Special Guests said. "In 2004, we increased to 19,000, and, last year, we - are pleased to report that 24,000 members of our community were in attendance. We expect this year to be even better!' Grand Prize Film Live and Become is the win- ner of the fourth annual Sarah & Harold Gottlieb Award for Contributions to Jewish Culture that is presented to the festival's best film. Live and Become will be shown at all five festival sites. The first presentation takes place at 8 p.m. Sunday, April 30, at United Artists Commerce. The film recounts the ironic yet life-affirming tale of a young boy from Ethiopia who survives and thrives in modern Israel by pre- tending to be Jewish. "Live and Become is a won- derful film. It stood out from all the rest:' said Betty Pernick of West Bloomfield, the festival's associate steering committee and development chair. "Once you saw it, there was no question it would be the winner!' When the film festival's screen- ing committee considers which movies to present, members look at "the quality of the movie-making and the importance of what the movie is talking about:' said David Magidson, who has served as festival director for the last seven years. Another vital criterion is "what does it say about being Jewish in the world today?" At least 30 committee members saw Live and Become, and its selection for the grand prize was nearly unanimous, he said. "We had to be done choos- ing the award-winning film by late fall; I think it was the end of November',' Glass Kanat remem- bered."The day before the cut-off, David came over at 10:30 at night and said to me,`You've got to see this film.' "It was a quarter of two in the morning before I fumed it off. My husband said, `What are you doing — you can see the rest of it tomorrow: but I couldn't tear myself away. "You can go to this movie with people of all ages, from my 32-year-old daughter to my husband, who's 73. You can discuss it with them, and you will all grow through seeing it!" • The Gottlieb Award includes a prize of $7,500 for filmmaker Mihaileanu. The April 30 screening includes a festival introduction by Terry Lawson, Detroit Free Press movie reviewer. In addition, Sirak Sebhat, an Ethiopian Jew who plays the movie's main character when he is older, will appear at this screening. Before the Birmingham show- ing, scheduled for Tuesday, May 2, at 8 p.m (not at 5 p.m., as listed in the festival brochure), Birmingham day sponsor Program for Holocaust Survivors and Families will host an invita- tional pre-glow. The Ann Arbor screen- ing, which takes place 8 p.m. Thursday, May 4, will be followed by a discussion, moderated by Magidson, who is a professor in the Wayne State University theater department. Other screenings of Live and Become are scheduled for 8 p.m. Sunday, May 7, in Flint; and 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 9, in Windsor. No -Laughing Matter In addition to the Live and Become events, the film festival includes several other special events, discussions and featured guests. Some are aimed specifically at young people. The Young Adult Division of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit is co-sponsoring the Birmingham Palladium Theatre presentation of the documentary Protocols of Zion, scheduled for 8 p.m. Wednesday, May 3. YAD also - is sponsoring an afterglow at the Blue Martini, located next to the Palladium. The movie, which investigates the current slanders against the Jewish people, including and going beyond the often dis- proved but still widely circulated Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, is an important film for young people to see, said YAD's Jordan*Glass of West Bloomfield. Last year, YAD sponsored the comedy The Hebrew Hammer, and it was fairly successful, said Glass, the festival's young adult chair. But the immense popularity of 2004's film festival presentation Paper Clips showed that "we don't need comedy to attract young people." In Paper Clips, non-Jews gain sensitivity to anti-Semitism through a school project aimed at expressing the immensity of the Holocaust through the collection of 6 million paper clips. "Seeing Paper Clips made you feel proud to be Jewish; Protocols makes you feel a certain amount of fear," Glass said. "Anti-Semitism is still around, and our generation has a responsibility to be on guard against it." Along with free vegetarian appetizers and reduced-price drinks, the Blue Martini afterglow will feature a discussion moder- ated by Brian Marcus, director of Internet marketing for the Anti- Defamation League. Screenings of Protocols also will take place 5 p.m. Thursday, May 4, in Ann Arbor; 5 p.m. Monday, May 8, in Flint; 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 9, in Commerce; and 8 p.m. Wednesday, May 10, in Windsor. Something For Everybody The film festival continues its Sunday morning "Jews In Sports" program with a free brunch and movie, Sunday, May 7, in Commerce Township. Sponsored by the Michigan Jewish Spofts Hall of Fame, the bagel brunch begins at 9 a.m., while the movie Monday Night Mayhem screens at 10 a.m. • This story of the evolution of television's Monday Night Football stars John Turturro as a wholly believable Howard Cosell. Unfortunately, reservations for the brunch were required by April 10; call the film festival office at (248) 432-5577 just in case there is room to view the movie — with- out brunch-- at 10 a.m. The festival offers two Voyages of Discovery events specifically designed for the youngest seg- ments of the Jewish community, both of them free. Monday night religious school classes have been invited to the Birmingham-screening of the Israeli movie Walk On Water, scheduled for 5 p.m. Monday, May 1. The movie cen-. ters on a Mossad hit man tracking down an aged ex- Nazi officer, and his relationship with the man's non-Nazi children. After viewing the movie, students will have kosher pizza and pop while participating in a discus- sion moderated by Wayne State Professor Dr. Phoebe Mainster. Slated for Commerce Township at 12:30 p.m. Sunday, May 7, are the multigenerational films -Becoming Rachel and Nicholas Winton: The Power of Good. Sunday school classes from throughout metro Detroit have been -invited. "One of the purposes of this festival is to keep the community - informed and educated:' said associate chair Pernick, "not only about current issues but also about historical issues, and we do this in a variety of ways. That's what a festival is all about. We . cover all topics, so hopefully all segments of the community will be covered by our films." Magidson said that every year - people ask him which movies they should see. "Others come up to me and say, `Why did you pick that . one? I am sorry I saw it:" "I like them all well enough to see them',' he said. "Everybody may not like everything, but there's something for everybody. "This is the mosaic that makes up the Jews of the world today." ❑ The. Jewish Community Center's eighth annual Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival runs April'30-May 11. Festival passes are $118 JCC members, $136 nonmembers;_ Ann Arbor passes are $60. Individual tick- ets are $9 each. Tickets can be ordered by mail (JCC Marwil Film Festival, 6600 West Maple Road, West Bloomfield 48322); phone (248-432-5402); fax (248-432: •5552); Internet (www.jccdet. org ); or in person at the West Bloomfield JCC's front desk. Group rates and other inqui- ries: (248) 432-5577. NOTE: After noon Friday, April 28, tickets will be avail- able only at the theaters one hour before show times. The schedule provided with this article was correct as of the Jewish News deadline. For a com- plete updated listing, see the Film Festival Web site: www.djff.org. S . , everal filmmakers and others asso- ciated with the movies to be shown at the Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival will speak at select-4 ed screenings throughout the festiva The following -speri app antes have been confirmed, as of Jewish News deadlines: • Live and Become – Festiv0:- introduction by Terry Lawson, Detroit Free movie reviewer; appear- ance by actor Sirak Sebha Commerce, 8 p.m. April 30. Festival Director Davi Magidson: Ann Arbor, 8 p.m. May 4. • The Ritchie Boys – Guy Stern, WSU professor and featured participant in the World War II warfare docu- mented in The Ritchie Boys, will appear at every show- ing: Commerce, 5 p.m. April 30; Ann Arbor, 5 p.m. May 2; Birmingham, 5 p.m. May 4; Flint, 8 p.m. May 8; and Windsor, 2 p.m. May 10. King of the Corner – Actor- filmmaker Peter Riegert: Ann Arbor, 8 p.m. April 30. • A Cantor's Tale – Filmmaker Eric Greenberg and Cantor Jack Mendelson: Ann Arbor, 8 p.m. May 1; Commerce, 8 p.m. May 2. • Perla – Filmmaker Debbie Brookman: Commerce, 5 p.m. May 9. • One Flight for Us – Filmmaker Haim Hecht: Commerce, 5 p.m. May 2. • Hineni: Coming Out in a Jewish High School – Producer ldit Klein: Commerce, 5 p.m. May 3; Ann Arbor, 2 p.m. May 4. — Diana Lieberman April 27 • 2006 49