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E. Nina Rothe

Film. Fashion. Life.
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The Diaries, because sometimes life needs more. 

The 27th New York Sephardic Jewish Film Festival brings together film, food & culture

E. Nina Rothe May 28, 2025

The American Sephardi Federation is also debuting Festival Sefarad NYC, a special monthlong celebration dedicated to the community and featuring a variety of events with something for everyone—from musical performances and book talks, to exhibitions, tours, and Shabbat dinners, with the film festival at its center.

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In Cinema, Festival Tags New York Sephardic Jewish Film Festival, Shalom Assayag and Ariel Benbaji, The 90s – The Revelry (Hillula), Matchmaking 2, Erez Tadmor, The Last Righteous Man (Baba Sali), Rafael Balulu, Hanan Savyon & Guy Amir, Jinxed, YAEL NAIM: A new soul, Jill Coulon, Fortuna, Middle East, Sephardic Jews, El Museo del Barrio, NYC, Frank London, Oded Halahmy, Trio Mediterraneo, Roya Hakakian, Michel Boujenah, Yael Naim, Enrico Macias, Dr. Helene Jawhara Piñer, Maurice’s Bar, Florence Nasar & Chanan Ben Simon/Guy Barash, Festival Sefarad
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Benedict Cumberbatch's starrer 'Eric' on Netflix taps into soundtrack of our lives

E. Nina Rothe June 7, 2024

Whether or not we lived in NYC in the 1980’s or watched TV shows like Sesame Street, or even ever talked to an imaginary friend as children (or adults), there is something about the miniseries created by Welsh screenwriter Abi Morgan and directed by Lucy Forbes that strikes a chord — a musical chord.

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In The Diaries, Art Tags Eric, Netflix, Benedict Cumberbatch, NYC, Sesame Street, soundtrack, Gaby Hoffman, corruption, Good Day Sunshine, McKinley Belcher III, Lucy Forbes, Abi Morgan, CAN Vitamin C, Rodriguez Crucify Your Mind, Joan Armatrading Love and Affection
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Emma Stone and Joe Alwyn in ‘Kinds of Kindness’, photo by Atsushi Nishijima, courtesy of Searchlight Pictures

This year's Festival de Cannes line up is announced

E. Nina Rothe April 11, 2024

And it features the latest works from Yorgos Lanthimos, Karim Aïnouz, Ali Abbasi, David Cronenberg, Paolo Sorrentino and Francis Ford Coppola, to name a few — phew!

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags Festival de Cannes, Iris Knobloch, Thierry Fremaux, Kinds of Kindness, Emma Stone, Joe Alwyn, Raoul Peck, Yolande Zauberman, Rithy Panh, Ali Abbasi, Yorgos Lanthimos, Karim Aïnouz, David Cronenberg, Paolo Sorrentino, Francis Ford Coppola, Kevin Costner, Nabil Ayouch, Leos Carax, Roberto Minervini, Norah, Tawfik Alzaidi, Payal Kapadia, Jia Zhang-Ke, Paul Schrader, Miguel Gomes, Andrea Arnold, Martin Scorsese, It's Not Me, Motel Destino, La Belle de Gaza, M, Locarno, Dustin Hoffman, Megalopolis, Giancarlo Esposito, NYC, Adam Driver, Horizon An American Saga
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A still from ‘The Black Power Mixtape: 1967-1975’ by Göran Hugo Olsson

A still from ‘The Black Power Mixtape: 1967-1975’ by Göran Hugo Olsson

Five films to illuminate in these dark times, and check your racism at the door

E. Nina Rothe June 4, 2020

“I love America more than any other country in this world, and, exactly for this reason, I insist on the right to criticize her perpetually.” — James Baldwin

When I learned what happened to George Floyd on Memorial Day, I remembered more profoundly what “white privilege” means.

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In Cinema, The Diaries Tags Spike Lee, Black Lives Matter, Minneapolis riots, George Floyd, cinema with a conscience, Ava DuVernay, 13th, Selma, When They See Us, Central Park Five, NYC, racism, Nadia Hallgren, Becoming, Michelle Obama, Barack Obama, Americans, America, USA, Goran Hugo Olsson, The Black Power Mixtape, Erykah Badu, Stokely Carmichael, Angela Davis, Martin Luther King Jr., I Am Not Your Negro, Raoul Peck, James Baldwin, Malcolm X, Red Sea International Film Festival
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Brian Ray Norris and Gil Brady in ‘Sideways The Experience’, photo by Jeremy Daniel

Brian Ray Norris and Gil Brady in ‘Sideways The Experience’, photo by Jeremy Daniel

Sideways The Experience: A quintessential California story makes for the perfect NYC evening

E. Nina Rothe February 26, 2020

Everyone is probably familiar with the 2004 film ‘Sideways’ by Alexander Payne, starring Paul Giamatti and Thomas Haden Church, playing two best friends on a trip through California’s wine country. Giamatti’s Miles wants to enjoy the wine tastings while his buddy Jack is looking for a last fling before his wedding at the end of their journey together. Sprinkle in Virginia Madsen and Sandra Oh as their romantic interests and needless to say, the film was a indie hit. Yet I never realized what a devoted fan following the story has, originally written as a novel by Rex Pickett who also did the stage adaptation for ‘Sideways: The Experience’.

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In The Diaries Tags Sideways The Experience, off Broadway, NYC, California story, Sideways, Theatre at St. Clement's, Alexander Payne, Paul Giamatti, Thomas Haden Church, Rex Pickett, Mary Giuliani, Wine Access, Gil Brady, Brian Ray Norris, Kimberly Doreen Burns, Jenny Strassburg, Dan Wackerman, Jimmy Lawrol, Jimmy Lawlor, Quentin Chiappetta, David L. Arsenault
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Dr. Nof Atamna-Ismaeel in a still from ‘Breaking Bread’

Dr. Nof Atamna-Ismaeel in a still from ‘Breaking Bread’

'Breaking Bread' and the story of one super, courageous NYC film festival

E. Nina Rothe November 14, 2019

In history, it has often proven dangerous to attempt to be a peacemaker. In fact, men from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to John F. Kennedy and even Malcolm X — once he realized his own philosophy of hate was going nowhere and advocated peace between the races — have fallen victims to assassinations because of their ideals.

When we look to the Middle East, the list grows to include Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. In April of 2011, Palestinian-Israeli actor and director Juliano Mer-Khamis was murdered by masked gunmen outside his theater in Jenin, where he worked to promote a meeting of minds.

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags The Other Israel Film Festival, NYC, Breaking Bread, Anthony Bourdain, Haifa, A-Sham food festival, Israel, Palestine, Arab chefs, Jewish chefs, food, culinary cinema, peacemakers
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Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Edward Norton in a still from ‘Motherless Brooklyn’ photo courtesy of Warner Bros.

Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Edward Norton in a still from ‘Motherless Brooklyn’ photo courtesy of Warner Bros.

Rome Film Festival Diaries: Three things I love about La Festa del Cinema di Roma

E. Nina Rothe October 17, 2019

Alright, I’ll kick it off right away by saying that the opening film for this 14th edition of the Rome Film Festival is wonderful! ‘Motherless Brooklyn’ the second directorial venture by beloved actor Edward Norton is everything an opening film should be for a festival — full of star power, great performances and evoking an elegance that only that particular time and in that place can bring about. More on it later.

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In The Diaries, Festival, Cinema Tags Rome Film Festival, Edward Norton, Festa del Cinema di Roma, NYC, Motherless Brooklyn, Michael Kenneth Williams, Bruce Willis, American cinema, Gugu Mbatha-Raw
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Sea Wall a Life Jake Gyllenhaal and Tom Sturridge

The NYC Diaries: 'Sea Wall / A Life' on Broadway proves Jake Gyllenhaal is the best actor we have today

E. Nina Rothe July 29, 2019

Alright, I’m partial I’ll admit it, ever since securing this wondrous interview with the man back in 2017 in Cannes. But now on stage performing in the second half of ‘Sea Wall / A Life’ which premiered last summer at the Public Theater before moving to the Hudson for its Broadway run, the man does blow every other actor of his generation out of the water.

How, you ask?

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In The Diaries Tags Tom Sturridge, Jake Gyllenhaal, Sea Wall a life, Broadway, Hudson Theater, NYC, theater, Nick Payne, Simon Stephens, Carrie Cracknell, Guy Hoare, JR, Inside Out, Daniel Kruger, Laura Jellinek
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A still from ‘Femmetasia’ by Mouhssine El Badaoui

A still from ‘Femmetasia’ by Mouhssine El Badaoui

Five projects from this year's Qumra I simply cannot wait to watch

E. Nina Rothe March 31, 2019

The yearly, five days long Qumra event in Qatar, held by the Doha Film Institute each March is that rare occasion for those of us who write about cinema to connect with the filmmakers, producers, film programmers, sales agents and festival directors who make the magic happen. Don’t misunderstand me now, I think film journalists and bloggers are equally to praise or blame for great movies being made. Our collective word, the reviews and interviews we manage to sell to publications or feature on our blogs, can create a movement that reverberates around the world. I know colleagues who pride themselves on making or breaking someone’s career. It’s not nice, but it is true. Take the case of Gianfranco Rosi’s ‘Below Sea Level’ and the infamous Variety review that ensured the film never made it to a cinema near you — a fact the filmmaker mentioned in his Masterclass at last year’s Qumra.

That said, in Doha there is a great energy created by the powers that be of the DFI, which allows journalists to relate to the film projects in such a personal way that it’s impossible thereafter to dislike it or even ignore it.

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In Cinema, The Diaries Tags Bombay Rose, Gitanjali Rao, Doha Film Institute, Qumra 2019, Doha, Qatar, DFI, Khuzama, A.J. Al-Thani, documentary, narrative feature, animated feature, Afghanistan, Iran, Hasan Noori, Afsaneh Salari, Taliban, The Forbidden Strings, Places of the Soul, Hamida Issa, Antartica, desert, iceberg, NY Times, NYC, Femmetasia, Mouhssine el Badaoui, Fantasia, Morocco, horses, masterclasses, Arianna Huffington
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Robert Mitchum photographed by Bruce Weber

Robert Mitchum photographed by Bruce Weber

The Venice Diaries: Bruce Weber paints a daring portrait of Robert Mitchum in 'Nice Girls Don't Stay for Breakfast'

E. Nina Rothe September 3, 2018

As I sat down to meet legendary fashion photographer Bruce Weber I said "Mr. Weber, I can't say I grew up with your photographs because I'm older than I look, but I definitely grew into my sexuality thanks to your iconic images." It's true. Those NYC billboards in Times Square of underwear models for Calvin Klein, the Ralph Lauren "out of Africa" campaign, Kate Moss in the bathtub, the beach scenes, the catalogues I devoured before the advent of the internet, I grew into my skin thanks to Weber's images. 

Today, Weber has helped me to rediscover the beauty and genius of classic American actor Robert Mitchum. 'Nice Girls Don't Stay for Breakfast' screens at the Venice Film Festival in the Venice Classics section and is co-produced by Weber's wife Nan Bush. In the documentary, Mitchum is shown as never before, a singer, a lover and a poet, aided in part by cameos by Johnny Depp, Benicio Del Toro, Polly Bergen, Brenda Vaccaro and Liam Neeson, among many many more.

So why a film about Mitchum, why from Weber and why now?

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In Cinema, Interviews, Fashion, Festival, The Diaries Tags Nice Girls Don't Stay for Breakfast, Bruce Weber, Robert Mitchum, Venezia 75, La Biennale di Venezia, Venice Film Festival, documentary, Venice Classics, movie stars, Manhood, NYC, Calvin Klein, Photography, Ralph Lauren, Kate Moss, Johnny Depp, Benicio Del Toro, Brenda Vaccaro, Polly Bergen, Liam Neeson, Nan Bush, America, Judy Garland, George Cukor, A Star is Born, Lady Gaga, Bradley Cooper, political correctness, affairs, Dorothy Mitchum, Hollywood, Chet Baker, Let's Get Lost, Shelley Winters, Frank Sinatra, Johnny Mercer, Keely Smith, Pearl Bailey, Marianne Faithful, Dr. John
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A still featuring Noel Sto. Domingo from Lav Diaz' 'Season of the Devil'Photo © Giovanni D. Onofrio

A still featuring Noel Sto. Domingo from Lav Diaz' 'Season of the Devil'

Photo © Giovanni D. Onofrio

The Berlinale Diaries: Hulu's 'The Looming Tower' and a Lav Diaz virgin no more!

E. Nina Rothe February 21, 2018

The 21st century version of the all-American question "where were you when JFK was assassinated?" is "what were you doing when the planes hit the World Trade Center?"

Some of us watched the towers disintegrate before our very eyes, our landscape changed forever, and it's a vision, a feeling we will carry inside our hearts for as long as we live. The smell throughout downtown Manhattan, the lines of demarcation -- complete with checkpoints -- between the northern and southern parts of the city but also the newfound sense of camaraderie we bestowed upon each other to merely get from day to day, is also what I remember from those days.

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags Hulu, Berlinale, Berlin, Berlin Film Festival, The Looming Tower, Lav Diaz, Season of the Devil, Filipino cinema, Philippines, opera, Black and White, Ali Suliman, Tawfeek Barhom, Samer Bisharat, Omar, Martin Schmidt, Ali Soufan, Alex Gibney, Jeff Daniels, Tahar Rahim, Peter Sarsgaard, 9/11, September 11th, East Africa, Middle East, Dan Futterman, Lawrence Wright, Manhattan, NYC, World Trade Center tragedy
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