Boulder Jewish Film Festival
Friday, November 15, 2024 from 12:00pm to 05:00pm
Boulder Jewish Film Festival
Various Location
Schedule of Events:
12:00 pm - 1:30 pm: Here Lived
United States/2024/English/79 minutes/Documentary
This moving documentary tells two intertwined stories of hidden children, murdered parents, and the stones that bring healing. The first, set in the present and dealing with Holocaust remembrance, focuses on the “Stolpersteine” (stumbling stones) project originated by German artist Gunter Demnig, born in 1947, who creates commemorative brass-plated plaques that are placed in the pavement in front of the houses previously occupied by Jews throughout Europe. The concurrent story details Holland’s heartbreaking fate during the Shoah, when this Western European country saw 80% of the Jewish population annihilated. Both stories are told with compassion and care, expressing the idea Elie Wiesel articulated so well about the Holocaust: “How can we talk about it? How can we not talk about it?” Directed by Jane Wells
Location: Boedecker Theater - Walnut Street, Boulder, CO 80302
Cost: $15
Buy Tickets
3:00 pm - 5:00 pm: Shorts: Peacocks, Pops & Pepchook
Featuring narrative, documentary, and animated films from Israel, the UK, and the USA, this year’s program of 7 shorts curated by Judith Dack and the Shorts Committee will surely leave you smiling.
The Peacock That Passed Over 4 min British Documentary. Directed by Max Goldberg. An unlikely whimsical creature takes up long-term residence at a Leeds synagogue where the film explores the responses of a diverse section of the Yorkshire community who are all in delighted agreement over this charming state of affairs.
Pops 19 min British Narrative. Directed by Lewis Rose. A comedic drama about a battle that breaks out between two siblings over their late Jewish father’s eccentric last request. Will it be Elli or Roz who will determine Pop’s final journey?
No Flowers 10 min Israel. In Hebrew w/subtitles. From the Sam Spiegel Film and Television School in Jerusalem. The florist’s delivery woman has to call forth previously unused counseling skills when she becomes embroiled in a couple’s dispute where the recipient refuses the flowers her lover has sent just before Shabbat.
Pepchook 9 min Israeli Animation in English. By student filmmaker Tamar Chetzroni from the School of Audio & Visual Arts at Sapir College in Sderot, Israel, located less than two miles from the Gaza border. Sometimes intercultural romances are wonderful in one setting but don’t translate well outside of that context. See what happens when an Israeli woman visits her post-cruise ship boyfriend in his home country of Samoa, where they never even heard of the Holoc.
Heritage Day 19 min English. Written and Directed by award-winning Lara Everly, starring Rachel Bloom. In this dark comedy, eight-year-old Evie becomes obsessed with playing Holocaust after dressing up as her estranged grandmother, a holocaust survivor, for Heritage Day at school. Inspired by a true event, this film explores the comedic irony that Evie is re-creating a world where everyone else is trying to forget. Evie is at the age where her truth drives her actions more than social norms do. Her behavior makes her mother Sarah, question herself as a parent and ultimately sympathize more with her mom. The holocaust is a complex and tender topic that this film tackles through the lens of subsequent generations and heartfelt humor.
The Anne Frank Gift Shop 15 min English. Written and directed by Mickey Rapkin. Shortlisted for the 2024 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short.
When a high-end design firm presents its plans to reimagine the gift shop at The Anne Frank House, the company’s overt appeal to Generation Z sparks a debate about inter-generational trauma, the Holocaust, and tote bags.
MERV 21 min English. Directed by Sam Roebling, starring Renee Taylor, Willie Orbison, and Hal Linden. Following his latest romantic humiliation, Simon is unexpectedly summoned to his grandmother’s house to meet her new boyfriend, Merv. What happens next was previously unimaginable and quite hilarious.
Buy Tickets