weet Georgia Brown showcases Detroit on the move" Film takes byte out of cyberspace. NAOMI PFEFFERMAN Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles in Israel," Gorlin says. Finally, on an impulse, he entered his picture in the 2002 Slamdance Film Festival, which has replaced the now- mainstream Sundance Festival as a venue for avant-garde, independent films. The Holy Land not only was one of 14 feature films accepted out of 1,000 applicants, but walked off with the top Grand Jury Prize. Success bred success: Gorlin won the 21st Century Filmmaker Award at the Avignon/New York Film Festival, and later was nominated for the Independent Spirit "Someone to Watch" award. After these successes, an American film distributor, CAVU Pictures, finally showed up, and signed Gorlin to a con- tract. The picture, which opened in New York, is now screening or set to screen in Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas, Washington, Denver and a dozen other cities as well, including Detroit. In an extended interview, Gorlin came across as the very antithesis of the Hollywood self-promoter. He has indeed kept such a low profile that, dur- ing months of inquiries, his name drew an absolute blank among Israel film mavens in Tel Aviv and Los Angeles. He was finally discovered teaching Hebrew classes at the Reconstructionist congregation Kehillat Israel in Pacific Palisades, Calif. Like Mendy, Gorlin keeps struggling with his religious identity "We seem to be the chosen people of an angry God. Maybe we're doing something wrong," he says. "Part of me wants to reject God, but I can't do it." ❑ The Jewish Community Center Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival in cooperation with CAVU Pictures of New York and the Maple Landmark Theatre present a preview of The Holy Land7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 17, at the Maple Landmark Theatre on Maple Road, just east of Telegraph. For free tickets, call the JCC's Jewish Life and Learning Department at (248) 432-5577. Seating is on a first come, first-served basis, and the doors will open at 7 p.m. The film, in Hebrew with English subtitles, opens in Detroit on Friday, Sept. 19, at the Maple Landmark Theatre. While not rated, the film contains strong lan- guage, nudity and sexual situations. 10'7 "4 "4.5.07:!. W hile obsessing over an ex- girlfriend in 1997, Jed Weintrob, then an Orion vice president of interactive media, turned to the Internet for distraction. "I got hooked peering into the lives of strangers," said Weintrob, a self- described Jewish "techno geek." "It was both canning and mend blowing to log on and see Jenni on Jermicam.org who was also awake at 4:30 a.m., but in the end it was also kind of alienating. You're watching this person do the most intimate things, yet you're never going to know them or touch them." It's a sentiment echoed by John Roth (josh Hamilton), the Internet- addicted lonely-heart in Weintroli's acclaimed directorial debut, On Line. Like Lynn Hershman Leeson's Thknolus4 the gritty but stylish film is among the first to probe relationships in cyberspace. Weintrob shot his actors in separate rooms connected by Web cams so they felt like they were alone with their computers. The message is that "-we all need human contact, so eventually you have to g-et offline," he said. Weintrob, 34, first learned about the importance of human connections growing up in a dose-lmit Manhattan 1045 Brush Street - Detroit • phone (313) 965-1245 • wm.sweetgb.com ea ecliterranean Cuisine Iii`r I 1;1;1:(:1 I l 1;1 Outstanding Excellence & 000601E1 SANDWICHES 'ow loicAnoy our • CAIERING Superior (2uality j ewisk News Keaders Orr TOTAL BILL witk coupon Expires 10/12/03 , Jewish family where Israeli relatives often crashed on the couch. His intro- duction to the Web (and to cybersex) was the early PC model he received for his bar mitzvah. Sex Ed Part II was researching On Line, co-written with fellow Harvard alumnus Andrew Osborne; one inspiration was man who learned of his wife detity by reading her Web journal. He never spoke to her again except via e-mail, Weintrob said. "That started me thinking about the intimate things people were willing to reveal online and how messed up that could make you in real life." The fictional Roth evolved as Weintrob wondered what would have happened had his heartbreak-induced Web addiction escalated. "We've all felt desperate and depressed, and that the computer is our only friend," said the director, now dating a nice Jewish girl from Long Island. "But as personal as it feels, it's completely impersonal." ❑ 28 6 3 9 Nortliwestern fivv9. • 5outkfielcl (in tile Fromenaele Fla 2+8.827.0077 • fax: 248 827.0099 fax usrur order T IDE GALLERY RESTAURANT I) It Enjoy gracious dining amid a beautiful atmosphere of casual elegance 10 BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER OPEN 7 DAYS: 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 0000624550 Birmingham's I Thai v itEsENTIAro MICHIGAN'S Restaurant Our ?4e,ciattle4 • • SOLigu iciiloN ANTIQUES EXPOSITION • Curry Fish • Apple Salad Crispy Duck • Ginger Fish SEPTEMBER 19, 20 & 21 r Y71/4,8 Otte/ attreeiArl Get tp ita ec444 attrektar On Line opens Friday, Sept. 12, at Madstone Theaters in Ann Arbor. (734) 994-1000. 41 SOUTHFIELD MUNICIPAL COMPLEX kJ OFF SOUTHFIELD, MI on Evergreen Rd Civic Center Dr (10% Mile) I coupon per couple. Not good with any other offer. '- Expires 9/30/03. 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