Arts & Entertainment REEL LIFE Guest Starring Joshua Sinclair An eclectic director, a famous photographer and a haunting mystery come together in Jump! Elizabeth Applebaum Special to the Jewish News B efore he became one of the greatest photographers of his time — a man who captured a luxurious Marilyn Monroe slinking in a corner, Richard Nixon jumping in the air and Salvador Dali with leaping water and flying cats — Phillippe Halsman was at the center of a mysterious death that has never been solved. On Sept. 10, 1928, Morduch Halsman, a Jewish dentist from Latvia, was found dead in the Ziller Valley of Tyrol while on a hiking trip with 21-year-old son, Phillippe, then an electrical engineering student in Dresden. Phillippe said that his father had fallen, that the death was an accident. But the police arrested Phillippe, charged him with murder and put him on trial on December 13, 1928. The trial was a fiasco that quickly attracted international attention. Though it would be years before Hitler came to power, anti-Semitism was already grow- ing, thick and deep and dark. Phillippe's trial was riddled with lies, insinuations and whispers; so overt was the anti- Semitism that some of the leading figures of the day, including Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud and Thomas Mann, spoke out on Philippe's behalf. In 1940 Halsman came to New York. He spoke almost no English and had little more than a camera, but by 1942, his pic- tures were on the cover of Life magazine. The extraordinary true story of Phillippe's trial remained mostly forgot- ten — until a few years ago when a friend approached author and director Joshua Sinclair. Sinclair was born in New York — sort of. "I was born on the Leonardo da Vinci ocean liner, just outside Pier 90 in New York Harbor;' says Sinclair, 57. "So I guess you can say I was born and raised in New York?' Since then, though, anything goes. Not only an author and a director but also an actor, physician, theologian, songwriter and teacher, Sinclair has lived around the world and today resides in Vienna. He loves Europe's architecture, Producer Norbert Blecha asked Sinclair to write the story of Phillippe Halsman's trial, which eventually became the move Jump!, starring Ben Silverstone (Get Real) as Phillippe and Patrick Swayze, in one of his last and most critically acclaimed roles, as Phillippe's colorful attorney, Richard Pressburger. As with all his projects, Sinclair did "extensive research ... and dug deep into those events" for Jump! This meant study- ing the actual court transcripts and "re- creating the events as they were described in the testimonies of both the prosecution and the defense' What Sinclair did not consider: any legitimacy of the charges against Halsman. These were simply "the fruit of anti- Semitism," says Sinclair, who is not Jewish. "National Socialism and anti-Semitism were alive and well in many countries other than Germany — in Austria, for instance. But we also know it was already an infectious disease in Poland, Hungary, Russia and even the United States." Though Halsman went on to find great fame, his trial was "horrific," Sinclair says. "He came out of that darkness with the help of art" Halsman also "found the wherewithal to survive and prosper where others would have succumbed to inexo- rable defeat:' Working with Patrick Swayze, says Sinclair, "was the greatest film experience of my life. He was a friend, a brother, a faithful colleague, a mentsh, a source of ence at the University of Michigan; Izzi Lifschutz, filmmaker of the movie HAG (Hasidic Actors Guild); Ken Droz, man- ager of communications at the Michigan Film Office in Lansing; Jim Burnstein, who heads the screenwriting program at the University of Michigan; Disturbing the Universe filmmaker Emily Kunstler; Ann Arbor businessman Michael Levine; Leila Ferault, director of Bon Papa: A Man Under German Occupation; and French educator Kathy Meyer. The festival will conclude on April 29 with the showing of the Australian comedy Hey Hey It's Esther Blueburger, the hilarious story of the unending quest to fit in and the girl who solves it by completely breaking out, starring Toni Collette and Keisha Castle-Hughes. Sponsors of the the Jewish Film Festival in Ann Arbor include the Michael and Patricia Levine Philanthropic Foundation and the Charles and Rita Gelman A scene from the mockumentary HAG Filmmaker and Patron Event speaker Joshua Sinclair nature, closeness, "its good and its evil. It is emotionally and intellectually stimulat- ing: , Fourteen Flicks Jewish Film Festival returns to Ann Arbor. Halye Aisner Special to the Jewish News Ann Arbor T he Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival returns to Ann Arbor for the ninth year April 25-29. The festival includes 14 films over five days at the Michigan Theater on East Liberty. The festival opens 8 p.m. Sunday, April 25, with a showing of the Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival 2010 Best Feature Film winner, A Matter of Size. It tells the story of an overweight chef who discov- ers the fine art of sumo wrestling. Film fest sponsors will enjoy a pre-film spon- sors reception catered by Lori Shepard of Simply Scrumptious Catering. Of the 14 films to be shown in Ann Arbor, eight are foreign, including five from Israel. The Israeli films The Debt, A Matter of Size and For My Father all 48 April 15 • 2010 have been nominated for multiple Israeli Academy Awards. Leaving the Fold won the award for best documentary at the International Festival of Cinema and Religion in Rome. Tel Aviv Jaffa, which depicts the remarkable, moving and humorous story of the largest city in Israel, is a Steven Spielberg Jewish Film Archive production. The festival will host two Lunch and Learn programs at the Michigan Theater. The program on Wednesday, April 28, will feature a discussion on the Michigan film industry. The event on Thursday, April 29, is titled "Jewish Genealogy-How to Find the Family You Never Knew You Had." The cost for each program is $8 for JCC members and $10 for nonmembers. Several special speakers will be part of this year's event. They include Rabbi Adam Rosenwasser of Congregation Beth Am in California; Lars Rensmann, visit- ing assistant professor of political sci-