Tuesday | 23.04.24

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Monthly Screenings

Ethics and Cinema 2018/19

5 sessions, once a month, Thurs., 19:30

Price: 290 NIS / Members: 260 NIS

The Rabbinical Court

Speaker (in Heb.): Prof. Aviad Hacohen. Tickets: 80 NIS / Members: 70 NIS

Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem

Dir.: Ronit Elkabetz, Shlomi Elkabetz
| 113 minutes

When Viviane’s husband refuses to grant her a divorce, she must demonstrate sufficient grounds for the Rabbinic Court to force him to comply.

Education, Empathy and Ethics: Pedagogical Reality in a Heterogeneous Society

Speaker (in Heb.): Dr. Tamar Ketko

The Class

Dir.: Laurent Cantet
| 129 minutes

François Bégaudeau, a French teacher from Paris, plays himself in Laurent Cantet‘s film based on the teacher‘s own book. The plot follows one school year and introduces us to a group of young people who are as authentic as ever. 

America and Israel Without Machers – Is It Possible?

Speaker (in Heb.): Prof. Itzhak Galnoor

Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer

Dir.: Joseph Cedar
| 118 minutes

Norman Oppenheimer was a small time operator until he befriended a young Israeli politician. When the politician becomes an influential world leader, Norman’s life dramatically changes. Joseph Cedar’s new film is a touching drama-comedy.

Ideological Changes and Ethical Changes in Professionals’ Psyche

Speaker (in Heb.): Prof. Gaby Shefler

The Lives of Others

Dir.: Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck
| 137 minutes

Berlin, 1984. Gerd Wiesler is an officer in the Stasi, the East German Secret Police. When he is presented with the case of Georg Dreyman, a socialist writer, Wiesler decides to closely test whether the man is truly faithful to the party. 

The Documentary Plaster on the Fictitious Wall

Speaker (in Heb.): Prof. Agur Shif

A Film Unfinished

Dir.: Yael Hersonski
| 89 minutes

This film seeks the truth behind one of the most mysterious Nazi propaganda films ever shot inside the Warsaw ghetto. A Film Unfinished shakes our uncritical trust in the photographic image and the way we perceive the historical past.