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\"Solomon, you're Jewish\" Victor Pivert is so baffled at the very thought that his long-time driver was Jewish all along that he asked this question at least three times with a shocked look of disbelief. Solomon even mentioned that his uncle Jacob, coming from New York is a Rabbi. \"But he's not Jewish\" hopes Pivert, immediately deceived by Solomon's smiling nod. This brief exchange is one of the most memorable comedic movie scenes of French cinema and I admire Gérard Oury, who directed the film, for his equal talent as a writer. It's funny because no one would make such a big deal about having a Jewish driver and be so damn serious about it, and it's also smart because it sets the tone of our lead character: Louis de Funès as Victor Pivert, a racist, xenophobic and narrow-minded bigot. The scene is even funnier because he was previously attacking all the foreigners through their driving or mocking an interracial couple in a wedding, and even smarter because ten seconds before, the guy was stating that he wasn't racist. Not racist but glad though that his daughter is marrying a white, \"very white even a little bit too pale\" in his opinion.Only Louis de Funès could have played a despicable character with such comical appeal. Although we don't share Pivert's views, we feel sorry for his ignorance and only hope that he'll be taught a good lesson. And this lesson is very explicit in the film's synopsis: Pivert becomes the hostage of an Arab revolutionary leader named Mohamed Larbi Slimane (Claude Giraud) and to escape from some other Arab goons, both disguise as rabbis. In a nutshell, you have a Catholic and a Muslim passing for Jews. And beyond this ethnic premise, one of the funniest movies of French cinema: a comedy of slapstick and errors, but not without a subtle and poignant touch of social and political commentary.\"The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob\" marks also the pinnacle of the collaboration between Gérard Oury and Louis de Funès, after three of the greatest French box-office successes, with a de Funès, at the top of his game with his hot-tempered mannerisms and all the expressions that elevate his talent to the level of Chaplin, Keaton and Donald Duck. Take the way he mimics the sound of a woodpecker ('Pivert' in French) when he gives his name, his devilish smiles, his body language, a true comical talent who alas would never be the same after \"The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob\". Indeed, Louis de Funès suffered a massive heart attack two years after the film, and would never have the same range of physical talent. But let's get back to the laughs.\"The Mad Avdentures of Rabbi Jacob\" starts with a respected Rabbi leaving New York for the first time after 30 years, to celebrate his nephew's bar mitzvah. Rabbi Jacob is played by Marcel Dalio, Gabin's companion in \"Grand Illusion\", the croupier in \"Casablanca\", an underrated figure of French cinema, miserably exploited by the Nazi occupation to denounce the Jewish control on filmmaking. Rabbi Jacob is Dalio's last memorable role and what a fitting way to share it with another veteran actor. And involuntarily, it's Rabbi Jacob and his assistant who contribute to the misunderstanding, because they share the same physical features than Pivert and Slimane, so when the lead pair is seen at the airport by an old Jewish grandmother who can barely see, Pivert becomes Rabbi Jacob, and Slimane Rabbi Zeligman.The film is a spell-binding rodeo of gags, involving Pivert, Slimane, three Arab agents, three French cops, the Schmoll Family, Pivert's wife, from a chewing-gum factory to a dentist's room, from a synagogue to a Jewish quarter street, with an interesting running-gag involving Slimane's fondness on red-headed women. The film also features a series of unforgettable lines and moments now deeply rooted in French Pop-Culture. \"Silence, Rabbi Jacob, he will dance!\" shouts the grandmother with her strong Yiddish accent, and then starts the most emblematic moment of the film when Rabbi Jacob performs the Hassidic group dance. If you haven't seen the film yet, just watch this part on Youtube: a real classic of French cinema.The film is punctuated with more serious moments, particularly relevant in the context of the film (released right before the Kippur War) and even today, when both Pivert and Slimane bless the Jewish boy, and the powerful handshake between Sliman and Salomon, after Pivert genuinely asked them \"Sliman, Salomon are you guys cousins\" Like the greatest comedies, the film knows how to loosen up, and it was a nice touch for Gérard Oury to think of such moments. \"The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob\" is also the proof that we can mock any race or religion, through caricature and stereotypes, without being labeled as racist or Anti-semitic. Oury, from a Jewish background, can hardly be accused of Anti-Semitism of course, but through his film, he proves that one of the most essential elements of Jewish humor is self-derision.The film features also one of the most memorable scores of French cinema from the Master Vladimir Cosma, the sight of New York with his catchy Yiddish-like tone is the film's most unforgettable signature, enriched with a more melancholic melody at the end. Speaking of the ending, it's a bit chaotic in the way it sweeps off many of the subplots with some deus ex machina resolutions or cringe-worthy dated humor, but it doesn't really affect the film, not after so many great laughs anyway. Now, I've always been perplexed by Slimane's statement : \"When we ask a Jew question, he always replies by another question\" I asked one of my Jewish friends about that, and his reply was : \"What makes you think so\"
The film first released in the United States to packed houses in New York City in 1921 at the Criterion Theater.[9] It was the longest-running movie in the same theatre that year, having run for 16 consecutive weeks in the theatre.[9] Despite the hot summer, the film screened to full theaters on a daily basis, multiple times a day.[9] Its release started a so-called \"golem cult\" of golem-related media and adaptations.[10]
\"The rabbi's cat\" might be a somewhat misleading title, in the sense that the cat is devoted, to the point of idolatry, not to the rabbi but to the rabbi's teenage daughter. She is clearly the glorious sun of his small life. When the cat suddenly gains the power of speech, an interesting religious question arises : could/should an animal, however eloquent and intelligent, become a Jew Or is Judaism meant only for human beings As you may have guessed from the first paragraph, the movie explores themes like religion (especially, but not only, Judaism), identity and belonging. It is set mainly in an early twentieth-century Algeria, vibrant with colour, where representatives of the three monotheist religions meet and mingle - sometimes in an amicable way, sometimes not. The sun-drenched setting pulses with life and credibility, which leads me to suppose that author/creator Joann Sfar must be deeply familiar with that country. The various characters are beautifully individual or eccentric, such as a middle-aged man who walks around in the company of... a tame lion. (Unsurprisingly, nobody questions HIS right to walk, stand or sit wherever he wants.) And as to the cat of the title : it is the spitting image of a friend's cat I once knew. A skinny, ghost-like thing with huge eyes and ears, it spent most of its time reclining on a pile of cushions, pretty much like the Cleopatra of romantic legend.So there's quite a lot to like about this movie : its originality, its beauty, its wit, its freshness. On the minus side, the screenplay wanders and meanders. The movie seems to be based not on one graphic novel but on several graphic novels from the same \"Cat\" series ; it might have been stronger, narratively, if it had concentrated on telling a single short but coherent story.At one point the intrigue moves ever deeper into the heart of Africa. This allows for a short but lethal \"Tintin\" parody.In \"The rabbi's cat\" Joann Sfar seems to suggest that tolerance is the true crown and achievement of the religiously advanced mind, whatever that religion might be. In case you, dear reader, are one of these people who firmly believe that religions, by their very nature, cause conflict and war : now you know whom to send your next 200-page refutation to...
Joann Sfar is the director of Gainsbourg, Une Vie Heroique, a film that I loved immensely, one of the best I have seen lately. I was not astonished to learn that his Jewish origins are doubled by some Belgian identity, as he is a well known author of 'bandes dessinees'. The character of one of his most popular series - the rabbi's cat is coming now to screens and we spent a couple of hours in our last day in Paris to see this 3-D animated movie.The story is set in the Algiers of the 30s and the characters are the strongest side of the film. Rabbi Sfar is one of these venerated figures of Sephardi rabbis we would like to see more in real life. He is wise and has a great sense of humor, is tolerant and his best friend is the Muslim sheik Mohammed Sfar (of course, a mirror of himself in tolerance and ecumenicism), he gladly bends the strict rules of Judaic conversions when faced with true love and even pardons the cat who has swallowed his beloved parrot just because it got the divine gift of speaking. The ideal rabbi.Although we get too little time to know the other characters in the story we are already charmed by the daughter of the rabbi and w