Berlin-Jérusalem
- Berlin-Jérusalem
-
Berlin-Jérusalem (Berlin-Yerushalaim) est un film israélien réalisé par Amos Gitaï, sorti en 1989.
Synopsis
L'histoire de deux femmes dans les années 1930. La première, Else Lasker-Schüler, une poétesse expressionniste allemande, observe la montée du nazisme à Berlin puis quitte cette ville pour Jérusalem. La seconde, la Russe Mania Shohat, appelée Tania dans le film, s'installe dans une communauté sioniste en Palestine.
Fiche technique
- Titre : Berlin-Jérusalem
- Titre original : Berlin-Yerushalaim
- Réalisation : Amos Gitaï
- Scénario : Amos Gitaï et Gudie Lawaetz
- Pays d'origine : Israël
- Format : Couleurs - 35 mm
- Genre : Drame
- Durée : 89 minutes
- Date de sortie : 1989
Distribution
- Lisa Kreuzer : Else
- Rivka Neuman : Tania
- Markus Stockhausen : Ludwig
- Benjamin Levi : Paul
- Vernon Dobtcheff : éditeur
- Veronica Lazar : secrétaire
- Bernard Eisenschitz : homme au café berlinois
- Raoul Guylad : docteur Weintraub
- Juliano Mer : Menahme
- Yossi Graber : Zins
- Mark Ivanir : Dov Ben Gelman
- Ori Levy : Anton Keller
- Keren Mor : Fania
- Gadi Poor : Nissanov
- Bilha Rosenfeld : Tzipora
- Danny Roth : Yashek
- Ohad Shahar : Nahum
- Christian Van Aken : vendeur de ticket
Liens externes
Wikimedia Foundation.
2010.
Contenu soumis à la licence CC-BY-SA. Source : Article Berlin-Jérusalem de Wikipédia en français (auteurs)
Regardez d'autres dictionnaires:
Jerusalem's Church — Church of the Archangels Michael and Gabriel (1944/45) Jerusalemskirche (de) Kirche zu den Erzengeln Michael und Gabriel (1944/45) Jerusalem s Church in 1906, seen from south (Lindenstraße), view into Jerusalemer Straße with Lindenstr. continuing … Wikipedia
Berlin Graduate School for Transnational Studies — Vorlage:Infobox Hochschule/Träger fehltVorlage:Infobox Hochschule/Mitarbeiter fehltVorlage:Infobox Hochschule/Professoren fehlt Berlin Graduate School for Transnational Studies … Deutsch Wikipedia
BERLIN, NAPHTALI ẒEVI JUDAH — (known as ha Neẓiv from the initials of his name; 1817–1893), one of the leading rabbis of his generation, and head of the yeshivah at volozhin for some 40 years. He was born at Mir and already in his early youth was famed as a great talmudic… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Jerusalem Biblical Zoo — Zoo logo A Black Handed Spider Monkey swings on a rope over the artificial lake at the zoo Date opened 1940 … Wikipedia
BERLIN, ḤAYYIM — (1832–1912), Lithuanian rabbi, eldest son of R. Naphtali Ẓevi Judah Berlin , head of the yeshivah at Volozhin for some 40 years. Ḥayyim Berlin received his education from his father and became conversant with all aspects of rabbinic literature as … Encyclopedia of Judaism
BERLIN, SIR ISAIAH — (1909–1997), English philosopher and political scientist. Born in Latvia, Berlin was taken to England as a boy. He later studied at Oxford, where he lectured in philosophy from 1932 and became the first Jewish Fellow of All Souls College in 1938 … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Jerusālem — (in den Keilinschriften Ursalimmu, in den Hieroglyphen Schalam, griech. und lat. Hierosolyma, hebr. Jeruschalajim, »Wohnung des Friedens«, bei den Arabern El Kuds, »das Heiligtum«, bei den Türken Küdsi Schêrif genannt), die alte Hauptstadt… … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
Jerusalem Prize — Awarded for writers whose works have dealt with themes of human freedom in society Presented by Organisors of the Jerusalem International Book Fair Country Israel First awarded 1963 The Jerusalem Prize for the Freedom of the … Wikipedia
BERLIN, RAYNA BATYA — (c. 1817–c. 1875), learned East European woman remembered for her concern with the status of women in traditional Judaism. Berlin lived her entire life in the orbit of the Volozhin Yeshivah. Her grandfather … Encyclopedia of Judaism
BERLIN, NOAH ḤAYYIM ẒEVI HIRSCH — (1734–1802), German rabbi and halakhist. Berlin was born in Fuerth and was the son of Abraham Meir Berlin, the communal leader of Franconia. He became a dayyan at Fuerth in 1764 and later served as rabbi in Bayersdorf and Bayreuth. In 1783 Berlin … Encyclopedia of Judaism