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Karaoke- film presented at the Sarasota Jewish Film Festival

Moved Online20mar9:00 amKaraoke- film presented at the Sarasota Jewish Film FestivalMichael's On East, 1212 South East Avenue, Sarasota, FL 342399:00 am AreaSarasotaTypeFestival,Film,Fundraising EventCostVirtual Pass - All 14 Films $180.00, This event- $36

Event Details

Mort Skirboll Jewish Film Festival Opening Brunch

14 Outstanding Films.

As we enter the festival’s 14th year, we are especially proud to present a premier line-up of 18 remarkable and diverse films that will impact, provoke, and move you. They are documentaries, narratives, tragedies and comedies, mysteries, and love stories. All have won awards and have special meaning to our community of viewers.

The Jewish Film Festival is one of many programs sponsored by The Jewish Federation of Sarasota-Manatee. One tenet of our mission is to strengthen Jewish life and identity in our community. The yearly Film Festival that attracts so many movie-goers, both Jewish and non-Jewish, is all about strengthening Jewish life in Sarasota-Manatee. We hope you leave energized, thoughtful, and moved by the rich traditions and culture of Judaism found in movies celebrated around the world.  See you at the movies!

Karaoke – Opening Night Event with Special Guest Moshe Rosenthal, Director of Karaoke

That’s the beauty of karaoke – you don’t have to know how to sing. You sing to express yourself” states Itzik (Lior Ashkenazi), the charming neighborhood of Meir (Sasson Gabay), and Tova (Rita Shukrun) at his intimate penthouse suite karaoke party. It’s also the theme of writer/director Moshe Rosenthal’s Karaoke, that even when the music stops, life is a performance full of vulnerability, mistakes, and if you’re lucky, some fun too. Karaoke is an offbeat, comedic journey that delights and surprises.

Karaoke follows Tova and Meir, a standard aging couple with 46 years of marriage and two grown daughters. They live a comfortable life, with Meir currently on sabbatical from his academic professorship, and Tova running a boutique shop. Their lives get a jolt of excitement from their neighbor from above, Itzik, who invites them to his penthouse for karaoke nights. Tova and Meir fall hard for Itzik’s energetic lifestyle. They enter into a competition amongst their other neighbors and soon themselves, trying to win Itzik’s attention.

The cast for Karaoke excels in their performances. Lior Ashkenazi is effortlessly charismatic as Itzik. He’s the type of guy you want to hate on paper – drives a flashy Maserati, hangs out with models, and jets around the world for his work. He’s also the guy who will stand up to talkative and attention-seeking Tova, politely interrupting her diatribe at a party to ask Meir to speak, as he’s barely said anything the entire night. Itzik is the life of the party, but lurking underneath the neon glow is insecurity, a man so used to performing for others as the lavish playboy, that he can no longer turn it off.

Rita Shukrun is superb as Tova, the stern, perfectionist wife. When Itzik fails to show up at the dinner she meticulously planned in her and Meir’s apartment, she’s seething with every draw of her cigarette and sip of her wine. Later that night, the sounds of melodic karaoke sounds drift down to their balcony, and Tova’s hell-bent on exacting revenge on Itzik, calling in a noise complaint to the cops. Her relationship with Meir is strained; when he calls her out on flirting with Itzik, she bluntly tells him she could have cheated on him during their marriage, had she wanted to. She enjoys Meir’s jealousy, but can’t handle the same treatment when Meir spends more time upstairs with Itzik.

Karaoke is a comedic offbeat journey that delights and surprises.

Perhaps the most moving performance is Sasson Gabay as Meir. He’s a meek man drawn to the confidence of Itzik. He walks the line of wanting to be like Itzik, joining him in snorting cocaine and drinking to excess, and being with Itzik, opening himself to the potential intimacy of his friend. It’s a moving portrayal of an older man coming of age, as Meir realizes he’s been hiding in a comfortable life for so long that he’s unsure of his identity and desires. There’s a tense moment between the two men, with Itzik admitting that he could never settle like Meir. It’s a chilling moment that pushes Meir to confront the limits of their friendship, testing how far he’ll go to prove he’s a changed man, and Gabay plays it with beautiful and haunted vulnerability.

Writer/director Moshe Rosenthal crafts a wickedly fun journey in Karaoke. Tova, Meir, and Itzik are all pawns in each other’s games, and Rosenthal knows how to place them strategically opposite each other. Each character can bring out the best, and sometimes the worst in each other. Rosenthal also plays with their high-rise complex, bringing in the sprawling yet claustrophobic atmosphere of their building. With each penthouse party, the inhabitants gaze up from their balconies, unable to escape the sounds from above. Itzik is gaining a notorious reputation amongst his neighbors. Are they really upset at the revelry in the penthouse, or are they jealous that they’re not invited? It’s a fun environment to play in, and Rosenthal really nails the politics of living in an apartment building.

Karaoke might sing a familiar tune of the weary married couple confronted with change. However, with the excellent performances of Askenazi, Shukrun, and Gabay, Karaoke finds its own spin on the same old song, offering some darkly comedic takes, all orchestrated by writer/director Moshe Rosenthal.

$36.00 per ticket includes soft drinks and Poppycock (with Special Guest Moshe Rosenthal)

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Time

March 20, 2023 9:00 am

Location

Michael's On East, 1212 South East Avenue, Sarasota, FL 34239

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Organizer

Jewish Federation of Sarasota-Manatee

The Federation focuses its attention on three areas: 1) Preserving the Jewish heritage through cultural, educational and social programming. 2) Providing help for those in need by bringing sustenance, shelter, help and empowerment to the most vulnerable and disadvantaged members of the community. 3) Protecting the people of Israel and countries around the world by connecting our local community with Jews worldwide and funding human service and educational programs in 60+ countries. Our Facebook Page Policy: Our Facebook page is a place to communicate on topics related to our organization and community. It is our home on Facebook, and while we value an open exchange of ideas, we do maintain a few guidelines to make sure that we are able to assist people with questions and issues quickly and efficiently. We reserve the right to delete or mark as spam any and all comments that are not topical, are abusive, or repetitive. We also have the right to block access to any one from posting to this Facebook Page. Specifically: • While this is an open forum, it’s also a family friendly one, so please keep your comments and wall posts clean and respectful. In addition to keeping it family friendly, we ask that you follow our posting guidelines here. If you don’t comply, your message will be removed. • We will not allow personal attacks or vulgar, abusive, offensive, threatening or harassing images and/or language. This includes creative spellings of swear words using asterisks or spaces between words. • We will not allow comments that promote, foster or perpetuate discrimination on the basis of race, creed, color, age, religion, gender, marital status, status with regard to public assistance, national origin, physical or mental disability or sexual orientation. • We will not allow comments that contain sexual content or links to sexual content. • We will not allow comments that promote or advertise a person or a business or commercial transaction. • We will not allow the same content to be posted multiple times. Any subsequent posting of substantially identical information will be deleted, and the person posting it may be banned. • We will not allow comments that promote or oppose any political cause, advocacy, or campaign. This is a business page, and any such posts will be deleted, and the person posting it may be banned. • We will not allow comments or posts that disclose personal information. • You participate at your own risk, taking personal responsibility for your comments, your username and any information provided. Opinions expressed in public comments do not necessarily reflect official positions of the organization. Any information posted here is considered public information and may be subject to monitoring, moderation or disclosure to third parties.

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Cost

Virtual Pass – All 14 Films $180.00, This event- $36