¶ … tense right now in Israel. The Jewish New Year (it's 5773 for those who count) has coincided with a recent wave of anti-American and anti-Jewish sentiment related in part to a recent "incendiary" film that depicts the Muslim prophet Muhammad (Estrin, 2012). It's not as if Israel and Iran were not already archenemies, but tensions are higher now than perhaps ever before. The film in question also threatens to unify anti-Israeli sentiment among both Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims: a phenomenon that understandably frightens not just Israelis but most peace-loving human beings around the world.
Yet another film that can be accurately called incendiary injects much-needed humor into the centuries-old tradition of Jew-hating. That film was issued by legendary director Quentin Tarantino in 2009. Or, we should say, 5770. Called Inglourious Basterds, and spelled deliberately wrong, the film depicts a fictional troop of American assassins on a mission to kill Nazis during World War Two. The film is deeply sarcastic and so silly as to nearly be fluffy in spite of its occasional gore. There are, however, tidbits of truth to the underlying message Tarantino sends about why Israel was created in the first place.
It is only fitting that Inglourious Basterds should be seen, or seen again, on this particular New Year. Rosh Hashana is a holiday about beginnings, not endings. It is a positive, uplifting holiday that is characterized by an ear-wrecking blow into a ram's horn. The holiday celebrates the symbolic creation of the world by God, and is characterized not just by feasting but also by a period of penance, self-work, and introspection. So it is only suitable that the holiday should coincide with deep musings on the creation of the state of Israel during these tense times of 5773.
Inglourius Basterds is not one of Tarantino's best films, by any stretch of the imagination. It does not reach the pinnacles of genius that causes Pulp Fiction to become timeless. The film is quirky, but falls flatter than either Jackie Brown or the Kill Bill series. It's not...
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