This year’s JIFF lineup includes a matchmaking rom-com, an atomic-age documentary for ‘Oppenheimer’ fans and a Henry Winkler-starring television comedy.
If the Oppenheimer side of 2023’s Barbenheimer phenomenon has you wanting to find out more about the atomic age, this year’s Jewish International Film Festival has your next viewing option: documentary A Compassionate Spy about physicist Theodore Hall. His tale didn’t make the cut in Christopher Nolan’s blockbuster, but he was part of the Manhattan Project team at Los Alamos, and also passed intelligence to the Soviet Union, as Hoop Dreams‘ filmmaker Steve James explores in one of JIFF’s must-see efforts at its latest fest.
When the Jewish International Film Festival returns for 2023, it’ll hit up seven cities between Monday, October 23–Wednesday, December 6, making movie-filled dates with Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, the Gold Coast, Canberra, Hobart and Perth. On the just-announced full lineup is a hefty 55 Australian-premiere titles spanning both flicks and TV shows, including everything from box-office hits to new episodic efforts starring a big-name US talent.
Israel’s Matchmaking hits JIFF’s opening night after success at home, following a Jewish Orthodox man’s romantic ups and downs in a film that’s been likened to Romeo and Juliet — but Haredi and a comedy. And that standout television series? Chanshi follows its namesake (Aleeza Chanowitz, Dismissed) in Brooklyn, with Barry‘s Australia-bound Henry Winkler as her father.
Read the article by Srah Ward on Concrete Playground.