arts & life Nancy Spielberg tells the story of American pilots who fought for Israel in 1948. Producer Nancy Spielberg will speak following the film. Above and Beyond will screen at 5 p.m. Monday, May 11, as part of the JCC's Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival. $12. Producer Nancy Spielberg will speak following the film. Above AndBeyond Michael Fox Special to the Jewish News A lot of documentary makers get their ideas from the front page. Nancy Spielberg discovered the forgotten late-1940s saga that gives wings to Above and Beyond on the obituary page. "I found out about Al Schwimmer, and that this guy, an American, was considered the godfather of the Israeli Air Force Spielberg recalls. "It talked about smuggling planes and being indicted [and later pardoned by Bill Clinton] and I was like, 'Whoa:" In 1948, just three years after the liberation of Nazi death camps, a group of American Jewish pilots answered a call for help. In secret and at great personal risk, they smuggled planes out of the U.S., trained behind the Iron Curtain in Czechoslovakia and flew for Israel in its War of Independence. At the forefront of these pilots was Schwimmer. Schwimmer was alive, and it turned out so were several other World War II veterans who risked their American citizenship and their lives to leap into the fray when the State of Israel was created. They were men of exceptional character — with a few adrena- line junkies — rather than ardent Zionists, but their experience and skill proved essential when Israel's Arab neighbors attacked. Above and Beyond, screen- ing May 11 followed by a talk by Spielberg as part of the JCC's Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival (see "Something For Everyone" on page 66), soars on the colorful and occasionally rib- ald exploits of the still-vital pilots. "You realize if you want to talk to anyone, they're in their 90s, and you don't have time" Spielberg says. "So you really have to [put the] pedal to the metal. We didn't have a script. I got a few bucks, and as soon as I got enough to get a director on board and grab a cameraman and go, we went:' A businesswoman, fundraiser and philanthropist (and sister of Steven), Nancy Spielberg has in recent years turned her energy and talents to producing documentary films, including the Oscar-winning documentary Chernobyl Heart. For Above and Beyond, she turned to seasoned director Roberta Grossman, the savvy and talented director of the riveting World War II portrait, Blessed Is the Match: The Life and Death of Hannah Senesh, and the crowd- pleasing Hava Nagila: The Movie. "I was worried when we started out that the subtitle of the film was going to be 'Old Guys Talking,,' Grossman says. "And that wouldn't be hugely compel- ling. We'd end up with a film that would only appeal to those who were specifically interested in this story. What makes the film rise above that, I hope, is that the guys are really wonderful characters. As it should be in a film, the his- tory's in the background and the individuals are in the foreground. And they were worthy individuals to put in the foreground" Spielberg had the same con- cern, and she chose Grossman in part because the director had employed re-enactments in Blessed Is the Match with excep- tional skill and effectiveness. "I knew that if I wanted to attract people to the film, I need- ed to have more than 90-year-old talking heads" Spielberg says. "I needed to do these kinds of [re-enacted] flying sequences. We researched archival footage and we got some great stuff, but there's not a lot out there. That combination, I thought, may be able to attract a younger audience, which to me is very important" In addition to Schwimmer, A group of the Machal (volunteer pilots) in 1948. among the American pilots fea- tured in Above and Beyond are Stan Andrews and Bob Vickman (who together created the Angel of Death logo for the 101 Squadron unit of the Israeli Air Force — still on Israeli F-16 jets today — on a cocktail napkin in Tel Aviv), Milton Rubenfeld, a former stunt pilot (and the father of actor Paul "Pee-wee Herman" Reubens) who flew for the British Royal Air Force and the U.S. Air Force before volunteering in Israel. These straight-talking pilots belong to the so-called Greatest Generation, but they have no interest in perpetuating sanitized myths or posing for statues. They revel in long-ago love affairs and every rule they broke. "I have to tell you that we really cleaned up a lot" Grossman says with a smile. "Not just language, but stories. Believe me, compared to the [full] interviews, this is a G-rated film:' "They were young men" Spielberg adds, "and many of them said when they came back from World War II they were celebrated heroes and all of a sud- den they were selling insurance or shoes. That just doesn't hold a candle. They liked their flight jackets. They liked their girls. JN Several of them needed that thrill; they wanted a band of brothers; they wanted the glory days. They wanted another shot" Consequently, they procured, repaired and flew airplanes that — among other invaluable con- tributions — helped thwart the Egyptian blockade of supplies that threatened the newborn state's existence. While unambiguously pro-Isra- el, Above and Beyond gracefully avoids simple-minded politics. It sticks to the facts, wrapped in the colorful recollections of its endearing protagonists. As a bonus, the film provides insight into the contemporary Jewish experience. "It's a really interesting snap- shot for me of how — before, during and after the Holocaust and the birth of Israel — the trajectory of American Jewish identity became so connected to Israel and to Zionism," Grossman says. "It really was a very, very quick ramp-up. There was a very small Zionist community in the United States before the war, and then we became all about supporting Israel. These guys' lives follow that trajectory, and it's interesting to learn about American Jewish history through the lives of individuals:' ❑ April 30 • 2015 65