II

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MINOUS"

4.0
Arts Entertainment

- R. Corliss, TIME MAGAZINE

"A HAUNTING
DEPICTION

JUDAICA

from page 85

of life inside an ultra-
Orthodox community."

- D. Sontag NEW YORK TIMES

A FILM BY
AMOS GITAI

"A RALLYING
CRY OF REVOLT

that comes across
loud and clear."

- LE MONDE

A KINO INTERNATIONAL RELEASE

MAY

FRI. SAT. SUN.

excitaicse goletacte

5 6 7

DETROIT FILM THEATRE

7:00 7:00 4:00
9:30 9:30 7:00

THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS

DFT Monday Series:

313.833.3237

for information, or
to receive a DFT
2000 film schedule

The unorthodox methods of Violent Cop's renegade detective Ryosuke have
forced him into confrontations with his superiors. But when he tries to extinguish
corruption within the force itself, the fireworks really begin. Kitano's second film
is a darkly funny gangster picture which The Village Voice described as "moment
to moment amazement." (double feature runs 195 min.)

VIOLENT COP and
8
BOILING POINT
7:30

MAY

- 4 . 4
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In contrast to Razar's porce-
lain are the black and white pho-
tos taken by Jodi Sugar, whose
images recall sights she experi-
enced while living in Israel.
"I'll be showing about 50
photos, mostly street scenes in
•Israel," says Sugar, who lives in
Chicago. "I want the images to
express how people in the Holy
Land feel, and my most famous
work is a soldier and Chasid
standing next to each other at
the Wall. I wanted to show the
dichotomy in Jerusalem."
Sugar, trained by private
teachers and at the New York Institute
of Photography, is a regular contributor
to Jewish Action magazine.
"People in Jerusalem going about
their daily business are exciting to my
eye, and I try to capture a moment in
time," Sugar says. "Most of my favorite
images are never taken because I see
them on Shabbat. The real work is to
bring the sacred into the mundane and
uplift it. That is what I hope to accom-
plish with my photography."
Other out-of-state artists new to the
exhibit include Donna Prager of
Illinois, who does titanium metal
pieces, including jewelry and book-
marks; Michele Goren of Indiana, who
works with watercolor and gouache
lithographs; Julie Szerina Stein of
Arizona, who does paintings; and Karen

Top: Mary Etta
Moore will
show her paper
cuts.

Left: Margie
Razar: !Apples
and Honey"
plate for Rosh
HaS ana.

Weiss of Ohio, who does hand-painted
challa covers.
Michigan artists showing for the first
time at Bais Chabad include Mary Etta
Moore of Kalamazoo, who does paper
cuts; Martin Lowenberg of Southfield,
who specializes in metal pieces; and Lee
Bleifeld of Berkley, who does relief
sculptures.
Michigan glassmaker Dani Katsir is
the returning artist. ❑

The Bais Chabad Judaica Art
Exhibit runs 10:30 a.m.-6:30
p.m. Sunday, May 7, at the syn-
agogue, 5595 W. Maple Road,
West Bloomfield. $4 includes
refreshments. (248) 932-3311.

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