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Film

Rebels with a cause

This year's Jewish Film Festival begins with the story of a notorious heist in Romania

October 29, 2015 12:47
29102015 CloserToTheMoon

By

Brigit Grant,

Brigit Grant

4 min read

Life imitating art imitating life may be a cultural cliché but, when it comes to Nae Caranfil's Closer to the Moon, it really does the job. Selected to open the 19th UK Jewish Film Festival on November 8, Closer to the Moon is a fictional retelling of a bank heist in Romania in 1959 by the Ioanid Gang, a group of six Jewish intellectuals (five men and one woman) who were later caught and sentenced to death. Though the subject such as it is, suggests a bleak 112 minutes, Caranfil - one of Romania's most acclaimed directors - chose to give it a comedic, almost burlesque treatment, which is great for the audience, but caused him more than a few problems back home.

"There are people, mostly Romanians who object to the tone of the film as they feel I have no right to speak or portray Communists in such light colours," says Bucharest-born Nae, 54. "They claim that they lived through those dreadful years and I should have a moral obligation, to treat them in a dark tone. But I lived through those years, too, and though I was young I had fun despite the awfulness of the regime and this is my way of telling stories."

The story of the Ioanid Gang came to Caranfil's attention 10 years ago when a friend was making a documentary on the subject. Caranfil was immediately fascinated by the group, which included Alexandru Ioanid who was a colonel in the Securitate (secret police), his brother Paul and friends Igor Sevianu, Saşa Muşat Haralambie Obedeanu and Monica Sevianu, who were respectively journalists, a history professor and a physicist.

Alleged to have stolen 1,600,000 Romanian lei (£200,000) from an armoured National Bank of Romania car, the gang were caught quickly, tried behind closed doors and all but one executed, unbeknown to many of their relatives. Only Monica Sevianu was pardoned, as she was pregnant and, on release from prison, she made aliyah.