fi :>2'"\ St' s) MICHIGAN'S ONLY RESTAURANT FEATURED IN ' 1C THE 2004 TOP RESTAURANT ISSUE OF BON APPETIT V*'\ Contemporag but still approachable, its the kind of food that's too rare in metro `Detroit. .Detroit Free Press To do so, the filmmakers adopted "There are certain minorities you're what Zupan shot from wheelchairs and born into, like being Jewish, and then strapping cameras to the chairs during there are quads who are thrown into a minority and face all kinds of prejudice," games. Zupan said he opened up to the direc- he added. tors to publicize his sport and to be As a result, the athletes are "like jock depicted as normal. "People see quads in philosophers," Rubin said. They've had chairs, and they're like, their diapers changed `You're different,' and in and have required other actuality, we're not," he personal assistance, said. "which humbled them The movie features and made them incredi- frank discussions about bly introspective." sex, including positions; Shapiro identified Viagra; videos; and how with his subjects' strug- to pick up women. gle with God: "After Perhaps that's why one their traumas, these observer dismissed the guys do start question- film as grotesque and ing, and Judaism encourages dialogue Co-directors Henry Alex Rubin exploitative, and asked, "What's next? A movie with even the highest and Dana Adam Shapiro about midget tossing?" power. You may not In response, the film- come up with answers, makers pointed out that the response to but you're allowed to ask, 'Why, why, Murderballhas been overwhelmingly why, why, why?'" positive from both disabled and able- When the filmmakers began shooting bodied viewers. at the 2003 world championships in "This movie will make you forget Sweden, the challenge was "breaking everything you thought you knew through the yawn barrier," Rubin about quadriplegics," Shapiro said. recalled. "When you see something about disabilities, you just yawn. We did Murderball is scheduled to open not want to make a politically correct, Friday, July 29, at the Landmark quote-unquote inspirational, cue-the- Main Art Theatre in Royal Oak. violins type of movie. We wanted to (248) 263-2111. show how these guys played and partied and lived." Keego Harbor's simple but elegant Jeremy Restaurant and Bar lavishes attention on every dish that's created. - HOUR Deovit MAga.:tn.- J OPEN FOR DINNER Tuesday - Saturday 5:30 - IO pm • Sunday 5:30 - 9 pm 248.681.2124 1978 Cass Lake Road 5 minutes north of West Bloomfield off Orchard Lake Road New Summer Menu Fresh offerings and lighter fare Brim:, in this ad for a complimentary summer appetizer when you join us for dinner JN 7/28 Limit one per table. Not redeemable on holidays. Expires 8/31/05 ❑ MADE FOR SHARING. HOWEVER, PEOPLE AREN'T ALWAYS WILLING. Aeig,e/A rifice, in that he was saving his family from suffering," Stern responds, four years after his death. Although she did not know the offi- cial positions of the various rabbinical councils, Stern observed that people generally split along political lines on the right-to-die issue. "Liberal religious leaders raise the issue of compassion," Stern says. "They say, 'What we're asked to do as Jews is be compassionate. If someone is termi- nally ill, within six months of dying and painfully suffering, it can be a com- passionate act to allow them to die.' And I think there are rabbis who even go so far as to support physician-assist- ed suicide, as is legal in Oregon." Religion is barely mentioned in The Self-Made Man, since Bob Stern was not a man of faith. "I did struggle with saying, 'We are Jewish,"' Stern confides. "I put in that he was an atheist and not that he was a Jew because his atheism had a direct bearing on his decision to take his own life: The fact that he thought dgamoi there was no God that had to be con- sulted, the fact that he was his own maker — a self-made man — and could be his own un-maker." Yet Bob Stern molded his Jewish identity, like everything else in his life, to his own specifications. He con- tributed to the United Jewish Fund in his native Chicago for 40 years, and he devised a unique tradition for fami- ly milestones. "My father assigned each grandchild a task they had to complete to be bar or bat mitzvahed by him," Stern recalls. "My daughter was the youngest and last. She was assigned at Passover 2001 to completely design and run the following year's seder. Her personal sadness is that he gave her a task and didn't live to see it finished." Sewed Yilor4 StVe "BUCA SMALL" feeds 2 or more "BUCA LARGE - feeds 4 or more THE PERFECT RECIPE FOR WEDDINGS, BAR/BAT MITZVAHS, GRADUATIONS, BIRTHDAYS, ANNIVERSARIES AND PARTIES! NO CROUP TOO LARGE ON TOO SMALL i Birmingham 270 N. Old Woodward Ave. 248-540-9463 Also located in Utica and Livonia ❑ TRY BU CA Our M menu is available n s : Go out & Ace:taps -EAT-BUCA (868-328-2822) The Self-Made Man airs 11:30 p.m. Sunday, July 31, on Detroit Public Television- Channel 56. any $35 or more food purchase. I - ( One per visit/tah. ]iris bring in this coupon in order to receive dis mint at time of purchase. Not valid with any other discounts/offers. 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