Itc's ;1 111%.11111 talt.u . 1 4. "iti sttke 248.476.0044 "Ativ Event . t,',Itorint) • Rant 1,101 Room Availoillo Buy any dinner entree and receive 00 $6 off the second dinner entree Salads, pizza, sandwiches and ribs for 2 excluded. Expires: 11/15/07 One coupon per table Farmington Hills • Corner of Grand River & Haggerty Road Auburn Hills • 1 1/2 miles south of the Palace of Auburn Hills WE ARE KNovetil FOR OUR SIZZLING rAchTAS t it •41EXICAN GRILL w: TILE `-`1i3ES11 9' 1101111FMAim CORN TORTilk.A.AS ALITRENTFC IWIF. X.CAN CLitSitfr otAior rfivS1.1! ALAN O N. ivAtTOIG A LITTLE . CONGA?. 2:110W04. 11- .1t SANGRIA / cLILL MAR 0 I • OFF I CARRY OUT l CarliAG • 'I I 10%. en on Nu min n Total Bill 1 . ExprireL11451 a s a Week 30685 W. 12 Mile just East of Orchard Lake 1248.474.0902 The Bubble's Mon Friedmann, Ohad Knoller, director Eytan Fox, Yousef "J e" Sweld and Daniela Wircer Michael Fox Special to the Jewish News )11`',111, I 10% OFF r TOTAL BILL Excluding tax, tip and beverages • With this ad Dine in only • Expires 10/31/07 JN , 1 ( ORCHARD LAKE RD. SOUTH OF 14 MILE Farmington Hills • 851-7000 • Carry-Out • Our Speciality "Low Car b Ribs" en & Ribs t:- HEALTH & FITNESS inside the JN the last week o every month For more information call: 248.354.6060 58 October 11 0 2007 T hanks to the worldwide suc- cess of Yossi & Jagger and Walk On Water, filmmaker Eytan Fox has earned a following well beyond his native Israel. But he still looks for inspiration close to home, in his childhood and his neighborhood. Fox's latest, The Bubble, is set (and largely shot) along Sheinkin Street in the Tel Aviv neighborhood of young hipsters and artistes where the openly gay director lives with his longtime partner and co-screenwriter, Gal Uchovsky. The vibrant, funny and ultimately shocking film centers on a quartet of attractive twentysomethings whose sex lives typically take precedence over political activism. But when Noam (Ohad Knoller, who played Yossi in Fox's earlier film) begins a relationship with Ashraf (Yousef "Joe" Sweld), a Palestinian, he makes waves that not only engulf them, but also his gay roommate Yali (Mon Friedmann) and straight female roomie Lulu (Daniela Wircer). Like all of Fox's films, The Bubble entertainingly combines an enthu- siasm for contemporary pop culture — notably a soundtrack of catchy, often familiar tunes — with personal and political awakening. "Some people don't really like what I do and don't like the fact that I mesh these two:' Fox said with a shrug dur- ing a recent visit to San Francisco. "We have this dichotomy in Israel, where you have very serious political or ideologically oriented films and war stories. Then you have fluffy films that have humor. "I told my [backers],`I want to make an Israeli-Palestinian relationship story, but I don't want to make it one of those heavy Amos Gitai films. I want to make a film that is true to life:" Fox is gregarious and speaks fast, fluent English, which may contribute to the reception he's received outside of Israel. He was born in New York and was a toddler when his family moved to Israel in 1967. His late mother, his key influence, devoted her life to building relationships between Israelis and Palestinians in Jerusalem and elsewhere in Israel. Fox grew up in the posh French Hill neighborhood of Jerusalem. It had a nice playground, so the children from Isawiya, an Arab village in nearby east Jerusalem, would come and play with the Jewish kids. "At some point:' Fox recalls, "the head of the neighborhood committee decided or heard that the Palestinian kids were hitting or beating the Jewish kids. He said, 'We'll stop the whole playing together.' My mother was beside herself" In The Bubble, this becomes Noam's pivotal memory. It peaks with a flash- back of a party at the playground where the only attendees are Noam and his mother. That, too, has its roots in Fox's experience. "It was important to us to shoot in