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Sons of Sakhnin United
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All reviews for Sons of Sakhnin United

    samsonbersamsonber not just for soccer fans
    by samsonber in samsonber Blog
    loved it.
    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    "i saw this saturday at tribeca film festival and it was a massive surprise. the movie is a huge story trapped in a small one -- an arab soccer team who become champions of israel. it is very much a Rudy kind of tale -- with textured characters, chilling moments, real humor, and a killer soundtrack. i dont like soccer but i was cheering every goal along with the rest of the cinema by the end of the movie. do everything you can to see this charming gem. " [More]
    TheReelerTheReeler From Jump Rope to Jazz, the Doc ...
    by TheReeler in The Reeler on Spout
    hasn't rated it.
    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    "One of the jump rope powerhouses of Stephanie Johnes' Doubletime By Michelle Orange I seem to have tapped into a documentary-rich vein three days into my Tribeca tunneling, and three of them have a distinctly New York angle. A Walk Into the Sea: Danny Williams and the Warhol Factory , joins the ever-increasing canon of Warholia, but only tangentially; director Esther Robinson has attempted to eke out the story around the 1966 disappearance (and apparent suicide) of her uncle Danny, a one-time Factory denizen. Robinson gets access to a host of Factory personalities, some of whom may be remembered from their last (albeit fictional) appearance in February’s Edie Sedgwick bio-hazard, Factory Girl. The problem is that no one seems to recall the young man from Massachusetts, further proof of the solipsistic, craven opportunism fueling Warhol’s so-called family. What people like Brigid Berlin recall in detail is the emotional politics raging within Warhol’s inner circle, and the dis ... " [More]
 
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