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Trembling Before G-D
 
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Trembling Before G-D (2001)
4.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Video Details
Trembling Before G-d is an unprecedented feature documentary that shatters assumptions about faith, sexuality, and religious fundamentalism. Built around intimately told personal stories of Hasidic and Orthodox Jews who are gay or lesbian, the film portrays a group of people who face a profound dilemma eligious identity and tradition in the world.

Review
Exploring an often hidden segment of the population, Trembling Before G-d is an accessible documentary told with compassion and featuring and excellent score by John Zorn. The highly personal nature of the interviews resonates well with the frequent use of Yiddish and Hebrew words used to express religious sentiments that are almost untranslatable. The serious conflict between sexuality and religion is an age-old problem, but the focus here remains interesting and urgent to the subjects' lives. David is an upper-middle-class Orthodox Jew living in L.A. who appears completely composed and calm despite his long struggles with accepting his sexuality. On the other hand, Israel is a Hasidic gay man from Brooklyn who gives a public tirade in the street about the power of his faith. Many of the subjects appear in obscure framing devices where only their mouths, hands, or silhouettes can be seen. Not wanting to risk exposure but still wanting to participate, members from Jewish homosexual support groups perform traditional rituals that appear in high contrast silhouettes throughout the film. The implied community is a touching conclusion after the various stories of isolation and alienation. The only weak parts are the pastoral scenes involving clouds and landscapes following the more inspirational commentary, which are tedious and give extraneous pondering time. While duly serving its niche audience, Trembling Before G-d is also a moving learning experience for Gentiles with little exposure to the intricacies of Orthodox life. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
5 star: 84%  (11)
4 star: 7%  (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star: 7%  (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars GATHER IN ALL THE EXILES..., Dec 27 2003
By Lawyeraau (Balmoral Castle) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
Winner of the Teddy Award of the 2001 Berlin Film festival and a 2001 Selection of the Sundance Film festival, this is a beautifully realized documentary that is devoted to the stories of those who are gay and lesbian within the Jewish Orthodox and Hasidic communities. Their stories and their struggles break the viewer's heart. It shows the lengths that people will go to try to reconcile their Jewish faith with its strictures regarding homosexuality and still remain a member of that religious community. Some of the stories are very sad, but all are, nonetheless, enlightening. People of all faiths should make it a point to see this film, because reconciliation of faith with one's sexual orientation is not limited to those who profess Judaism. It is a question with which Catholics, as well as those of other faiths, grapple.

Masterfully directed by Sandi Simcha Dubowski, the film boasts a wonderful, joyous soundtrack by John Zorn that conjures up the biblical underpinnings and zest of the Jewish faith. The filming of people behind a white screen so that they appear as dark silhouettes against a light backdrop, at times, to show moments in the religious life of those of the Jewish faith is also striking and very powerful, as well as aesthetically pleasing. This was done because so many who participated in this film refused to appear on screen, so as to avoid ostracism within their respective communities. The final result is visually mesmerizing.

It took the director six years to get enough people who dared to speak out on film about this issue. Some of them are out of the closet, but a number of them are not. Some of them, mostly women, are, in fact, married to a member of the opposite sex, despite their sexual orientation, mostly quite unhappily. How terrible for all parties concerned, as none have been able to achieve true communion with their spouses. Yet, many feel that living a lie is the only way to remain within their religious community, and for them this is preferable to ostracism from the only way of life they have ever known. Some have left their religious communities, but that, too, has been a road fraught with personal turmoil, as well as with emotional trauma and anguish. Others have stayed true to their natures, but still try to live a religious life, though they are no longer participating in the religious communities that have rejected them. Some have despaired and felt suicide to be their only alternative.

Some of the advice given to homosexual men by their rabbis so that these men may overcome their "affliction", for that is how homosexuality is perceived by many in the Orthodox and Hasidic communities, is quite startling. In the Jewish faith. strict construction of biblical texts holds that certain types of sexual intercourse constitutes an abomination. So, homosexual men are encouraged to marry women, despite their sexual orientation. Never mind that such men will also be unlikely to have a true communion with their wives. Yet, at the same time, many in these religious communities prefer that their daughters not marry such men. So there is some visceral, tacit acknowledgment that this is not a recipe for a good marriage. Behavior modification, aversion therapy, and psychotherapy are some of the other weapons the religious community uses to mount their campaign to correct one's sexual orientation. Some within these religious communities hold the antiquated belief that one's sexual orientation can be changed or sublimated.

The film provides much food for thought, and the topic is one that has been previously considered to be taboo. The issue of homosexuality within religious communities is now one that is ripe for discussion. The director has managed to bring the issue to the forefront in a tasteful, yet thought provoking way. The director is always mindful of the humanity of those whose stories he is telling. It is a humanity of which those in these religious communities should also be mindful, as all are made in the image of God.

This is a DVD worth having for those who are interested in different cultures or faiths within the construct of the issue that the film is exploring. It is a two disc, value laden DVD with crisp visuals and sound. Asides from the usual commentary and theatrical trailers, it has one disc entirely devoted to special features. It discusses the medieval rite of atonement for homosexual acts. It has an panel of prominent rabbis discussing their thoughts on the issues raised by the film. There is a special project in Israel that was established in the wake of this film and a number of panelists discuss their experiences with some of these issues. The director even has a featurette on his grandmother, who seems to be quite a character. All in all, this is a DVD worth having in one's personal collection. Bravo!

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating, validating, precedent-setting, Nov 5 2003
By A Customer
When this movie premiered at a San Francisco film festival in 2001, the lines stretched around the block and I couldn't get into the theater. I've been eagerly awaiting the DVD's release, and -- cliche alert!-- it was well worth the wait. Seeing this film, I cried, I laughed. I'm Jewish (not Orthodox) and gay, and my coming-out created much 'tsuris' in my family, so I could relate to the material on many levels.

I did not expect to learn so much about spirituality, theology, and the awesome spirit and strength of the individual. The people who "dared" to speak out in this documentary are role models-- down to earth, articulate, struggling, wise, warm.

Special mention must be made of the mesmerizing soundtrack by John Zorn; the bonus, sweet, short feature, "Tomboychik," featuring the filmmaker's irreverent and delightful Grandma; and the "on the road" featurette showing how the film transformed the lives of the women and men involved.

*Trembling Before G-d* seems especially relevant in these times when the church [and synagogue] are dealing with the public's growing realization that being gay is neither an illness nor a crime. The existence of this film is a mitzvah.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Moving, Touching, Thought Provoking, 2 THUMBS UP!, Oct 2 2003
By Jennifer R Levinsky (Bronx, New York United States) - See all my reviews
I was lucky enough