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Restored by NCJF
Like Sholem Aleichem, on whose Motl Peysi, the Cantor's Son and The Enchanted Tailor stories Laughter Through Tears is based, director Gricher-Cherikover leavens pathos with humor in his earthy portrait of prerevolutionary shtetl life. Motl's father dies, leaving him to survive on his own in a changing world while the tailor Shimen-Elye buys a she-goat which mysteriously changes gender each time its new owner stops at the inn between Kozodoyevka, where he purchased the creature, and Zlodyevke, where he lives.In accord with then-official Soviet policies against antisemitism (which were always as odds with prevailing popular sentiments), Gricher-Cherikover emphasizes the poverty and repression of Jews under Czarist rule. He capitalizes on the skills of the Moscow Art Theater's actors through close attention to facial expression and gesture, and particularly of child actor Moshele Silberman.
A sound version of the film opened on November 19, 1933 at the Acme Theater in New York City where it was held over for six weeks due to its extreme popularity. Actor George Jessel said, "I enjoyed every minute. It is a classic, you will rave about it!"
The National Center For Jewish Film
Brandeis University, Lown 102, MS053, Waltham MA 02454
P: (781) 899 7044, F: (781) 736 2070
Laughter Through Tears
Skvoz Slezyaka Through Tears
USSR 1928 92 minutes B&W Silent with English intertitles
Directed by Grigori Gricher-Cherikover$72 Institutional Use VHS
Public Exhibition 35MM, 16MM, Beta Rental also available
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