This is powerful and depressing stuff.
Protocols of Zion (2005)
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Reviews Counted:54
Fresh:37
Rotten:17
Average Rating:6.4/10
Consensus: Levin takes viewers on a personal journey, laying bare the ugly and varied faces of anti-Semitism.
Theatrical Release:Oct 21, 2005 Limited
Synopsis: While rattling through the bustling streets of New York City in a yellow cab, filmmaker Marc Levin (SLAM) discovered the idea for his next film from an unlikely source. Striking up a conversation... While rattling through the bustling streets of New York City in a yellow cab, filmmaker Marc Levin (SLAM) discovered the idea for his next film from an unlikely source. Striking up a conversation with his Egyptian taxi driver, Levin was unnerved when the conversation turned to the events of September 11, 2001. Angrily informing the filmmaker that he believed no Jews had died in the terrorist attacks on that day, the cabbie explained that they had all been warned of the event in advance so they could stay safely home. Levin subsequently turned to the 100-year-old book THE PROTOCOLS OF THE MEETINGS OF THE LEARNED ELDERS OF ZION, which was exposed as a forgery in the 1920s, but is still followed by a disconcertingly large number of anti-Semites across the globe. After examining the book--which was furtively written by the Russian Secret Police, and was alleged to be the meeting minutes of a group of Jews who were hell-bent on world domination--Levin decided to explore some of the protocols in his film. Traveling across America with his father, Levin encounters various hate-filled figures, and attempts to understand their feelings toward Jews. His most entertaining, Michael Moore-like excursions take place in New York City, where he encounters people whose oddball behavior does a fine job of discrediting their views, and attends a discussion group about Mel Gibson's THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST. However, these moments are tempered by some jaw-dropping footage of an Egyptian TV mini-series based on the PROTOCOLS book and the Malaysian prime minister paraphrasing from the pages in 2003. Creating a fascinating and worthwhile film, Levin sensibly discounts various crackpot theories, but makes it clear that many of the people who spread anti-Semitic feeling remain worryingly influential. [More]
Starring: Marc Levin, Al Levin
Starring: Marc Levin, Al Levin
Director: Marc Levin
Director: Marc Levin
Producer: Marc Levin, Steve Kalafer
Composer: John Zorn
Studio: ThinkFilm
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Reviews for Protocols of Zion
Levin approaches his subject with a healthy amount of sarcasm ... and does not refrain from flat-out arguing with his interview subjects.
Jewish filmmaker Marc Levin (Slam) embarks on a personal odyssey to explore the roots of the fraud, its impact on Jewish history of the 20th century and its acceptance among the Jew-haters of our troubled time.
Far from neat or focused, but always enlightening and often surprisingly funny.
Illuminates manifestations of anti-Semitism without ever really elucidating or posing solutions to the problem.
Purporting to look at the roots of modern-day anti-Semitism, Levin only has eyes for a well-worn checklist of Jew-haters and oppressors, his shoddy search for answers turning up not a single one.
If such a peurile tract comes from "elders" there's some significant retardation involved.
an unflinching and often terrifying look at a particularly insidious type of hate that has for too long flown under the radar of mainstream attention
...too unshaped and rambling to leave one as stunned as one should be. This may be the first case where a remake of a documentary is in order.
Steering clear of polemics, Levin takes a humanistic stand in navigating the divisive landscape. The extremely personal film is strongest when dealing with emotions at opposite ends of the spectrum.
The central message is that people who want to hate will embrace anything that supports their beliefs.
Levin's film is most effective as it objectively documents the history of international anti-Semitism, but loses ground whenever it reverts back to anecdotal coverage of the subject.
It's probably useful for the world to know the extreme lengths to which bigotry is willing to travel; Protocols may not be the best-made documentary, but it definitely fills in those blanks.
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