SELECTED SCREENINGS
Toronto Jewish Film Festival (2004)
During the late 1920s, many impoverished Jews searching for a better life made their way to Birobidzhan, the Soviet Jewish Autonomous Region on the Chinese border. This melodrama tells the story of a Jewish family's immigration to Birobidzhan and their experiences as settlers on a collective farm in the area.
While the family encounters hardships in adjusting to this new way of life (including son-in-law Pinya's greedy, misguided search for gold) their search for assimilation is ultimately shown as positive. While the film is essentially a Soviet propaganda piece emphasizing the utopian dream of Birobidzhan as a socialist Jewish homeland, the reality of the area was harsh and inhospitable.
PURCHASE DVD
HOME USE ONLY
$36.00 plus shipping
Home Use Only DVD (Not for Classroom/Institutional Use)Does not include Public Performance Rights
Home Use Policy (pdf)INSTITUTIONAL USE
$72.00 plus shipping
Classroom/Institutional Use Only DVDDoes not include Public Performance Rights
Institutional Use Policy (pdf)
The National Center For Jewish Film
Brandeis University, Lown 102, MS053, Waltham MA 02454
P: (781) 899 7044, F: (781) 736 2070
Seekers of Happiness
Iskateli schastyaaka: Birobidzhan, A Greater Promise
USSR, 1934, 84 minutes, b&w
Russian with English subtitles
Directed by Vladimir Korsh-Sablin
$72 Institutional Use DVD
Buy Now
$36 Home Use DVD
Buy NowPublic Exhibition Beta Rental also available
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