Assistive Technologies

Mothers of Today (Hayntige Mames)

Runtime
1hr 25mins
Directed by
Henry Lynn
Featuring
Esther Field,
Max Rosenblatt,
Gertrude Krause
Film Language
in Yiddish with English subtitles
Body

Opening night film and Mother's Day celebration! New England premiere of 35mm restoration from the archives of The National Center for Jewish Film, featuring a post-screening Q&A with NCJF Directors Sharon Pucker Rivo & Lisa Rivo. 

85th Anniversary Screening. This essentially unknown 1939 Yiddish film stars Esther Field, the 1930s radio personality known as the “Yiddishe Mama,” in one of her only appearances on film. Field plays an immigrant Jewish widow in New York who suffers the gradual deterioration of her family and Jewish tradition at the hands of neighborhood criminals and the realities of assimilation. This soapy, over-the-top drama — with cantors and gangsters, Yiddish songs, liturgical singing and comedy interludes — is surprisingly moving in its authentic emotional directness. 

Mothers of Today is a surviving example of the era’s shund genre: proudly sentimental, low-budget and low-brow films, books, and theater. Shund films were particularly popular with working-class Jewish immigrant audiences, who recognized and enjoyed seeing their own daily lives reflected on the big screen, especially the central role women played in Jewish family life. Mothers of Today is a fun ride, a time capsule, and a rescued piece of Jewish and cinema history. Bring a hanky for the tsuris, and a few insults to yell at the no-goodniks.

Please note: by purchasing a ticket to this screening, you agree that your contact information will be shared with the National Center for Jewish Film for the purpose of including you on their mailing lists. There are no member comps for NCJF Festival Films.

Reviews
Review Text

“For those with a particular interest in the Yiddish language, there’s an added bonus: It’s a fascinating record of American Yiddish circa 1939. The English words absorbed into the vocabulary (even among the European-born characters) and the American accents in the speech of the younger actors reflect the Yiddish that many of our parents and grandparents spoke. It’s nice to hear it again…Leon Field’s wonderfully over-the-top score provides the eye-rolling and chest-clutching.”

Review Author
A.L. Rickman
Review Publication
Forward

presented by

This Week

  • The new film from Luca Guadagnino (Call Me By Your Name), starring Zendaya, Josh O’Connor, and Mike Faist.

    Showtimes
  • The new ecopolitical thriller from  Ryûsuke Hamaguchi (Drive My Car and Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy).

    Showtimes
  • The new film from writer and director Alex Garland (Ex Machina, Annihilation), starring Kirsten Dunst.

    Showtimes
  • New 4K digital restoration of the Jean-Pierre Melville classic. 

    Showtimes
  • A 1920s English seaside town bears witness to a farcical and occasionally sinister scandal in this riotous mystery comedy.

    Showtimes
  • The new movie from filmmaker Jane Schoenbrun (We're All Going to the World's Fair).

    Showtimes
  • Massachusetts premiere! 

    Showtimes
  • The new film from director Ken Loach (I, Daniel Blake, The Wind that Shakes the Barley).

    Showtimes
  • The Rise of a Star... The Fall of a Legend!

    Showtimes
  • Nominated for Best International Feature Film at the 96th Academy Awards, from director Wim Wenders. 

    Showtimes
  • A hilarious and heartfelt comedy about the bonds of friendship and the unpredictable challenges of adulthood and becoming a parent.

    Showtimes
  • He's ''Action'' - She's trouble - Together, They're Lethal

    Showtimes
  • In this sensual experimental elegy by Harmony Korine, infrared photography evokes a dreamlike portrait of a tormented assassin.

    Showtimes
  • From director Hayao Miyazaki, comes a dazzling aerial adventure set in and above the scenic port towns of the Adriatic Sea.

    Showtimes
  • Some fight for money... Some fight for glory... He's fighting for his son's love.

    Showtimes
  • Followed by Q&A with Brandeis University Professor Laura Jockusch.

    Showtimes
  • Hayao Miyazaki’s celebration of childhood imagination tells the story of two girls' adventure in a forest filled with magical creatures.

    Showtimes
  • Revenge: Our Dad the Nazi Killer

    New England premiere, featuring a post-film Q&A with Brandeis University Professor Laura Jockusch.

    Showtimes
  • Featuring a post-screening conversation with guests from the Huntington Theatre Company's production of Toni Stone.

    Showtimes
  • Composer Jeff Rapsis performs a live piano score to the silent comedic masterwork written, directed, and starring Charlie Chaplin!

    Showtimes
  • Hayao Miyazaki's masterpiece that has dazzled audiences worldwide with its imagination, exhilarating battles and deep humanity.

    Showtimes
  • The new film from director Ethan Hawke, starring Maya Hawke, Cooper Hoffman, and Laura Linney

    Showtimes
  • Richard Linklater’s sunlit neo-noir starring Glen Powell as a strait-laced professor who moonlights as a fake hit man.

    Showtimes