S.F. Jewish Film Festival
Castro Theatre, 429 Castro (near Market), S.F.
Screenings begin at 8 p.m. on Thursday, July 17 (and continue through July 24)
Other screenings take place through Aug. 4 at various Bay Area theaters
Admission is $8-36, or $40-180 for a festival pass
(925) 275-9490
If there's a theme running through the fest, it would be the notion of exile -- not simply forced exile but exile as intention and possibility, as seen in three documentaries. Black Israel, for instance, celebrates flourishing Jewish enclaves in the Negev Desert pioneered by black converts in the 1960s. Embrace Me profiles legendary singer Jo Amar, who brilliantly fused Arab and Jewish styles. And a former resident limns the remote community of Guba in Azerbaijan in The Last Jewish Town.
Docs are in fact the strength of this fest. Kinky Friedman: Proud to Be an Asshole From El Paso excels as a sympathetic portrait of the controversial writer, wit, and singer of ditties like "Ride 'Em Jewboy." Accompanying Kinky are several irresistible shorts, including 72 Virgins, which asks people if they'd give Arafat a blow job "for regional peace." (One straight man gets carried away and says he'd also "do" Ariel Sharon, if necessary.)
Two must-see docs are Detained and The Settlers, which meticulously record the strange, sad lives of Palestinian widows and settler wives, respectively. The films' neutral approach mirrors the emotional numbness of both groups, as the Palestinian women stoically mop up after the Israeli soldiers occupying their roof, and the settler wives, who say they've "come home," shrug as they point to bullet holes in their trailers.
