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Monthly Screenings

Robin Williams: A Tribute

This month, we mark the tenth anniversary of the passing of the great Robin Williams, one of the biggest Hollywood stars of the latter part of the 20th century.
 
Williams was a gifted actor and a successful stuntman. His acting career began in television in the comedy series "Mork and Mindy," where he played an alien acclimatizing on Earth. Williams' first film role was in Robert Altman's flop, Popeye (1980). The failure did not stick to Williams, who, following the film, had a series of breakout roles and hits.
 
Williams was known, early on in his career, for his improvisational abilities, which were expressed in his quickness of speech, physical humor, and sense of timing - brilliant qualities that spewed from his experience on the stand-up stage to his performances on the screen. The combination of his pleasant expression, positive characters, and the possessed restlessness - created intense and singular performances, which gave a dramatic and human anchor to his films and made them hits. Thus, Williams was the star of the most successful and memorable films of the 1980s and 1990s: The World According to Garp (1982), Good Morning Vietnam (1987), Stand By Me (1989), Awakenings (1990), The Fisher King (1991), Aladdin (1992), Mrs. Doubtfire (1993), The Bird Cage (1996), Good Will Hunting" (1998), to name a few.
 
Williams was a unique star, brilliant, witty, and compassionate - who successfully realized his talents and, in his last years, even tried to challenge the image created for him in films such as Insomnia and One Hour Photo. Unfortunately, his career ended too soon, and the lack of a dramatic comedy star like him is well-felt. This month's program is a wonderful opportunity to enjoy this great talent and his excellent films.
Alon Gur Arey (in Heb.) on the late Robin Williams, one of the greatest comedic actors of all time

Good Morning, Vietnam

Dir.: Barry Levinson
| 108 minutes

Saigon 1965. A military radio operator comes to the city to entertain the American gunner in Vietnam. From the start, he clashes with his superiors due to his non-conformist nature. With Robin Williams' inexhaustible energy, the film became one of the biggest hits of American cinema.

The World According to Garp

Dir.: George Roy Hill
| 136 minutes

The life story of the only son of the high priestess of the feminists. Through John Irving, the bestseller, adapted to the screen by George Roy Hill, comes this ironic perspective on the modern world and the American way of life.

Dead Poets Society

Dir.: Peter Weir
| 128 minutes

1959. In a conservative private school in New England a charismatic and unconventional English teacher influences his impressionable students, not always in the right direction... An extremely well-made and well-acted film.

The Fisher King

Dir.: Terry Gilliam
| 137 minutes

A famous New York City D.J attempts to commit suicide, but is saved by an eccentric homeless man. The encounter between the two men, exquisitely performed by Robin Williams and Jeff Bridges, unfolds into an unusual, absorbing, comic, and tender film.

Awakenings

Dir.: Penny Marshall
| 121 minutes

The story of neurologist Oliver Sacks, who encountered a group of statuelike paralytics and "awakens" them using a new drug. But the miracle cure proves temporary... Robin Williams as the doctor and Robert De Niro as one of the awakeners give shape to this moral dilemma.

Mrs. Doubtfire

Dir.: Chris Columbus
| 120 minutes

Daniel loves his children very much and the thought that after the divorce he won't be in their lives like he always was pushes him to dress up as a maid in her 60s and work for his wife. Robin Williams, with the ability to switch between the comic and the dramatic, and with an abundance of warmth and humanity, created a character that captures the heart.

Good Will Hunting

Dir.: Gus Van Sant
| 126 minutes

Will Hunting, a janitor at M.I.T., has a gift for mathematics that can take him far away from his blue collar roots. To achieve his dream he must turn his back on his neighborhood. 

Aladdin

Dir.: Ron Clements, John Musker
| 90 minutes

Aladdin is sent by the sultan's evil assistant to retrieve the magic lamp hidden in a cave. The plot thickens when a genie emerges from the lamp and grants Aladdin three wishes. The classic fairy tale gets a tear-jerkingly funny (and unfaithful) adaptation with Robin Williams in the role of Genie.

The Birdcage

Dir.: Mike Nichols
| 119 minutes

An American remake of the French farce La Cage Aux Follies in which a gay couple is forced to play straight when the son of one of them is going to marry the daughter of the right-wing politician. Using a classic comedy of errors structure, Nichols exposes American society and its false values.