Wednesday, May 9, 2018

3 Food Films to see at the Toronto Jewish Film Festival


TORONTO JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL


The Toronto Jewish Film Festival runs from May 3-13, 2018 and I had a chance to review 3 of the food related films showing at the festival this week. 

The one thing all 3 of these films have in common is the sharing of food and the connection between people and how it develops community and family with the people sharing the food.  From a drama to a couple of fun documentary short films, food is at the centre of the heart of these films but maybe not the most important thing.

The Cakemaker (Drama)

May 9th - 8:30PM
Cineplex Cinemas Empress Walk 9

Country: Germany, Israel
Year: 2017  Running Time: 104 min.
Language: Hebrew, German, English Subtitles: English
Director: Ofir Raul Graizer
Cast:  Tim Kalkhof, Sarah Adler, Roy Miller


The Cakemaker is a man who works in a cafe in Berlin who meets a customer from Jerusalem who works in Berlin.  They develop a relationship but the man from Jerusalem also has a family in Jerusalem.  The man returns to Jerusalem but there is an accident that changes a series of events for the Cakemaker and the Berlin man's family.  This is a story of bonding through food, family, truth, loyalty and following one's passion. This is a very interesting story with religious customs being at the centre of the conflict but with a hidden secret hanging over it.

Bella! Did Ya Eat?: The Story of Judy Perly and Free Times Cafe (Documentary)

 May 10 - 3:30PM
Cineplex Cinemas Empress Walk 9
&
May 13 - 2:30PM
Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema

 Judy Perly has owned the Free Times Cafe for decades and is a staple fixture of the Toronto restaurant scene.  She is funny, and has tenacity to keep her restaurant going through tough times and to build a community along the way.




Wendy's Shabbat
(Documentary)

Country: United States
Year: 2017  Running Time 10 min.
Language: English
Director: Rachel Myers
Cast:  Gussman Gerri, Sharon & Michael Goodman, Roberta Mahler, Lou Silberman, Barrister Winston, Rabbi Isaiah Zeldin


A group of seniors decide that they should have their Friday Shabbat dinner at their local Wendy's Restaurant and with a very accomodating Manager's permission it becomes a regular friday night Shabbat that grows and develops into a gathering place for new and old friends to pray and break bread, literally.  They laugh and bond over Challah and enjoy their weekly Shabbat dinners together.

For more information and for the Film Schedule check out the 

TJFF Website at: https://tjff.com/


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