SCREENINGS
New Center for Arts and Culture, Boston (2008)
Vienna Jewish Film Festival, Vienna Film Archive (2008)
Festival of Jewish Cinema, Australia (2007)
Deutsches Film Museum, Germany (2006)
American Museum Moving Image, New York (2004)
Schauburg Film Theatre, Germany (2003)
Berliner Film Kunsthaus Babylon, Germany (1997)
Laemmle Theater, Los Angeles (1997)
Barbican Center for the Arts, London (1996)
Tucson Jewish Film Festival (1995)
Pacific Film Archive, California (1995)
Vienna Jewish Film Festival, Austria (1995)
Arbeitskreis Film, Germany (1993)
Goethe Institute, Italy (1993)
Danish Filmmuseum, Denmark (1993)
Swedish FilmInst, Sweden (1993)
Milwaukee Jewish Film Festival (1992)
RESTORED PRINT WITH COMPLETE NEW SUBTITLES
When poverty and persecution compel his Polish landsmen to leave their shtetl, "Uncle" Moses, the crude and lusty former butcher, welcomes them to the promised land of his Lower East Side clothing factory. A master in the harsh new American system, with its fourteen-hour workday, Moses attempts to reconstruct the lost harmony of the shtetl community in the paternalistic order of his sweatshop. He uses his wealth to show off and leaves the daily operations to his nephew Sam.
When Masha Melnick pleads him for her father's job Moses, taken with the girl, rehires him. Masha is the sweetheart of Charlie, a labor activist who is trying to organize a union in Moses' factory. Moses begins to court Masha who agrees to marry him in order to improve her family's desperate financial position. She bears his child but confesses she feels wretched because she did not listen to her heart and marry Charlie who incites the workers to strike. The first Yiddish talkie engaged directly in the progressive currents of the day, political and aesthetic.
CRITICAL ACCLAIM
Uncle Moses stands as one of the finest examples of Yiddish cinema and is unique in its portrayal of a despotic Jewish factory boss who takes pleasure in seeing the "tables turned" by employing the former leaders and highly respected men of his shtetl as sweatshop tailors. Uncle Moses is a harsh man who uses his wealth and power to fight against unionization of his shop (by a young idealistic Jew) and manipulate women, especially the daughters of his workers.
-J. Hoberman, Bridge of Light: Yiddish Film Between Two Worlds
"Here is a chance to see one of the century's greatest actors (Maurice Schwartz) in a melodrama focusing on work and tenement life in the Lower East Side."
-Georgia Brown The Village Voice
Uncle Moses "is a symphony of contradictions, which Schwartz orchestrates brilliantly."
-Richard Corliss, Time
EXTERNAL LINKS
Review in THE NEW YORK TIMES (11/21/91)
HOME USE ONLY
$36.00 plus shipping
Home Use Only DVD (Not for Classroom/Institutional Use)Does not include Public Performance Rights
Home Use Policy (pdf)INSTITUTIONAL USE
$72.00 plus shipping
Classroom/Institutional Use Only DVDDoes not include Public Performance Rights
Institutional Use Policy (pdf)
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Uncle Moses
USA, 1932, 87 minutes
B&W, Yiddish with new English subtitles
Directed by Sidney Goldin and Aubrey Scotto
Based on the novel by Sholem Asch
RESTORED
with New English Subtitles by
The National Center for Jewish Film
$72 Institutional Use DVD
Buy Now
$36 Home Use DVD
Buy NowPublic Exhibition 16MM, Beta Rental also available
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