tid Entertainment Film Year In Review From Venice to Munich, a far-flung year in movies. Michael Fox Special to the Jewish News S teven Spielberg had to know he Nvas walking into a hornet's nest A scene from the Israeli film Ushpizin Fred Friendly (George Clooney) in Good • Night, and Good Luck and the manic pro- tagonists of The Producers were just some of the urban Jews featured in central roles. Kevin Bacon played a Jerry Lewis- inspired comic named Lanny Morris in Where the Truth Lies, which featured a key scene triggered by the word "kike." Bob Hoskins winningly portrayed theater pro- ducer Vivian Van Damm in Mrs. Henderson Presents, and Allan Corduner played a refugee tailor in 1930s Shanghai in the Merchant-Ivory misfire The White Countess. when he embarked on Munich. Still, he couldn't have imagined that he'd be this year's Mel Gibson. Gibson, of course, galvanized the Jewish community in 2004 with The Passion of the Christ, which breathed new life into the canard that the Jews killed Jesus. It was hard to say which was more dis- . turbing, the movie's thesis or its . phenome- nal commercial success. George Clooney, left, As 2005 -began, the likeliest subjects of is Jewish - at least Power Players controversy — though hardly on the same he is as Fred Friendly Behind the camera, Sidney Lumet, the scale — figured to be The Merchant pf in Good Night, and deft director of The Pawnbroker and Venice and Oliver Twist. The two literary Good Luck numerous other New York stories, received adaptations were high risk and high profile, an honorary Oscar. In the executive suite, with Al Pacino and Ben Kingsley interpret : Michael Eisner was finally pushed out of ing the problematic Jewish characters Disney, and Harvey Weinstein left Miramax Shylock and Fagin. to form a new production and distribution But both films met with unenthusiastic entity dubbed the Weinstein Company. reviews and indifferent public response — Another Jewishipower player, the late and vanished from theaters almost imme- Lew Wasserman, Nvas the subject of The diately. A few New York columnists assailed Sarah Silverman Last Mogul, a documentary coming to DVD Merchant when it was released in January, brought her comedy following its brief festival and theatrical but by and large neither film made the to the big screen in run. slightest dent in Jewish consciousness. The, Aristocrats and It was an unexceptional year for Jewish (Nonetheless, both are worth checking out Sarah Silverman: documentaries, all in all, with the prosaic on DVD.) Jesus Is Magic Paper Clips, The Ritchie Boys, Watermarks, The most provocative Jewish-themed Protocols of Zion and 39 Pounds of Love films of 2005, it turned out, came from the making the festival rounds. Middle East. Leading the way was the The Aristocrats featured a slew of Jewish quirky spy drama Walk on Water, which grossed $2.7 mil- A couple of bestsellers were transposed to the screen comics from Shelley Berman to Howie Mandel to Jon lion to place fifth among all foreign-language films, and the with mixed results. Liev Schreiber'S deeply felt adaptation Stewart, while a lone sometimes over-the-edge comedienne ultra-religious fable Ushpizin ($1.2 million and counting). . of Everything Is Illuminated was intriguing if not fully sat- commandeered the spotlight in Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Those hits, plus the favorable response to Nina's Tragedies, isfying. David Siegel and Scott McGehee's oddly detached Magic. Campfire and Or My Treasure, guarantee that the wave of Bee Season suffered from, among other things, the mis- A relatively quiet year in movies, in other words, until Israeli movies receiving U.S. distribution will continue (the casting of big stars.. • Munich arrived this month. Spielberg's film kindled the latter three movies have yet to find a distributor in Detroit). Slipping in under the radar was King of the Corner, a politely worded wrath of the Jewish establishment by sug- Generating the most discussion, though, was the critical- poignant midlife comedy directed by and starring Peter 'gesting, among other things, that Israel paid a moral price ly acclaimed Palestinian drama Paradise Now. Riegert that's worth seeking out on DVD, and Paul for retaliating for the Palestinian attack on its athletes at With ticket sales approaching $1 million and the strong Reiser's saccharine The Thing About My Folks. the 1972 Olympics. possibility of an Academy Award nomination, the portrait The quintessential American Jewish independent, Although reviews are mixed and other films seem of two suicide bombers is widely regarded as one of the Woody Allen, released two films overrated by critics eager primed for glory come Oscar time, Munich will continue to year's most important films. - to trumpet his comeback. Quality aside, neither Melinda provoke discussion on op-ed pages and within the Jewish and Melinda nor Match Point (scheduled to open in community. That's hardly an insignificant achievement for Family Matters Detroit on Jan. 20) contained Jewish characters, but one a movie, especially a flawed one. For all the criticism that On the home front, Jewish families rather than politics can hope that Allen hasn't finished mining his ethnic will be aimed at him, however, there's no chance of provided the focus for a surprising number of American identity. Spielberg becoming a pariah. independent films. Hollywood more than made up for Allen's shortfall, Speaking of Mel Gibson, he is reportedly producing a TV Noah Baumbach's The Squid and the Whale stood out though. The Jewish sisters of In Her Shoes, the boyfriend miniseries about the Holocaust that could air as soon as from the pack, thanks largely to Jeff Daniels' performance and his therapist mom (played by Meryl Streep) in Prime, next fall. If you're handicapping 2006 controversies, that's a against type as a selfish novelist and father. lovelorn filmmaker Mark Cohen in Rent, TV producer good bet. LI 54 December 29 - 200c.