Alles auf Zucker!

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Alles auf Zucker!
Alles auf Zucker! film poster
Directed byDani Levy
Written by
Produced byManuela Stehr
Starring
Music byNiki Reiser
Distributed byX Verleih AG
Release date
  • 31 December 2004 (2004-12-31) (Germany)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman

Alles auf Zucker! (

Wessi" confrontation within Germany. Directed by Dani Levy, the cast includes Henry Hübchen, Hannelore Elsner, Udo Samel, Gołda Tencer and Steffen Groth
.

Director Dani Levy, himself

Jewish, has made an ironic comedy about modern Jewish identity
in present-day Germany. Henry Hübchen stars as Jaecki Zucker.

Cast

Plot and details

Jakob Zuckermann alias Jaeckie Zucker is Jewish. But he says he's got nothing to do with "that club", ever since his mother and his little brother left him behind the

Shiv'ah period of mourning, and their Mamme's will requires them to reconcile in the presence of the rabbi and the family. If they fail, her assets will be bestowed upon the Jewish community of Berlin, and not them.[1]

Most of the scenes were shot at

as himself.

Golda Tencer does not speak German, even though she spoke her own lines fluently. She had the German text written down on small pieces of paper, hidden in her purse. During the movie she can sometimes be seen looking down into her purse.[citation needed
]

The soundtrack by Niki Reiser is light and jovial, featuring some klezmer music as well.

Overview

The movie was co-funded by the television channels

Shoah
in the centre, but is a comedy about the crazy twists and turns of fate that befall a family that finds itself again. The two Jewish families are more symbolic of the current problems and past tragedies of the division of Germany between East and West, and how the country and its people are struggling to find to each other again. This division affected every German, regardless of their religion. The film depicts in a comic manner the divisions within Judaism between a secularised Jew from the former GDR who has to reconcile himself with his Orthodox brother from the West.

The film has been termed "an audacious, politically incorrect, self-ironical Jewish comedy". It was critically acclaimed in Germany and won a number of awards, most notably the 2005

Deutscher Filmpreis in several categories.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b "Alles auf Zucker!". filmportal.de. Retrieved 31 July 2012.

External links