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Film

Review: Reuniting the Rubins

British-Jewish comedy it may be best to pass over

October 19, 2011 10:26
James Callis plays a brother totally at odds with his siblings

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

2 min read

There are very few movies that depict Seder nights. There are even fewer that do so with an affectionate and intelligent sense of the celebration's variety, or the way that it brings out the best and worst in Jewish family dynamics. The filmic potential is abundant but yet to be explored in the way that the British director Gurinder Chadha limned American Thanksgiving dinners in her charming What's Cooking or the Indian director Mira Nair celebrated a classic Punjabi Monsoon Wedding.

Of course, films with explicitly Jewish subject matter are surprisingly rare given the historically disproportionate presence of Jews in film-making. If you discount films that deal with the Holocaust - and there are fewer of those than people believe - such works are rare indeed.

Even, or rather especially, when all the major Hollywood studios were led by Jews, Jewish film-makers were wary of bringing any overtly Jewish elements into their work, let alone any depictions of religious practices. British-Jewish film-makers also seem to have had their own cultural and business reasons for avoiding stories that might bring attention to their ethnicity and religion.

First-time writer-director Yoav Factor therefore deserves much credit just for attempting to represent a slice of modern British-Jewish life and for making a Seder the dramatic focus of a film.