Screened as part of NZIFF 2017

Menashe 2017

Directed by Joshua Z. Weinstein World

A young widower struggles to appease Orthodox tradition and raise his son without a mother in this touching and funny observational drama, shot in Yiddish in a camera-shy Hassidic neighbourhood in Brooklyn.

Israel / USA In English and Yiddish with English subtitles
82 minutes DCP

Rent

Producers

Alex Lipschultz
,
Traci Carlson
,
Joshua Z. Weinstein
,
Daniel Finkelman
,
Yoni Brook

Screenplay

Joshua Z. Weinstein
,
Alex Lipschultz
,
Musa Syeed

Photography

Yoni Brook
,
Joshua Z. Weinstein

Editor

Scott Cummings

Music

Aaron Marin
,
Dag Rosenqvist

With

Menashe Lustig
,
Ruben Niborski
,
Yoel Weisshaus
,
Meyer Schwartz

Festivals

Sundance
,
Berlin
,
New Directors/New Films 2016

Elsewhere

Joshua Z. Weinstein’s charming Menashe immerses us in a Hassidic neighbourhood in Brooklyn, a community not given to self-exposure. His film tells the touching story of a young widower struggling against the Orthodox requirement that his son be raised in a household with a mother.

“In a world apart, the recently widowed Menashe (a wonderful Menashe Lustig) is anxiously trying to get his only child back home to live with him. His family, friends and rabbi in his tight-knit Orthodox community want Menashe to remarry first, but that sits uneasily with this quietly stubborn, independent soul. As the story opens gracefully, Menashe’s struggle to balance his Orthodox religion and his own desire builds into a gentle human comedy.

The director Joshua Z. Weinstein, a cinematographer and documentarian making a seamless transition to fiction, shot Menashe entirely in Yiddish in Borough Park, Brooklyn. He has an eye for the fine-grained textures of everyday life that draw you into this cloistered world and close to Menashe, a character partly inspired by Mr Lustig’s own life.” — Manohla Dargis, NY Times