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The boys are playing Star Trek in Cartman's mother's new minivan and, as usual, the antisemitic Cartman insults Kyle's Jewish heritage. Cartman dares Kyle to watch The Passion of the Christ, the blockbuster film which Cartman cites as proof that everybody hates the Jews, he states that he saw the film 34 times and states there is one scene in the film where the Jews had a chance to save Jesus ...
Jacob the Liar (1975 film) Jakob the Liar; The Jazz Singer (Ford Startime) The Jazz Singer (1952 film) The Jazz Singer; The Jazz Singer (1980 film) The Jester (1937 film) Jettchen Gebert's Story; Jew Süss (1934 film) The Jew's Christmas; Jewtopia (film) Jud Süß; Judith and Holofernes (1929 film) Judith of Bethulia
Southern Jews on the other hand could be considered more religious Jews rather than cultural or ethnic Jews. This has to do with the fact that most Jewish immigrants who settled in the South came from Germany , where Jewish identity is tied only to religion, rather than Eastern Europe , where Judaism is seen as a cultural and ethnic identity in ...
Jesus (also known as The Jesus Film) is a 1979 American Biblical drama film directed by Peter Sykes and John Krish, and produced by John Heyman. In Jesus , the life of Jesus Christ is depicted, primarily using the Gospel of Luke as the main basis for the story.
The film was originally slated to be titled, Judas and Jesus. [1] One source stated of the film that "The ABC television network tried to cash in on the craze for The Passion of the Christ". [2] The film "focuses on Judas himself with Jesus being a significant being a significant presence but having more of a supporting role". [1]
A landmark film, Gentleman's Agreement, was produced in 1947. It highlighted antisemitism in America during the post-World War II years in America. In the film a reporter, played by Gregory Peck, decides to write a story on the subject, by posing as a Jew himself to gain first-hand experience. The film won the Academy Award for Best Picture for ...
According to movie historian Leonard Maltin, who declared the film a "BOMB" (his lowest possible rating), "This drivel should have been titled In Search of Morons Who Will Believe Anything." [5] Produced on a low budget, the movie earned over $22.4 million at the North American box office [1] [6] and was the 34th highest-grossing film of 1979. [7]
Pushcarts and Plantations is a 1998 documentary about Louisiana Jewry from award-winning director Brian Cohen. The documentary combines interviews with historians and locals to tell the 300-year-old history of different Jewish communities found in the North, South, and New Orleans.