T ile Garden of the Finzi-Con- tinis is rooted in producer Right: Preparing to leave the "garden." Arthur Cohn's own need to help counter anti-Semitism. First released 25 years ago, the clas- Below: sic film about an aristocratic Jewish fam- Helmut ily in Ferrara, Italy, originally found Berger and itself a second-class citizen in the film Fabio Testi. world. "I had trouble with distributors," re- calls Swiss-born Cohn, "who thought it was a 'Jewish film,' that it would not ap- peal to a wide audience." What opened the naysayers' eyes — wide — was the wonderful reception ac- corded Garden in Jerusalem, Hong Kong and Berlin. But it was winning the 1971 Oscar for Best Foreign Film that plant- ed the seed for success. "After that ..." and Mr. Cohn's voice fades out triumphantly. Garden — based on a novel by George Bassani — is re-appearing 25 years af- ter its initial run, restored to a classically clean look. "The film looks brand new," says Arthur Cohn. "What's more, it looks even better than when it first came out. And today, we have given it stereo sound." The sound of applause greeting the film's re-release is not all that surpris- ing: "Film critics all over the world re- cently voted this one of the top 10 best films ever made," says Mr. Cohn proud- ly. It has made a happy man out of Arthur Cohn, but Garden is no late bloomer. Indeed, it was valued considerably in 1971 for its on-target look at how Fas- cism and anti-Semitism encroached on the quiet life of the Finzi-Continis: The family gradually was forced to realize that the walls of their beautiful gardens couldn't protect them from the weeds of the world's evil. "I am doing this again for a new gen- eration," says Mr. Cohn, whose many cin- ematic contributions have included The • Sky Above, the Mud Below (1963) and Woman Times Seven (1967). "This film is timely and timeless." "It is a poetic film, a film without sex, violence, special effects," says Arthur Cohn. "But people will go to see it." Box offices are backing him up. Wher- ever the film is being shown now, lines are forming; interest in the era is revived. They are the revisionists at whom Arthur Cohn is targeting the re-release. portant to try. "We felt it was important "The denial of the Holocaust," he cites to bring the Holocaust [to the screen] and as one reason for the re-release, "and the show history in a poetic way," he says, ignorance of many people about what citing the work of pre-eminent director Vittorio De Sica (The Bicycle Thief), happened during the war." But what happens now — can art whose career was revived by Garden, and actually change society? Will a reel actress Dominique Sanda, who plays one masterpiece about one of history's of the family members. With all the movie's success as a re- most surreal and savage periods vival — "Its second week now showing have a real effect on the way people be- in New York was bigger than its first" — have? "No," says Mr. Cohn, admitting that the '90s would not provide fertile ground Garden goes against today's movie for such a film if Garden were made to- trends. Film's ability to impact on life is day. Even with its success in re-release, negligible, he notes. don't expect a rash of projects to make But, he adds, it is nevertheless im- Hollywood itch for an era of relevance. Michael Elkin is entertainment editor of "Garden," says its producer, "is an ex- the Jewish Exponent in Philadelphia. ception to the rule." Shrum Wiesenthal is the subject of a new documentary, The Art of Remembrance: Simon Wiesenlhal. Paving The Future With Lessons of The Past LYNNE KONSTANTIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS Dedication to Jewish life ruled in Arthur Cohn's Swiss upbringing, the film- maker's grandfather, Arthur, rabbi of Basil for more than 40 years, was in- strumental in the establishment of Agu- dat Israel some 85 years ago. The producer's father, Marcus, was a Zionist whose many prominent positions included president of the Swiss Zionist Federation (1931 to 1936), and an exec- utive role in the Federation of Jewish Communities in Switzerland (1938-1950). From 1950 to 1953, Marcus Cohn served Israel as assistant attorney gen- eral. "My father had an enormous impact on my life," says Mr. Cohn. Now, despite his denials of film's abil- ity to change the world, the producer is making his own voice heard. "There is a reward for patience." "Besides," he says, "I don't take no for an answer." ❑ TRfrop4wmprog The restored anniversary version of The Garden of the Finzi-Continis, as well as The Art of Remembrance: Simon 1 Wiesenthal, will be shown one week- i end only at the Detroit Institute of Arts'i Detroit Film Theatre. Garden: 7 and :4 9:30 p.m. Friday; 4, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Sat- • urday; 4 and 7 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 10- 12. Remembrcazce: 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 13 only. $5.50; $4.50/students/seniors. The an' is located at 5200 Woodward, Detroit. (313) 833-2323. "I am a survivor ... It should be for us a lesson, a lesson not only for us, but for our children and grandchildren: Infor mation is defense." These the words of Simon Wiesenthal have paved the path which his life has taken following the Holocaust. Known as a "hunter" of'war criminals, Wiesen- thal is shown to be much more in The Art of&rnembrance: Simon Wiesentha l, a 1995 collaboration documenting this life. Austrian filmmakers Johanna Heer and Werner Schmiedel have together directed and produced films of contem- porary history since the mid-'80s, including The Other Eye, an award-win- ning portrait of silen.t film director G.W. Pabst. This most recent effort by the two was PartiallY borne of a desire to exPreee the Austrian repression of its own re- sponsibility for its participation in the crimes of the Third Reich, even con- demning the government's indifference to bringing Nazi criminals to justice. Even more so, though, the film traces Wiesenthars life, utilizing interviews with colleagues and friends, documents and rare archival photographs of his c.hildhood in Galicia and his experiences in Nazi ghettos and concentration camps. It continues to paint a picture of Wiesenthal the humanitarian, a per- spective not often so sensitively seen. As Heer puts it: "We believe that, had people listened to Simon Wiesenthal's basic message, namely, to bring more Nazi criminals to justice as well as to in- troduce timely and comprehensive edu- cational measures, contemporary right-wing extremism could perhaps have been avoided. Wiesenthal found a way to address the most profound prob- lem in a concrete way."