
Mrs. G
The incredible story of how a Holocaust survivor with endless creativity and passion created one of the world’s most famous swimsuit companies, starting in her
Portland Press Herald, Feb. 24, 2024, . Dennis Perkins

The Maine Jewish Film Festival is one of the big events on the Maine movie calendar. MJFF’s 26th festival is taking place this week, from Saturday through March 9 at venues in Portland, Waterville, Lewiston and Brunswick and featuring 15 fascinating and thrillingly different films from around the world.
As ever, the Maine Jewish Film Festival is a treat for film fans of any (or no) religion, with its 2025 theme of “Destinations Unknown,” promising moviegoers the festival’s traditional wide-ranging and entertaining view of the world as seen through the eyes of Jewish creators.
ON A MISSION
First-year MJFF Executive Director David Andrusia cites famous Jewish author Elie Wiesel in saying, “Peace is our gift to each other” in explaining the festival’s ongoing mission. “It’s our hope that by showing positive images not only of Jews but of our brethren throughout the world, we can take one step farther toward peace.”
That’s a tall order for a film festival, but movies have always had the power to move people, and this year’s festival, according to Andrusia, seeks to bring an increasingly fractured world together. “We certainly recognize world events,” says Andrusia, who recently moved to Maine after organizing Washington, D.C.’s March on Washington Film Festival. “But we strive to present positive images of Jewish life here and around the world that show how kinship and allyship not only can but must be our roadmaps in searching for a more peaceful and inclusive world.”
This year’s films approach that mission in excitingly different ways.
Documentaries like Ilana Trachtman’s “Ain’t No Back to a Merry-Go-Round” tackle justice and civil rights directly in its portrait of young Howard University students’ sit-in on a Maryland amusement park’s segregated rides. Daniel Robbins’ “Bad Shabbos” employs dark family comedy involving the tense holiday meeting of a Jewish family and the strictly Catholic parents of a recently converted daughter, made even more high-stakes by the discovery of a mysterious dead body.
“Our theme this year is ‘Destinations Unknown,’ and that encompasses real destinations, places where you would not expect to find Jewish culture, and also destinations of the mind,” says Andrusia of this MJFF’s signature blend of tones, styles and subject matter. “We sought out films that would nudge people into new ways of seeing their place in the world, in Jewish life around the globe.”
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
I asked Andrusia to pick out a few favorite films he’s especially excited about this year.
‘Come Closer’ is our opening night film (playing Saturday, March 1 at the Portland Museum of Art). It won the equivalent of the Israeli Academy Awards for Best Picture and Best Actress, and it turns tragedy into a really searing personal exploration of friendship and love.” The film is the tragic tale of a shocking accident that brings two young women together. “It’s going to attract a younger audience, a new audience,” Andrusia says.
Switching gears completely is “Thelma,” starring then 93-year-old June Squibb (“Nebraska,” “About Schmidt”) in her first starring role as a nursing home resident who takes off on an improbable rampage of revenge (at times on her motorized scooter) against the scammers who stole her money. Featuring the last role of Shaft himself, Richard Roundtree, as the feisty Thelma’s partner in vengeance, the film, according to Andrusia, saw the preview audience not only laughing but cheering. “It’s cathartic in a lot of ways,” Andrusia says, “a lot of fun and very warm and human—people love this film

The incredible story of how a Holocaust survivor with endless creativity and passion created one of the world’s most famous swimsuit companies, starting in her

Two rebellious young women – one fleeing secular hedonism for the disciplined comforts of faith, the other desperate to transcend her oppressive religious past –

An exhilarating look at the 1963 Rivonia trial that sentenced Nelson Mandela and nine other defendants to life imprisonment. Several of the defendants, as well

When a world-famous conductor accepts the challenge from a foundation to create an Israeli-Palestinian youth orchestra, he is quickly drawn into a tempest of seemingly

A delightfully satiric take on the Israeli-Palestinian quagmire, this comedy-drama revolves around a third-rate soap opera and a border checkpoint where creativity — and helpings

Two traumatized Holocaust survivors form a tenuous bond in this exquisitely crafted Hungarian drama. Having lost his family, a middle-aged doctor’s haunted survival is upended

Roy Cohn was a ruthless, unscrupulous lawyer and political power broker who personified the dark side of American politics. This thriller like expose, (the title

A daring Israeli underwater photographer spends 40 years taking stunning close-ups of aquatic wildlife, but one fearsome challenge eludes him: swimming beside a polar bear

An Israeli documentary filmmaker turns detective and sets out to uncover the truth behind the man who stole his grandfather’s identity. A fascinating, suspenseful and

An Israeli family deals with the challenges of cerebral palsy, which affects one of their twin sons. 10 year old Ron is intelligent, charming and

It’s the eve of WWII, when 17 year old Franz travels to Vienna to apprentice at a tobacco shop and meets Sigmund Freud, a regular

Acclaimed actress Tovah Feldshuh recreates 100 years of Jewish history playing 45 different characters, including David Ben-Gurion, Moshe Dayan, Holocaust survivors, Israeli soldiers and, of

Using innovative solutions developed in water-poor Israel, three visionary individuals do their part to bring sustainable water solutions to different parts of an increasingly thirsty

Award-winning filmmaker Aviva Kempner (Rosenwald) hits another home run with this amazing story of Moe Berg, the Major League Baseball player turned WWII spy. Berg’s

Just in time for Passover! This extraordinary animated musical drama features the story of Moses, a prince of Egypt with a secret Jewish past.

In this bittersweet romantic comedy, Parisian newlyweds Adam and Anna travel to Poland in part to reconnect with their Jewish heritage and homeland as they