Dance improvisation in the former synagogue of Kazimierz Dolny, Poland. The film’s title comes from the 1937 Yiddish language film, “The Dybbuk.” An authentic Yiddish folk and ecstatic dance where the mysterious sense of the porous borders between spirit and body, past and present, life and death, remembering and imagining, are evoked.
This bittersweet, dramedic story is a celebration of “small talk” in a pedestrian city during lockdown.
At Oneiroi, one baby refuses to have his dreams controlled...Intriguing student sci-fi film...
19th century Jaffa, a Jewish prostitute delivers oranges, but the Turks have other plans.