RD ith the cold winter months upon us, what else is there to do in Michigan beside_s cozy up with a good Jewish movie on video?. Here is Part I of a two-week listing of some highlights of what is out there — some more easily accessible than oth- ers, but all attainable if you try hard enough. Whether you're looking for Jew- ish history, a musical or plain-old fun, this should get you started. Now, if only we could get the video stores to deliver. In next week's issue, look for Part II of this com- pilation, plus a listing of resources that have hard- to-find films available for sale or rent. ill ISRAEL (made in or about Israel) Beyond the Walls 1984. Directed by Uri Bar- bash. With Arnon Zadok. Explores the relation- ship between Israeli and Arab convicts in an Israeli prison. THE DETROIT JE WISH NEWS Ben-Hur 195 9. Directed by William Wyler. With Charlton Heston, Jack Hawkins, Sam Jaffe. The classic epic of the Palestinian Jew battling the Ro- man Empire. 78 A collection of films with, about or made by Jews, available on video. LYNNE KONSTANTIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS David and Bathsheba 1951. Directed by Henry King. With Gregory Peck, Susan Hayward. Epic of the Hebrew king and his adulterous affair. Double Edge 1992. Directed by Amos Kollek. With Faye Dun- away, Amos Kollek. An Ameri- can reporter becomes involved with Palestinian intifada lead- ers while reporting on affairs in Jerusalem. Drifting 1982. Directed by Amos Guttman. With Jonathan Sagalle, Ami Traub. A gay film- maker in Jerusalem. Every Time We Say Goodbye 1986. Directed by Moshe Mizrahi. With Torn Hanks, Christina Marsillach. The family of a Sephardic girl objects to her af- fair with an American flyboy in 1942. Exodus 1960. Directed by Otto Preminger. With Paul Newman, Eva Marie Saint, Lee J. Cobb. Written by blacklisted writer Dalton Trtunbo from Leon Uris' novel, the film documents the concentration camp refugees and the growth of a Jewish homeland following World War II. Goodbye New York 1985. Directed by Amos Kollek. With Julie Haggerty, Amos Kollek. Jewish yuppie on vacation in Israel finds her- self stranded and penniless, then adapts to life on a 1db- butz and romance with a soldier. Hamsin 1983. Directed by Daniel Wachsman. With Shlomo Tarshish, Yasjin Shawap. Relations between a Jew and an Arab become difficult with governmental plans of confiscating Arab land. Hill 24 Doesn't Answer 1955. Directed by Thorold Dickinson. With Edward Mulhare, Haya Harareet. The first Israeli feature film. Existentialist Zionist soldiers ponder life and their cause. The House on Chelouche Street 1973. Di- rected by Moshe Mizrahi. With Gila Almagor, Michal Bat-Adam. A young Egyptian-Jewish im- migrant attempts to support his family in pre-Is- rael Palestine. The Impossible Spy 1987. Directed by Jim God- dard. With John Shea, Eli Wallach, Michal Bat- Adam. True story of an unassuming Israeli who doubled as a spy in Syria. Made for cable. Kazablan 1974. Directed by Menahem Golan. With Yehoram Gaon. Musical made in Old Jaffa and Jerusalem, based on the play. King David 1985. Directed by Bruce Beresford. With Richard Gere, Alice Krige. The struggles of the king. The Last Winter 1984. Directed by Riki Shelach. With Kathleen Quinlan, Yona Elian. An American woman searches for her husband, who disappeared in the Yom Kippur War. Little Drummer Girl iTr- 1984. Directed by George - Roy Hill. With Diane Keaton, Klaus Kinski. E2 Based on John Le Carre's novel of an actress re- cruited to ensnare a ter- rorist leader in Israel. Masada 1981. Directed by Boris Sagal. With Peter O'Toole, Peter Strauss. Based on Ernest K Garm's novel The Antagonists, this epic recreates the Roman siege of the Jewish free- dom fighters' fortress. My Michael 1971. Directed by Dan Wolman. With Efrat Lavie, Oded Kotler. Based on the Amos Oz novel of a young woman in late 1950s Jerusalem. Noa at Seventeen 1982. Directed by Isaac Yeshurun. With Dalia Shimko, Idit Zur. The sto- ry of a young girl in 1951 Israel. Operation Thunderbolt 1977. Directed by Men- achem Golan. With Yehoram Gaon, Assaf Dayan, Klaus Kinski. Depiction of the 1976 raid on En- tebbe; makes use of much information not avail- able to American filmmakers. Sallah 1963. Directed by Ephraim Kishon. With Chaim Topol, Geula Noni. Award-winning film