At The Movies The Detroit Jewish News speaks to your interests and your concerns. WINNERS from page 74 DETROIT JEWISH NEWS To order your subscription or a gift subscription for family or friends, please call (248) 354-6620. PASSOVE R FABULOUS SELECTION AND VARIETY FOR PASSOVER. GET YOUR ORDER IN EARLY! A Little Bit Of New York Right Here In Bloomfield Hills CALL AHEAD OR FAX YOUR ORDER, IT WILL BE HERE WAITING FOR YOU. WHAT COULD BE EASIER? 6646 Telegraph at Maple • Bloomfield Plaza • 248 ,932 ,0800 THE GALLERY RESTAURANT Enjoy gracious dining amid a beautiful atmosphere of casual elegance BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER 41) MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. West Bloomfield Plaza • 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • 248-851-0313 P OPEN 7 DAYS: ( ( "1111110.1.- 3/23 2001 76 CPR can keep your love alive —"41.11115. American Heart Association. Fighting Heart Disease and Stroke 4 Michael Douglas confronrs Erika Christenson, who plays his daughter about ,)er drug use in the best-picture nominated "T-c,trit".. -"It ha d sense of its content that you don't see in movies, particularly Hollywood movies," says David Magidson. November. I have my favorites, and basically I•m not supposed to reveal what I vote for. That's the bargain You make with the Academy-. "I tend to like the 'kinder, gentler' films. I loved Chocolat this year. I thought it was an absolutely exquisite film for all the right reasons. It was a big story told in a small way, and I think those are what I tend to like a lot. Best picture? I just don't know. They're all so different, each from the other. "I thought Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon Was a brilliant film, but I don't think I would call it best picture. It should win a ton of awards. There are a lot of good films. Anything is possible. "In terms of documentary, I am very hopeful. I have a dear friend, Roger Weisburg, whose film Sound and Fury is up for an award. He's a former Detroiter. Its a beautiful film, absolutely spectacular. I was saddened that the Hank Greenberg film did not get a nomination, because I think it was a wonderful documentary" Vicki Honeyman, director of the Ann Arbor Film Festival: "I'm actually very excited because a close friend of mine — John Nelson — has been nominated for an Academy Award. He's the special effects director for Gladiator. He's from Detroit. He's been working in the industry for about 25 years. We think that he's going to get it! "Crouching Tiger is a great film — technically, the choreography, the spe- cial effects, the music. The film was really exceptional. Gladiator: It probably will win best pic- cure. 0 Brother, Where Art Thou is proba- bly one of the favorite films that I've seen. [There are] films that probably should win Academy Awards, but they don't reach that level. "People really do get caught up in [the Awards]. That's always fun. But in terms of merit, and films that really deserve the recognition for truly being great films, for the art of films, it's all ar-bitrary. There are never any surprises." Elliot Wilhelm, curator of film at the Detroit Institute of Arts, director of the Detroit Film Theater and host of Film Festival, airing 9 p.m. Fridays on Channel 56: "I don't think that the Oscars have ever really amounted to an aesthetic contest. I don't think that anyone in Hollywood would ever really tell you — under penalty of death or hooked up to a polygraph — that the winner of the best picture of the year award is absolutely and beyond question the best picture of the year. "[The Oscars are] a kind of social barometer of where America is at a par- ticular moment in time. What I find when you look at movie history — you look at the pictures that have won for best picture of the year over the decades — they tend to be movies that reflect a particular era, or particular social atti- tudes at a particular point of our history. "I sort of feel like taking a slightly distanced point of view, since, in a sense, I really do want to champion all movies, and to get people to see as many movies as they can, and make up their own minds." ❑