm.org for the full program

Attachment, dir. Gabriel Bier Gislason, 2022, 105 min.

November 5, 9:15 pm, Brattle Theatre

Boston Premiere

 

 

Attachment is a modern-day thriller/horror film with no violence or blood, just fear of the supernatural lurking in the atmosphere. The story involves Jewish mysticism—what non-mystics would call superstitions to ward off demons and evil. The only way to talk about the film risks a spoiler, for the plot’s clues are so subtly woven into the action as to be missed. Be forewarned: unless you keep an unswerving eye on the camera’s focus and listen acutely to the dialogues’ subtext, puzzlement may result. And the epilogue’s playful twist only adds to audience uncertainty. At the same time, it is this very eeriness about the presence of invisible evil that disturbs us in a marvelous way. 

 

The film moves briskly and features three female protagonists, two of them—Maja and Chana—antagonists for the love of the third, Leah. Chana is Leah’s Jewish mother and Maya is Leah’s non-Jewish lover. A fourth character, Lev, Chana’s Orthodox brother-in-law and religious bookstore owner, is a scholar of the Kabbalah—Jewish mysticism that has, as Lev tells us, “the power to unlock the secrets of the universe and ward off evil.” Chana also knows and practices the Kabbalah’s esoteric rituals that include amulets, heaps of salt in the corners of rooms, candles lit at night, and soup concoctions made with chants to activate their magical powers—incantations like those of the witches in Macbeth, their cauldron bubbling with portentous vapors. We meet shopkeepers in London’s Orthodox neighborhood, home to Leah, Chana, and Lev. These vendors also know the mystic traditions and secretly sell Chana the sacred ingredients she needs for the rituals she performs for Leah, her lovely and charismatic daughter.

 

The film begins with Leah, a graduate student, meeting Maja during a research trip to Denmark. The two fall in love and return to Leah’s London flat, located above her mother Chana’s flat. The plot then takes off with sinister and suspenseful sounds and inexplicable happenings. Lev shows Maja a book from his shop about “the other side.” He turns the pages, pointing out supernatural beings who are evil, such as the Dybbuk, the tortured soul of a dead person who possesses a living person’s body, causing that person derangement and death—unless the Dybbuk can be expelled. Secret rituals can attempt to exorcise a Dybbuk, Lev tells Maja, but they are life threatening to those who perform them, and “nowadays out of favor, deemed dangerous. The Talmud forbids black magic and sorcery.”

 


Leah’s increasingly strange condition and her mother’s even stranger behavior, feeds the suspense and mystery of the movie. Catastrophe looms in the atmosphere. Uncertainty rivets each ticking minute: Who is good, who is evil? Is Chana a witch? Is Lev dangerous? What is going on that we do not yet understand? And can Maja—the only innocent one in this scary coterie—save her beloved from the invisible evil clutches moving in at an ever faster rate? Attachment offers viewers a fabulous, bated-breath film journey.

 


Sofie Grabol (Chana) deserves special note for her role as Leah’s mother. She fully embodies Chana’s deep psychic pain for the life of her daughter. Every detail of Chana’s internal, turmoiled state brims in her facial expressions, her movements and speech. It is as if she herself is possessed by a terrible power slowly destroying her. Attachment eschews back story—we learn little about the characters before the film’s present moment, and that is all we need to be in the grip of this thrilling tale.

  

For those interested in past Dybbuk films, check out my review of two that screened in Boston in 2018 and may be available for streaming: gailspilsbury.blogspot.com/2018/04.


Dybbuk etching by Ephraim Moses Lillien (1874–1925). 


Contributed to the Boston City Paper, by Gail Spilsbury, www.bergamotbooks.com

Saturday, October 8, 2022

"Shorts" at the Boston Palestine Film Festival

October 14–23, 2022

For the festival’s complete program of documentaries, shorts, and feature films visit https://bostonpalestinefilmfest.org.

 

Palestinian family traditions, particularly as they affect women, feature strongly in this year’s festival shorts. Young women, and in one case a young man, face the dilemma of needing to pursue their own life choices versus those involving the traditions of their elders, which the younger generation also respect.

Short films have the power to convey deeply felt personal stories in just a few minutes. The facial expressions of each character, the tension in silences, and the snippets of conversation not only capture an entire story, but also an emotional situation rife with inner unease—something audiences identify with at once and that words can rarely express.

This year’s shorts bravely connect us to our inner, hidden selves of fear, pain, love, anger, and self-doubt. Talented directors of both sexes have created these difficult family and cultural situations with such truth that our audience response is one of understanding and empathy—responses so often missing in our busy, me-first lives. 

  

Me and Youdir. Alexandra Muhawi-Ho, 2020, 17 min., USA

In Me and You, Amira, an Arab school teacher raised in the United States, juggles two lives—the one at home with her traditional mother who needs medical and emotional care, and the one in the outer world with an American culture that includes far more freedom for a woman, especially romantically. Love and duty keep Amira faithful to her mother, but also hiding her dating life with a colleague and her own discontent with Islamic traditions. Her home life looks and feels dark and curtained, while her outer life in the open and in school has freedom, choices. The stress of living two lives creates tension in all Amira’s relationships. Can she resolve her dilemma? Can she ever have a separate life from her mother’s? Her problem is driven home when her mother flings impassioned words at her: “May God keep you with me!” 

 


 








Hushdir. Samar Qupty, 2021, 20 min., Palestine, Israel

World premiere

Two friends, Nadine and Nour, band together to find out if Nour is pregnant—a problem that would be of severe consequence to her life. The film follows the young women on their quest to obtain a pregnancy test, which leads to a life-changing visit to a gynecologist Nadine’s dad knows, one who can supposedly be trusted to keep a secret. The young women’s journey for help within a society of prohibitive rules for women—despite the protagonists’ educated, bourgeois background—leads to Nadine’s awakening and resistance to such patriarchy. A low, ominous tone of warning sounds whenever one of the “helpful” male characters offers assistance to the women—a marvelous touch!

 


The Woman from Bar Blue, dir. Jalal Masarwa, 2021, 14 min., Palestine, Israel, Boston premiere

Familial conflict strikes and hurts at every turn in this relationship-packed short film. From the unhappy mother’s frost and spite meeting her son’s fiancĂ©e, to the son’s grandmother taking absurd revenge on the young woman for wrongs done to her by her deceased husband, to the father and son behaving passively, we witness one family living the extremes of ancestral wounds that cause dysfunction in next-generation relationships. The predicament that unleashes havoc at this family’s gathering springs from social class divisions, rules for sexual activity, and personal vendettas. Private griping soon leads to overt insults and on to destructive behavior. Like all wars on earth, only after irrevocable damage has been done, is a truce the only solution.

 


 








Borekasdir. Saleh Saadi,  2020, 15 min., Palestine

Borekas is a quintessential father and son film, every second pulsing with the tension of opposites and the suspense of how the problem will be resolved. The son has to make his plane back to Germany, and his father has insisted on driving him to the distant airport. Unfortunately, the car breaks down in the middle of nowhere. The father takes an easy-going attitude toward the problem, while the son’s anger mounts as the minutes tick away. The past relationship between father and son slowly comes out— how they both feel hurt by the other and for the distance between them. Then, the father brings up his son’s secret, and in so doing opens a bridge to their reconnection and healing.

 


 










Be Good, dir. Jessica Damouni, 2021, 13 min., USA

Boston premiere

What a brave, powerful, and wholly educational film by Jessica Damouni. Be Good takes viewers into the deep mental hell of bulimia. We witness Lelia’s psychic pain about her body image that causes her to live as two personalities: the friendly, “everything is fine” person with her friends who phone about a birthday party that day, and the one who hangs up only to reenter the dark, terrifying world of her mind’s disorder. The latter state dominates her life, and Leila’s portrayal in a small bedroom attached to a bathroom becomes a perfect visual metaphor for the hidden, locked-in state that has taken possession of her mind.

 


 













Contributed to the Boston City Paper by G.D. Spilsbury

www.bergamotbooks.com