2024-05-30 20:00:00
403
2024-05-30

Pride at TJFF (Toronto Jewish Film Festival)

Description

The Toronto Jewish Film Foundation is proud to present five film that share stories from the spectrum of 2SLGBTQI+ lived experiences in celebration of Pride Month. Check out AMAZING GRACE, MIDAS MAN, MORE THAN FREINDS, TABOO — AMOS GUTTMAN, and UNSPOKEN at TJFF2024, running May 30 through June 9.

[1] TJFF Opening Night: Midas Man
[2] Thursday May 30
[3] 8:00 PM
[4] Toronto Jewish Film Foundation
[5] Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema
[6] 506 Bloor St W, Toronto, ON M5S 1Y3
[7] https://tjff.com/pride-at-tjff2024/
[8] Paid Event
[9] All Ages
[10] Wheelchair Accessible
[11] On a cold night in 1961, a young record store owner walked into Liverpool’s Cavern Club and discovered the greatest pop act the music world would ever see. So begins the story of Brian Epstein, the man who found The Beatles. Featuring a star-making performance by Jacob Fortune-Lloyd as Epstein, as well as the familiar faces of Emily Watson, Eddie Marsan, Jay Leno and Eddie Izzard, this funny, thrilling and occasionally heartbreaking film charts Epstein’s life as he guides the scrappy four-piece band’s rise from dingy bars to the hallowed halls of the Ed Sullivan show — a story of one man’s radical faith in talent and the sacrifices he made to champion it.

[1] Amazing Grace
[2] Tuesday June 4 thru Wednesday June 5
[3] N/A
[4] Toronto Jewish Film Foundation
[5] Online at TJFF Virtual Cinema
[6] Online
[7] https://tjff.com/pride-at-tjff2024/
[8] Paid Event
[9] All Ages
[10] Wheelchair Accessible
[11] Winner of the 1992 Wolgin Award and best film at the Haifa International Film Festival, Amazing Grace was a major influence on an emerging generation of gay directors like Eytan Fox and Tomer Heymann. It is the last feature by Amos Guttman (the subject of this year’s documentary Taboo) before dying from AIDS in 1993, and also his most autobiographical one. The first Israeli film to deal openly with AIDS, this moving melodrama marks Guttman’s move away from the margins of Israeli cinema into the mainstream. It focuses on the love story between Jonathan, an 18-year old Israeli and Thomas (Sharon Alexander, Life According to Agfa), who lives in New York but comes to visit his mother in Israel.
[1] The Other Widow screening with More Than Friends
[2] Saturday June 8
[3] 3:00 PM
[4] Toronto Jewish Film Foundation
[5] Innis Town Hall
[6] Innis College, 2 Sussex Ave, Toronto, ON M5S 1J5
[7] https://tjff.com/pride-at-tjff2024/
[8] Paid Event
[9] All Ages
[10] Wheelchair Accessible
[11] Dana Ivgy stars as a mom who discovers a love letter written by her 11-year-old son to another boy. Reflecting on her own experiences coming out and concerned for her son’s social status, she crashes a birthday party to keep a close eye on him. Omri Laron’s short film is beautifully acted all around and a real tug at the parental heartstrings. Screened before the film The Other Widow.

[1] TABOO — Amos Guttman
[2] Monday June 3
[3] 7:00 PM
[4] Toronto Jewish Film Foundation
[5] Innis Town Hall
[6] Innis College, 2 Sussex Ave, Toronto, ON M5S 1J5
[7] https://tjff.com/pride-at-tjff2024/
[8] Paid Event
[9] All Ages
[10] Wheelchair Accessible
[11] Born in Romania in 1954, Amos Guttman would go on to become one of the most singular directors in Israeli cinema. Centred around the last interview Guttman gave before dying of AIDS at 38, this incisive documentary explores his life and work that challenged the conservative Israeli film establishment and paved the way for future gay Israeli directors. Never feeling fully at home in Israel as a gay man and an immigrant, he was committed to portraying the experiences of society’s marginalized groups, particularly those of sex workers and the LGBTQ+ community. See also Amazing Grace.

[1] Unspoken
[2] Wednesday June 5
[3] 8:00 PM
[4] Toronto Jewish Film Foundation
[5] Alliance Francaise
[6] 24 Spadina Rd, Toronto, ON M5R 2S7
[7] https://tjff.com/pride-at-tjff2024/
[8] Paid Event
[9] All Ages
[10] Wheelchair Accessible
[11] “…A beautiful movie…” (Mayim Bialik) Past and present intertwine in this sweetly told coming-of-age story about finding one’s place in their own family history. When Noam, a teenager struggling to come out to his religious parents, discovers a love letter written to his grandfather by another man before the Holocaust, he begins to believe the two of them had more in common than he’d thought. Seeking a path to openness and acceptance, Noam sets out to uncover his family’s hidden past. Anchored by an endearing lead performance by Charlie Korman (Barry, Hacks), Unspoken perfectly captures the tumultuous challenges of self-discovery in adolescence.

Performances By

Skip to content