Story
‘David’ tells the story of Daud, an eleven year old religious Muslim boy growing up in Brooklyn. Concealing his Muslim identity, Daud inadvertently befriends a group of Jewish boys who through a haphazard sequence of events mistake him for being Jewish and accept him as one of their own. A genuine bond of friendship is formed between Daud and Yoav, one of the Jewish boys; Daud experiences a sense of freedom, joy, and camaraderie that he has never felt before, and for a brief time enjoys being a carefree eleven year old Brooklyn boy. When the Jewish boys discover Daud’s true identity, Daud’s world is shattered and he is left alone, struggling to come to terms with his place in the world.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Movie theatres and times
showtime: 7:30 pm | Sunday June 5 | Brooklyn Heights Cinema
showtime: 8:00 pm | Thursday June 9 | indieScreen
Notes: Director Joel Fendelman will be available for Q&A after the screening.
Director, cast & film details
Director: Joel Fendelman
Cast: Maz Jobrani, Muatasem Mishal, Binyomin Shtaynberger, Gamze Ceylan, Dina Shihabi, Noam Weinberg, David Mandelbaum, Ayse Eldek, Akram Basuni, Markus Goldberg, Daniel Henri Luttway, Michael Golden, Marjorie Austrian
Crew: Executive Producers: Jason Dubin, Andrew Cohen – Producer: Julian Schwartz – Screenwriters: Joel Fendelman, Patrick Daly – Cinematographer: Robbie Renfrow – Editor: Joel Fendelman, Martin Levenstein, Chris Houghton – Composer: Gil Talmi – Sound Design: Rick Secen
Email: infodavid-themovie.com
Web:www.david-themovie.com
About the director
Joel Fendelman has spent the last 7 years in Brooklyn producing and directing award winning films. His feature debut documentary “Needle Through Brick” won the Silver Palm award at the Mexico International Film Festival. In developing the script for “David”, Joel spent a year immersed in both the orthodox Jewish and conservative Muslim neighborhoods of Brooklyn. The two lead actors are kids from the neighborhood and the film was shot entirely in Bay Ridge and Borough Park. Based loosely on Joel’s experience of growing up Jewish in Miami “David” was created with the intention of exploring themes of identity and the struggle to fit in.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Another post of interest: Shirin Neshat’s film debut Women Without Men, written by Augusta Palmer