T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1251.1 | I see it also. | CXCAD::BERZON | | Wed Aug 05 1992 04:14 | 7 |
| I have been noticing the same sort of trend, but don't have an
explanation for it! I was watching "My Girl" last Friday night and
noticed that one of the people in the background (at the boy's funeral)
was wearing a kipah.
Jake
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1251.2 | a refreshing change | DAYENU::CHERSON | the door goes on the right | Thu Aug 06 1992 20:42 | 5 |
| Well all I can say is that it is a refreshing change. Hollywood/the media has
either projected Jews to be 100% assimilated or members of the most extreme
Hasidic sect, no in-betweens.
--David
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1251.3 | Anybody saw the Jewish "Witness"? | CXCAD::BERZON | | Fri Aug 07 1992 05:30 | 7 |
| RE.: .2
Case in point: the latest Hollywod triumph, "A Stranger Among Us(?)",
which I have yet to see (maybe this weekend). Has anybody else seen
it?
Jake
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1251.4 | hilarious premise | DAYENU::CHERSON | the door goes on the right | Fri Aug 07 1992 20:24 | 10 |
| >Case in point: the latest Hollywod triumph, "A Stranger Among Us(?)",
>which I have yet to see (maybe this weekend). Has anybody else seen
>it?
Uh, I think that I have higher priorities than to see this latest piece of
art (:-). I did see a preview, which had me rolling in laughter -- son of
a Hasidic rebbe in Borough park falls in love with blond shiksa undercover
cop Melanie Griffith. Give me a break!
--David
|
1251.5 | Stranger is realistic?! | CXCAD::BERZON | | Fri Aug 07 1992 20:48 | 8 |
| RE.:.4
Hey, while the movie got shitty reviews from all the mainstream
newspapers/critics, a local (Denver) Jewish newspaper carried a very
favorable review of this film. The reviewer said, "Finaly, a realistic
portrayal of Chasisds in a mainstream Hollywood movie." (or something
like that.) In any case this flick may be worth watching (just for the
laughs, if nothing else).
|
1251.6 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Aug 07 1992 21:03 | 6 |
| The Boston Globe thought it was "sympathetic," but the Wall Street Journal
complained that the NYPD could have come up with a less-shiksa-looking cop.
The idea of the chasidim allowing a shiksa to go undercover (why couldn't
they have used a male cop?), along with a romance between the rebbe's son
and a shiksa, is bizarre. Sounds as bad as "The Imported Bridegroom," which
was full of bogus Judaism.
|
1251.7 | I liked the Movie | NOVA::FELDMAN | | Wed Aug 26 1992 16:43 | 14 |
| I intentionally don't read movie reviews because I like to see movies
without a pre-prejudiced attitude. Was this a great flick? Nope.
Was it 100% accurate? Nope. Was it worth seeing? Absolutely.
IMHP, the main point to the movie was not the portrayal of Brooklyn
Chasidim, but the evolution of Melanie Griffith's character as she
lived among them from ignorance to acceptance to empathy. Was it
strange for the Rebbe's son to fall in love with her? Not really.
He's human, and he has the same temptations any other man does.
What I did find refreshing was that fact that his faith enabled him
to come through his crisis. I left the theater feeling good.
I think the movie portrayed the Chasidim as being different, but not
bizzare.
|