If the review below looks vaguely familiar to you, that's because TrustMovies first posted it at the end of last October. Hurricane Sandy hit us immediately after, and as the entire lower area of Manhattan went dark, the Quad Cinema closed, and this little movie never actually appeared. Well, it opens today -- really! -- and it deserves a look-see, so here's my original post once again, with only the opening date changed and some new personal appearances added at the close....
The above is pretty close to exactly what the film achieves. From an early scene in which the brothers spar lightly about their various medicines (and end up toasting by clicking their pill boxes) through the journey they take, the facts that come to light, along with the feelings they engender, turn this short film into yet another unusual and moving Holocaust story.
The film is based on a memoir written by Izhak called Three Mothers for Two Brothers, and the heart of the tale involves the three women who acted as mother and protector to the siblings: their birth mother, her sister (or perhaps sister-in-law) into whose care the children were given when their parents were taken to the concentration camp, and finally another young woman, Naomi, who became their protector in one of the camps.
The details of the story are full of the kind of specificity that startles and moves, and their effect on Avner (above, who has, up to now, kept himself from leaning of them) is major. For Izhak, who already knew all this, the goal is to finally share this with his brother.
Of all the specifics we learn, probably the most moving and awful is that of the aunt who took the children from their birth mother. Already herself pregnant, how she saves the brothers and then is herself made childless, is as horrible as it is memorable.
One thing I would have liked to know, as the film moved along, was who these brother are now -- who they had become. At movie's end, the filmmaker gives us this via still photos and written information. This is a quick and efficient way to manage it; weaving the information into the film itself would probably have increased the running time to that of a full-length documentary. (Maybe not a bad idea, either.)
Here I Learned to Love, running only 55 minutes (that title and where it comes from is probably worth an entire film unto itself), finally opens this Friday, March 1, in New York City at the Quad Cinema, where the filmmaker (and others) will be making personal appearances during the run. See below for details....
DIRECTOR AVI ANGEL WILL BE AT SELECTED SCREENINGS Friday 3/1 - 6:35, 8pm, Saturday 3/2 - 6:35, 8pm and Sunday 3/3 - 5:10, 6:35, 8pm evening
Special appearances on Sunday, 3/3, as representatives from ISOPC -- INTERNATIONAL STUDY OF ORGANIZED PERSECUTION OF CHILDREN, a project on child development research -- will join director Angel in discussion: Dr. Eva Fogelman at the 5:10 pm showing, and Dr. Helene Bass-Wichelhaus at the 8 pm showing.
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