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Deaf Jam

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Template:Deaf Jam
File:Deaf jam.png
Theatrical Release Poster
Directed byJudy Lieff
Produced by
Judy Lieff]
  • Steve Zeitlin
Starring
Aneta Brodski
  • Tahani Salah
Cinematography
Melissa Donovan
  • Claudia Raschke-Robinson
Edited byKeiko Deguchi
Distributed byCINEPHIL
Running time
70 minutes
CountryUnited States
Language


Deaf Jam is a 2011 documentary directed and produced by American filmmaker, Judy Lieff. The film highlights the communicative power of American Sign Language poetry as it follows the poetic development of Aneta Brodski, a deaf teenager living in Queens, New York. Aneta's desire to reach a diverse audience, not limited to the deaf community, ultimately leads her to collaborate with Tahani Salah, a spoken word slam poet, in order to compete in the verbal arena of slam poetry. Together, Aneta, an Israeli-born ASL poet, and Tahani, a Palestinian spoken word poet, create a combined, oral and signed poetry that gains recognition in deaf and hearing communities alike.

Deaf Jam premiered on PBS's Independent Lens program,Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page). and was awarded the 2012 Japan Prize for the Best Work of the Youth Category.[1]


Plot

Aneta Brodski is first exposed to American Sign Language (ASL) poetry through an after-school program at the Lexington School for the Deaf in Queens. Aneta is an Israeli immigrant, and unlike many of her classmates, was born to an all-deaf family. She is dedicated to the study ASL poetry, and by the end of the first year, has begun to master the three-dimensional form, and cultivate a strong poetic voice.

The following year, when the program expands its scope and moves to a space shared with Urban Word, an organization at the forefront of the youth spoken word movement, Aneta becomes interested in performing her poetry for hearing audiences. She competes for a spot on the Urban Word slam team, an unprecedented move for a member of the deaf community.[2] Although Aneta is proud of her deafness, she explains that she does not wish to be defined by it, but would like to have the opportunity to express herself in spheres beyond the deaf community.[3]

Through her activity at Urban Word, Aneta eventually meets Tahani Salah, a Palestinian spoken word poet, and the two young women begin to collaborate, creating a new form of slam poetry that transcends the politics of their respective national origins. After an arduous process of synthesis, Aneta and Tahani are invited to present their poetry Bob Holman’s Bowery Poetry Club.[2][3]

Release

Deaf Jam premiered on PBS's Independent Lens program, in the 2011-2012 season,[4] and has broadcast internationally on the German BR's magazine "Sehen statt Hören,"[5] Korea's EBS[6], Swiss Television and the Taiwanese Ski Digi Entertainment Co.[7]

The film was an official selection at the Woodstock FIlm Festival,[8] 13 Thessaloniki Documentary Festival,[9] Boston Jewish Film Festival, [10] and the Starz Denver Film Festival in 2011. [11] In 2012 Deaf Jam was officially selected to screen at Documentary Edge Film Festival New Zealand, [12] 35th Goteborg International Film Festival in Sweden,[13]San Sebastopol Documentary Film Festival,[14] San Diego Jewish Film Festival,[15] Atlanta Jewish Film Festival,[16] New York Jewish Film Festival,[17] San Francisco Independent Film Festival,[18] Houston Jewish Film Festival, [19] Pittsburg Jewish Film Festival,[20] Westchester Jewish Film Festival at the Jacob Burns Film Center,[21] Arts in Action Film Festival in Australia,[22] EBS International Documentary Festival in Korea,[6] Maine Deaf Film Festival,[23] Project Youth View in Oakland, California,[24] One World Arts Festival in Canada,[25], Festival CIneSordo in Ecuador,[26] CineDeaf Roma in Italy,[27] and the Toronto Jewish Film Festival.[28]

Reception

Deaf Jam was honored with the NHK sponsored Japan Prize for the Best Work of the Youth Category, in 2012. It was also awarded the prize for Best Documentary at the Greenpoint Film Festival[29] and The Greater Reading Film Festival[30], as well as Best Film at The Irish Deaf Festival in Dublin.[31] In 2013, Deaf Jam was invited to participate in the American Film Showcase, an initiative by the State Department's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs that sends filmmakers to selected countries to represent an independent view of American culture and society.[32]

The film has received positive reviews in the critical press. Reporting on the Thessaloniki Documentary Film Festival in the Huffington Post, Karin Badt called Deaf Jam a "riveting documentary" and remarks that "the deaf Israeli teenager at the center of the film, Aneta Brodski, is so charmingly expressive."[33] Reporting for Variety, Boyd Van Hoeij wrote, "ASL poetry relies heavily on visuals and movement, and Lieff's film follows suit, with lensing on a variety of digital formats, colorful tech wizardry and fast-paced cutting. A hip soundtrack further adds to the pic's street cred for hearing auds."[34]

References

  1. ^ http://www.nhk.or.jp/jp-prize/english/2012/prize_winner.html
  2. ^ a b http://cdn.itvs.org/deaf_jam-discussion.pdf
  3. ^ a b http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/deaf-jam/film.html
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference ind lens was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ http://www.br.de/fernsehen/bayerisches-fernsehen/sendungen/sehen-statt-hoeren/index.html
  6. ^ a b http://www.visitseoul.net/en/article/article.do?_method=view&art_id=57227&lang=en&m=0003001006003&p=06
  7. ^ http://www.d-word.com/documentary/509-Deaf-Jam
  8. ^ http://www.woodstockfilmfestival.com/festival2011/details.php?id=22591
  9. ^ http://tdf.filmfestival.gr/default.aspx?lang=en-US&page=943&date=3/20/2011&movie=614
  10. ^ http://bjff.festivalgenius.com/2011/films/deafjam_judylieff_bjff2011
  11. ^ http://www.denverfilm.org/festival/film/detail.aspx?id=24440&FID=61
  12. ^ http://www.documentaryedge.org.nz/2012/wgtn/film/deaf-jam
  13. ^ http://www.giff.se/us/public/videograph/trailers/video-single-view/post/deaf-jam-806.html?searchInput=deaf%20jam
  14. ^ http://www.sebastopolfilmfestival.org/film.php?id=81
  15. ^ http://www.sdcjc.org/sdjff/2012/
  16. ^ Holman, Curt. "Atlanta Jewish Film Festival takes tour of world cinema", CL Atlanta, February 7, 2012.
  17. ^ http://www.filmlinc.com/films/on-sale/deaf-jam
  18. ^ http://sfindie.festivalgenius.com/2012/films/deafjam_judylieff_sfindie2012
  19. ^ http://www.erjcchouston.org/events/2012/03/07/senior-adults/houston-jewish-film-festival-lunch-and-a-movie/
  20. ^ http://www.jfedpgh.org/2012films.aspx
  21. ^ http://vimeo.com/49378524
  22. ^ http://artsinaction.com.au/deaf-jam-event-round-up/
  23. ^ http://mainedeaffilmfest.com/?page_id=276
  24. ^ Jordan, Dixie. "Youth Films Screen Tonight At Alemeda Theatre", Alameda Patch, May 2, 2012
  25. ^ http://www.wiam.ca/performance/156
  26. ^ http://www.festivalcinesordo.com/programacioacuten-general.html
  27. ^ http://cinedeafroma.wordpress.com/programma/concorso/documentari/
  28. ^ http://tjff.com/film-info.php?id=806
  29. ^ http://greenpointfilmfestival.org/category/news/
  30. ^ http://www.berksarts.org/greater-reading-film-fest.aspx
  31. ^ http://www.irishdeaffilm.ie/58953/programme
  32. ^ http://americanfilmshowcase.usc.edu/deaf-jam-movie/
  33. ^ Badt, Karin.The Thessaloniki Documentary Film Festival: From Soviet Cannibals to Jarmusch's Cleveland, The Huffington Post, April 15, 2011
  34. ^ Hoeij, Boyd Van. "Film Reviews: Deaf Jam," Variety (magazine), New York, March 24, 2011