The International Tel Aviv LBGTQ+ Film Festival will be running at the Tel Aviv Cinematheque from December 21-31 at a number of venues around the city.
Director Rimas Tuminas has a genius for abbreviating complexities into simple movements.
Michael Abayev, a young rapper from Ashkelon soothes some fresh wounds.
The questions they were asked ranged from: “Do you dream about them at night?” to “What is the last thing you did together?”
Arik Einstein has always provided a soundtrack for Israeli life, and his work is relevant now more than ever during this time of war and loss in Israel.
The updated program will be Prelude in the Afternoon of Faun by Debussy, the Clarinet Concerto No. 1 by Crussel, and Symphony No. 2 by Johannes Brahms.
Due to the security situation in the north, the Docaviv Galilee Film Festival in Ma’alot Tarshiha cannot hold physical screenings, but there will be an online edition of the festival November 22-25.
Various members of the ensemble have been traveling the length and breadth of the country, playing – for free – to audiences of all sizes and age groups, and at all kinds of venues, grand and modest.
“Suddenly there was a fresh vibe in the corridors,” he told the Post, “a new life, we secured a budget to support these productions and everyone gave a hand.”
The movie is a filmed concert that Swift performed earlier this year in Los Angeles, as part of her worldwide tour, dedicated to all the different eras in her 17-year career, hence the title.