I *heart* Movie Day
January 16, 2005 | Filed Under Blog |This morning I wandered over to my Talmud teacher. Between the warmish weather we had today and the burnoutish feeling that one has a couple of weeks before finals (especially when one’s assignment for the day is to slog through an academic article in Hebrew), I was feeling a little cheeky.
“David, I know we’re like, adults in a serious program and all, but does that mean we never get to have Movie Day?”
I was just expecting a snarky response back. Instead, he said,
“Yeah, OK. Find something connected to avodah zarah (idolotry, our topic this semester) and we’ll pick a day next week to do it.”
Huh? Really. He said that as long as it was of the relevant Greco-Roman era (so, sadly, no teen-witch movies), it was fair game. We could do it as the last class, have some bagels and kick back. Right on.
So far the candidates that have been suggested for viewing are:
Troy
Jesus Christ Superstar*
The Passion of the Christ*
Sparticus
The Life of Brian*
History of the World Part I
Clash of the Titans
Ben Hur
Gladiator
Caligula**
and maybe one or two more, don’t remember. I think Troy is in the lead right now–I was very big on JC Superstar, lots of other people expressed interest in the Passion (which, you might imagine, is not what I’m personally terribly into–nor of course Gladiator), as much because it’s important for us baby rabbis to have seen it as because it’s in poorly pronounced Aramaic. (I’ve seen a few excerpts, it’s really awful on the pronunciation tip.) Instructor thought the Passion might be a leetle on the heavy side for an end-of-semester party. So we’ll see. If anyone out there has any other brilliant suggestions, please, let me know.
Of course, some people are saying that given the choice between an extra day of in-class review or a movie, they pick the former (though given a choice between another class of these academic articles or a movie, they pick the latter, DUH.) So whether or not it actually happens is TBD, but it’s excellent reinforcement for me re: being more cheeky more often. Bring on the cheek! Heck, bring on JC Superstar!!!!
(My classmates just don’t understand the power of profound kitch. Philistines. I may have to go rent the thing sometime soon just for my own enjoyment, dangit.)
*No, no, this isn’t to imply that Christians are being conflated with the pagany stuff in our gemara. The Rabbinic era Christian/Jewish thing is wayyy more complicated than that. But there are Romans in both movies.
**Suggested and then rejected by the instructor on the grounds that it is, really, soft porn.
I can’t believe Life of Brian isn’t in the lead. What’s wrong with your class, D?
Comment by The RetiKhah — January 16, 2005 #
Yeah, dude, I dunno. I just work here.
Comment by Danya — January 16, 2005 #
Why not consider Kristof Kieszkowski’s Decalogue: One. (www.imdb.com/title/tt0094982/) I don’t know if you can get it there, but WOW!
Comment by Anonymous — January 16, 2005 #
“it’s easy to see without looking too far that not much is really sacred”–bob
Comment by Meir — January 16, 2005 #
Micah, film looks great, but…. where are the Romans???
xo
Comment by Danya — January 16, 2005 #
I’m a huge fan of “Life of Brian,” as you’ve probably gathered, given that I mentioned it in a blog post a couple of days ago. *g* I fell in love with it as an adolescent, and when I watched it recently I was amazed by how funny and resonant it still is…
Comment by Rachel — January 17, 2005 #
Don’t forget Jason and the Argonauts, or anything by Homer….
Comment by Shawn Landres — January 17, 2005 #
Or, how about “Alexander”? (If it’s showing in Israel….)
Sorry to read about the burned bed! When I was a kid I always had an electric blanket - as an adult I’ve been more wary of the things, fearing exactly what happened to you. Next stop: the comforter store.
Comment by Rebecca — January 20, 2005 #