arts & life film reel!' Picklish A Jewish bubbie's pickle recipe is the star of a Michigan- made movie. Celebrity Jews Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News AT THE MOVIES Opening this week: Jurassic World is the long-delayed fourth entry in the Jurassic Park series. World is produced by Steven Spielberg, Trevorrow 40 June 11 • 2015 icicles happen to be at the center of a com- edy filmed over the past month around Metro Detroit. But it could've been lasagna or pierogi that supplied the pivot point for this story about how multigenerational family dys- function plays out. In this case, it happens to be the Glickmans of Detroit, and its milestones include a wedding and bat mitz- vah. Keep an eye out for scenes shot at Temple Shir Shalom and Clover Hill Park Cemetery. "It's a universal story:' says Sheldon Cohn, a former ad exec who wrote the screenplay with Gary Wolfson, his former col- league at Doner. The pair racked up a lot of awards with ads for the Detroit Zoo, Little Caesars and Serta Mattress while they worked in advertising, and con- tinued late-night brainstorming sessions well beyond their two- decade tenures at the agency. About five years ago, they were tossing around ideas when Wolfson mentioned his Russian grandmother's kosher pickles, and his father's short-lived deli, which went bankrupt thanks to mismanagement by a nudnik relative. "I remember these amazing pickles:' rhapsodized Wolfson of Bloomfield Hills. "My grandma [Libby Wolfson] went to her grave with [the recipe]. I would kill for her pickles." His memory became the basis for the script of The Pickle Recipe, in which the Glickmans run a deli that is famous for Rose Glickman's pickles. Cohn and Wolfson began the long process of talking friends and family into giving them money, tapped into film incentives from the state and set to making a comedy (with heart, of course) — their first feature-length film. Both serve as producers along with Jason Potash and Paul Finkel of Storyboard Entertainment. They spent each day on set at locations that included Hygrade Deli, owned by Stuart Litt, on a deserted stretch of Michigan Avenue in Detroit, transformed into "Irv's Deli." The film was shot in 22 days, wrapping up this week, with a budget well under $10 million. "This is a metaphor; says Wolfson, watching the action on the set on a monitor behind "Irv's Deli" on a recent Wednesday afternoon. "This is about people and the ingredients of their lives, people who aren't together at first, but come together in the end." Cohn of West Bloomfield says the film is "an extension of what we've done for 30 years:' minus the stopwatches, product shots and clients. He's been making promotional videos for various organizations, including Yeshiva 68, who directed the first two Jurassic movies. The screen- play was co-written by Colin Trevorrow, 38, Amanda Silver, 52, Rick Jaffa, 53, and Derek Connolly. Silver, who is Jewish, and Jaffa (who has some remote Jewish ancestry), have been married for 25 years and have two children. (The family are regular synagogue- goers.) The couple scored big as the co-writers of the two most recent hit Planet of the Apes movies. However, this is Trevorrow's first outing as the director of a big studio movie – he earned this gig follow- ing critical acclaim of his indie films. Trevorrow's mother is Jewish, and his maternal grand- mother came from a long line of Sephardi Jews who settled in the Caribbean centuries ago. The director's parents run a California horse ranch that bears his maternal grand- mother's maiden name (Rancho Toledano) and raises Paso Finos, a breed that originated in the Caribbean. The plot of the new Jurassic film is predictable: Fast-forward to the present day and the new owners of the park think they can run a tropic island Julie Edgar Special to the Jewish News Gary Wolfson, left, and Sheldon Cohn on the set of their film, The Pickle Recipe Beth Yehudah, and knocking around ideas for a film. "This thing has gone through many variations. If you saw our first script, you wouldn't rec- ognize it. But it's still about a pickle he says. The Pickle Recipe features a pretty impressive cast — all approved by Cohn and Wolfson. Lynn Cohen, who many remem- ber as Miranda's housekeeper Magda on Sex and the City TV series and who appeared in Hunger Games: Catching Fire and dozens of other films, plays Rose Glickman, award-winning pickle maker; Oscar-nominee David Paymer (Mr. Saturday Night, Payback, Get Shorty) plays her son Morty, who schemes to get the recipe; and Jon Dore, a Canadian actor/comedian (Inside Amy Schumer, Kroll Show) plays her hapless party-MC grandson Joey. Most of the remaining cast members and crew are locals. Michael Manasseri of Rochester, who heads Made in Michigan Films and who honed his acting and directing chops in LA before returning to Michigan to take advantage of the state's film incentives, is directing. He said the film has a Meet the Parents vibe. The actors are great, but "when the writing is good, you don't have to act." Cohn again points to its uni- versality. park where humans can safely view genetically engineered dinosaurs. But something goes terribly wrong and the park's operations manager (Bryce Dallas Howard) and others have to contain the dinosaurs before they can cause more damage. The film Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (opening June 26 at the Maple Theater in Bloomfield Hills) is based on 33-year-old Jesse Andrews' young-adult bestselling novel of the same name. The story is narrated by Greg Gaines (Thomas Mann), a Jewish high-school senior who stays aloof from most people – even labeling his African- American friend Earl, with whom he does comedic routines, as a more of a co-worker than a friend. This changes when his mother nags him into spending time with Rachel (Olivia Cooke), a high-school classmate who has just been diagnosed with terminal leukemia. Greg and Rachel have history: They were in the same Hebrew school class (around age 12). Greg thought if he flirted with Rachel, the class' "hot girl" would notice him. (The film's trailer establishes that Rachel remains a Jewish character. It's unclear if Greg