Bourekas film

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Bourekas films (Hebrew: סרטי בורקס) (named after bourekas) were a genre of Israeli-made comic melodrama films popular in Israel in the 1960s and 1970s.

History

Haaretz film critic Uri Klein describes Bourekas films as a "peculiarly Israeli genre of comic melodramas or tearjerkers... based on ethnic stereotypes".[1] They were "home-grown farces and melodramas that provided escapist entertainment during a tense period in Israeli history".[2] The term is said to have been coined by the Israeli film director Boaz Davidson, the creator of several such films, as a play-on-words on the "Spaghetti Western" genre, known as such because that particular Western subgenre was produced in Italy. Bourekas are a popular food in Israeli cuisine, it is also named because of a scene from The Policeman in which the title character gives one of his co-workers a bourekas.

Although Bourekas films were some of the most successful in the box office, they typically received terrible reviews from critics. They were cited as "low-brow" and "vulgar", with great concern as to this genre of film representing the Israeli people abroad.

Sallah Shabbati Biltzki in Al HaMishmar said, "Because parties in Israel are presented not only in the distorted mirror of a distorted humor but also in the ugly mirror of the image of public and organizational life...One has to think twice if such a film should represent us abroad".[4]

At the end of the 1970s, the popularity of the Bourekas film declined. In the 1980s, Israeli films became more politically charged and began to address controversial topics. Nowadays many of the Bourekas films have gained cult status in Israel.

Themes

The main theme in most Bourekas films is the conflict between ethnic cultures in Israel, in particular between the

Persia, and Poland. They employ slapstick humour, alternative identities and a combination of comedy and melodrama
.

Zuckermann (2005) argues that although "burekas films like snúker (Boaz Davidson 1975) and khakhám gamliél (Joel Silberg 1974) are regarded by many as the epitome of mizrahi culture, [they] are hybridic and modelled upon Ashkenazic shtetl life as in kúni lémel (Two Kuni Lemels a.k.a. The Flying Matchmaker) and shtétl Kabtsíel in Méndele Móykher Sfórim's Beémek Habakhá."[a][5]: 213 

In a book entitled "Israeli Bourekas Films: their Origins and Legacy"(2023),[8] the scholar Rami Kimchi claims that the portrayal of Israeli Mizrahi communities in these films bears a strong resemblance to the portrayal of the 19th century East European shtetl by classic Yiddish writers Kimchi attributes the commercial success of these films to their "hybridity", i.e. they were Israeli/Mizrahi and Diasporic/Ashkenazi at one and the same time, thereby satisfying the political, sociological, and psychological needs of both Mizrahi and Ashkenazi audiences in Israel. He believes eleven films produced between 1964 and 1977 make up the corpus of the genre. Kimchi also points out that the bourekas pattern has remained relevant to contemporary Israeli cinema and that there are two contemporary Israeli subgenres that are influenced by the historical Bourekas films: Neo Bourekas and Post Bourekas . Neo-Bourekas are films that innocently reproduce the paradigmatic representation of the Mizrahi neighborhood of the historical Bourekas films while adapting it to the current time and place, while Post-Bourekas are films that consciously copy several features of the aforementioned paradigmatic representation and exaggerate their performance to the point of creating a parody[9].

Actors and directors

Bourekas films were highly successful in Israel during the 1960s and 1970s, but were also criticized for being shallow. Some of the main actors and directors were:

Subgenres

Some films in this subgenre include:

Notable films

Several prominent Bourekas films are listed below in chronological order of production.

See also

  • Israeli culture
  • Israeli cinema
  • Cannon Films

Notes

  1. ^ Beémek Habakhá ("In the Vale of Tears"): Yiddish title: "Dos vintshfingerl"[6] ("The Wishing Ring")[7]

References

  1. ^ And Then There was One, Uri Klein, Haaretz
  2. ^ Overview: Israeli film
  3. .
  4. ^ Biltzki. "Another Opinion on "Sallah Shabbati"". Al hoMishmar.
  5. ^ a b Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2005). "Abba, why was Professor Higgins trying to teach Eliza to speak like our cleaning lady?: Mizrahim, Ashkenazim, Prescriptivism and the Real Sounds of the Israeli Language", Australian Journal of Jewish Studies 19, pp. 210-231.
  6. ^ "Dos vintshfingerl"
  7. ^ "The Wishing Ring"
  8. ^ Kimchi Rami, Israeli Bourekas Films: their Origins and Legacy, Indiana University Press,2023
  9. ^ Kimchi Rami, Israeli Bourekas Films: Their Origins and Legacy, Indiana university Press,2023
  10. ^ Meir Schnitzer, Israeli Cinema: Facts/ Plots/ Directors / Opinions, Kinneret Publishing House, 1994. P. 118.
  11. .
  12. ^ From the Archive: Israel's impressive losing record at the Oscars - Jewish Telegraphic Agency
  13. ^ 1965|Oscars.org
  14. ^ "Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow" Wins Foreign Language Film: 1965 Oscars