30th Annual Denver Jewish Film Festival 2026

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30TH ANNUAL

Welcome to the 30th annual Film Festival. This is a special milestone year for us and we’re very excited about our offerings. The Denver Jewish Film Festival Selection Committee is thrilled to present this year’s selection entirely on site in our beautiful and intimate Wolf Theatre.

Thank you to our hard-working Program Director at the Mizel Arts and Cultural Center, Tim Campbell, for his efforts in organizing our search for the exciting, high-quality films we are so proud to show you. Tim’s work is assisted by a strong supporting cast of the following people, without whom it would be impossible to put on the festival: Stephanie Herm, Marissa Swanson, Jacob Auten, Lexi Holtzer, Kevin McVeigh, and Greg Purcell.

To create the festival, Tim works with volunteer “pre-screeners,” who are the first eyes on potential films and provide Tim with reviews. From there, Tim, decides what films are passed to our Selection Committee. This hardworking group of eleven volunteers reviews between 80-100 films to determine the highest quality ones, while ensuring the selection is a well-rounded assortment of narratives, documentaries, and shorts for your viewing.

This year we are very delighted and excited to be able to show a larger selection of superb narrative films than in some previous years, along with some very impactful and interesting documentaries and shorts. As every year, we will also showcase films that educate, uplift, and are thought-provoking, with a smattering of humorous films and those highlighting a lighter side of life. We have not forgotten, nor will we forget, the horrors of October 7, 2023, and we have a very special film to commemorate that greatest tragedy of the Jewish people since the Shoah.

Film is a passion shared by all of our committee, and the Program Director. Film reflects our society, mirroring both the good and the bad, and sometimes even offers solutions. We will be sharing films that make you think and evoke strong emotions. Our goal is to entertain, educate, and stimulate discussion and thought-provoking ideas.

We trust that our continued commitment to exclusively showing festival films in our theaters will reinforce the feelings of camaraderie between patrons. It is one of our greatest delights to see people connecting with friends old and new.

Thank you to those who have helped sponsor our films. The financial support you provide allows us to bring you a high-quality festival, in our goal of returning back to pre-COVID attendance and beyond.

We treasure the relationship we have with our returning patrons, while also welcoming new festival goers. This year we again offer supplemental programming such as talk backs from directors, producers, and members of the community. These add context to films and provide a more meaningful experience for you.

Adieu, for now. Let the cameras roll and the popcorn flow as we embark on journeys that only film can provide.

With much fondness,

Mark H. Boscoe

Chair of the Denver Jewish Film Festival Selection Committee

Supported by

TICKETS ON SALE WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11, AT 10:00 AM!

ALL ACCESS PASS $325

(Includes all VIP Experiences) ($476 retail - Best Value)

One individual admission to all in-person events, including Opening Night VIP reception. (Reception starts at 6:00 pm, film begins at 7:30 pm.) Unused tickets are not transferable. This year the films are strategically scheduled to ensure the ability to see every film available in-person. This pass can only be used by one patron. Not transferable.

10-PACK

Buy 10 tickets (any price level) and get $1 off per ticket.

$10 off

Opening Night VIP Reception and Film $58

Individual Tickets $18

Student / Senior Individual Tickets $15

Thursday, January 22

Festival Overview

6:00 PM Opening Night Reception

7:30 PM The Ring

Friday, January 23

10:30 AM Labors of Love

12:30 PM Among Neighbors

Saturday, January 24

6:15 PM The Lady in the Black Dress 8:15 PM Once Upon My Mother Sunday, January 25 Family Day! 9:00 AM Shalom Sesame 10:15 AM An American Tail 1:00 PM Tatami 6:30 PM

Marcus Lecture

Elie Wiesel: Soul on Fire

Monday, January 26

1:00 PM The Unburdened & The Last Twins 4:00 PM Halisa

STANDUP COMEDY WORKSHOP

THURSDAYS, MARCH 12 - APRIL 30 AT 6:00 – 8:00 PM

Have your friends and family constantly been telling you how funny you are? Or that your particular brand of comedy is destined for greatness...or the opposite? Take this awesome class to hone your comedy skills! Don’t miss this chance to perform with a professional comedian on the Elaine Wolf Stage!

Festival Overview

7:00 PM Restraining Order & Full Support

Tuesday, January 27

1:00 PM Neshoma

4:00 PM Technion 10

7:30 PM Marathon Mom

Wednesday, January 28

10:00 AM Full Support

12:45 PM Torn & Soul of a Nation

4:00 PM

DJFF Shorts Package 1

The Sacred Society Of the Heart

A Name That is Not Mine War Before Bedtime

The Windows on Rue Saint-Dominique Guygu

Thursday, January 29 1:00 PM Midlife 4:00 PM Jaffa Stories 7:00 PM Date Night: 31 Candles

Friday, January 30 10:00 AM His Own Way 1:15 PM Turn Left at the End of the World

Saturday, January 31 6:15 PM Hidden 8:15 PM Date Night: Kissufim

Sunday, February 1

10:00 AM DJFF Shorts Package 2 Here I Am

Double Happiness KosherSoul Lox

LGBTQ+ Brunch 1:00 PM Janice Ian: Breaking Silence 4:00 PM Diane Warrant: Relentless 7:00 PM

Matchmaking 2

7:00 PM Healing Trails & Looking Up KEY

Italic = Film Titles

Non-italic = Program Purple Box = Special Event Yellow Box = Shown Together

Blue Box = Shorts Package

Opening Night Reception

The Ring

VIP Tier tickets include:

• Nosh

• Alcoholic and Nonalcoholic beverages available

Thursday, January 22 6:00 PM

The Ring

Comedy – Drama

Thursday, January 22 7:30 PM

Sponsor: Strear Family Foundation | Gary and Marsha Blum

Arnon Noble is a religious man with a strong bond to his mother, a Holocaust survivor. He usually drives her to school lectures where she tells the students how she saved the lives of her baby boy and herself with the help of a thin gold ring. When the mother’s health deteriorates, he travels to her old hometown, Budapest to search for the mythological ring that saved her life in the past. He turns for help to his estranged daughter who is a TV researcher and offers her to go on this journey together. Will the search for the ring be successful? Will the ring save the mother’s life again and will the same ring that saved his mother also succeed in saving Arnon’s relationship with his own daughter. A heart-warming dramady about three generations and the family history that reconnects them. The Ring is based on Adir Miller’s Holocaust survival story.

Director: Adir Miller, Doron & Yoav Paz

2024 / Israel / 122 min Hebrew, Hungarian with English Subtitles

Labors of Love

Documentary

Friday, January 23 10:30 AM

A visionary leader and one of history’s most influential, yet under-recognized, American Jewish women, Henrietta Szold left an indelible mark on the 20th century. She founded Hadassah in 1912, creating a vital link between American women and communities in Palestine. Through this organization, she established the region’s modern healthcare system, built on a mandate to treat Arabs and Jews equally. Later, she spearheaded Youth Aliyah, an operation that rescued 11,000 Jewish children from Nazi Europe. This heartfelt documentary, directed by Peabody award-winner, Abby Ginzberg, brings long-overdue recognition to Szold, offering a thought-provoking look at a woman who reshaped history through compassion and an unwavering belief in the power of humanity.

Among Neighbors

Documentary

Friday, January 23

12:30 PM

Combining magical realism and evocative hand-drawn animation with revelatory interviews and verité footage, Among Neighbors examines the story of a small, rural town where Jews and Polish Catholics lived side by side for centuries before World War II. The film brings the Polish response to the Holocaust to life through the last living eyewitnesses, revealing both love and betrayal as it zeroes in on the only living Holocaust survivor from the town, and an aging eyewitness who saw Jews murdered there — not by Nazis, but by her own Polish neighbors. Produced and directed by award-winning filmmaker Yoav Potash (Crime After Crime, Sundance Film Festival).

English, Polish

Director: Abby Ginzberg 2025 / USA / 79 min
Director: Yoav Potash 2025 / Poland / 100 min

The Lady in the Black Dress

Documentary

Saturday, January 24 6:15 PM

Ada Sereni was the only woman to lead the secret organization dedicated to clandestine Jewish immigration from Italy to Mandatory Palestine. Through her skill, courage, and determination, the organization grew, secretly bringing thousands of Holocaust survivors to Israel on clandestine immigration ships. Yet, Ada was erased from the pages of history. This film places her at the center of the historical narrative—where she rightfully belongs.

2025 / Israel / 58 min Hebrew

Director: Noa Aharoni

Director: Ken Scott

2025 / France / 102 min

French

Once Upon My Mother

Drama

Saturday, January 24 8:15 PM

A mother’s unwavering devotion helps her son, born with a clubfoot in 1963, overcome physical challenges and social barriers. Her powerful promise drives their remarkable journey through life’s ups and downs.

Shalom Sesame

Multiple Episodes

Kid Education

Sunday, January 25 9:00 AM

JCC Phillips Social Hall

FREE

Shalom Sesame is a series of children’s media, created by Sesame Workshop, that introduces American children to Jewish culture, Hebrew language, and the diversity of Israeli life. It blends the classic Sesame Street Muppets, like Grover, with Israeli versions of the characters from Rechov Sumsum, and features appearances from both Israeli and American celebrities. The series is designed to highlight Jewish traditions and values, Hebrew letters and words, and unique sites in Israel through live-action and animated episodes.

1987 – 1991, 2010 – 2011 USA, Israel / 30 min

English

An American Tail

Comedy

A young mouse named Fievel Mousekewitz (Phillip Glasser) and his family emigrate from Russia to the United States by boat after their home is destroyed by cats. During the trip, a fierce storm throws Fievel from the ship, and he loses contact with his family. Luckily, he manages to sail to New York in a bottle. There, Irish mouse Bridget (Cathianne Blore), an Italian mouse named Tony (Pat Musick) and a kindly cat named Tiger (Dom DeLuise) help Fievel search for his loved ones.

Sunday, January 25 10:15 AM Ticket $7 | 4-pack $20

$7

$20 4-PACKS

Director: Don Bluth 1986 / USA / 81 min English

January 25

Directors: Zar Amir Ebrahimi | Guy Nattiv 2023 / Georgia, USA, UK / 103 min English

Marcus Lecture

Tatami Documentary

Sunday, January 25 1:00 PM

Co-directed by Guy Nattiv (Academy Award-Winner for Skin) and Zar Amir (Cannes Film Festival Best Actress-Winner for Holy Spider), TATAMI follows Iranian female judoka Leila (Arienne Mandi) and her coach Maryam (Zar Amir), who travel to the World Judo Championships, intent on bringing home Iran’s first gold medal. Midway through the Championships, they receive a chilling ultimatum from the Islamic Republic: Leila must fake an injury and lose, or be branded a traitor. With her own safety and her family’s freedom on the line, Leila faces an impossible choice: submit to the Iranian regime, as her coach Maryam implores her to do, or fight on for the gold. TATAMI is the first feature film to be co-directed by an Iranian and an Israeli filmmaker.

Elie Wiesel: Soul on Fire

Documentary

Sunday, January 25 6:30 PM

Fred & Audrey Friedman Marcus Holocaust Lecture

Sponsored by University of Denver

Director: Oren Rudavsky 2024 / USA / 87 min English

Eighty years after his family’s deportation and the wholesale slaughter of European Jewry, Elie Wiesel: Soul on Fire explores the man behind the searing memoir Night. The narration is in his own voice, revealing the known and unknown Elie Wiesel (1928-2016) - his conflicts, memories, and his legacy as one of the most public survivors of the Holocaust. With unique access to personal archives, and using original interviews with his wife Marion and son Elisha, the film has a unique intimacy. It also includes his passion for human rights, whether confronting President Ronald Reagan about visiting a German cemetery, or pleading with President Clinton to take action during the war in Bosnia. With hand-painted animation by Joel Orloff and a score by Osvaldo Golijov, Elie Wiesel: Soul on Fire illuminates the survivor, writer, teacher and public figure. The Marcus Lecture was created in 2003 in memory of Fred Marcus, a Jewish educator who was born in Berlin and spent the war years in Shanghai as a refugee from Nazi Germany. Fred served as a member of the Speakers Bureau of the Holocaust Awareness Institute for many years, educating students and members of churches and synagogues about the Holocaust. In 2022, the Lecture was renamed to also honor Audrey Friedman Marcus, who co-founded the Marcus Lecture in her late husband’s memory, and without whose tireless advocacy on behalf of Holocaust education this longstanding community program would not be possible. Presented in partnership with the Mizel Arts and Culture Center, the Marcus Lecture highlights new scholarship and perspectives on the Holocaust and illuminates its continuing significance today.

The Unburdened Narrative – Short

Monday, January 26 1:00 PM

When a busy mother is summoned by her childhood friend to save their buried time capsule, unearthing its contents reveals more about their friendship – and heritage –than either of them expected.

Director: Arnon Z. Shorr

2025 / USA / 13 min

English

The Last Twins Documentary

Sponsor: Leah and Jeff Peer

Monday, January 26 1:00 PM

The Last Twins is the never-before-told story of an unsung hero of the Holocaust, Erno “Zvi” Spiegel, who risked everything to save dozens of young twins from almost certain death at Auschwitz. Under the shadow of Dr. Josef Mengele’s horrific experiments, Spiegel used his courage, compassion, and ingenuity to shield the most vulnerable—the sets of twins targeted for brutal medical experimentation. Mengele put Spiegel in charge of the young boys, but Spiegel used his position to protect and comfort the children, all of whom had been torn from their families and subjected to inhumane tests under the constant threat of extermination. Through first-hand testimony and exclusive archival material, The Last Twins brings to life the voices of those who survived because of Spiegel’s defiance. It is a testament to resilience, sacrifice, and the power of one person to make a difference, even in humanity’s darkest hour. The documentary is directed and produced by Emmy Awardwinning directors Perri Peltz and Matthew O’Neill and is narrated by Tony Award-winning actor Liev Schreiber.

2025 / USA / 80 min

English

Director: Perri Peltz, Matthew O’Neill

Halisa Drama

Every day, Sarah cares for other people’s babies at the Children’s Health Center in Haifa’s impoverished, multi-ethnic Halisa neighborhood, but she also yearns for a child of her own. After two years of failed attempts, her desperate desire for motherhood collides with the struggles of a young mother, culminating in a risky decision with potentially devastating consequences. Monday, January 26 4:00 PM

Double Feature

Director: Sharon Maymon, Tal Granit

2023 / Israel / 8 min

Hebrew

Full Support

Documentary

Sponsor: Marci Penner & Diane Waldman

THE NEXT TWO FILMS WILL BE SHOWN TOGETHER

Restraining Order

Narrative – Short

Monday, January 26 7:00 PM

The Israeli filmmakers Tal Granit and Sharon Maymon wrote and directed ‘Mortgage’ (2006), winner of the Best Drama Award at the Jerusalem Film Festival. They partnered again on two shorts, ‘To kill a bumblebee’ (Locarno 2009) and ‘Summer vacation’ (Sundance 2012, was shortlisted for the Oscar). In 2010, the duo won the Best Pitch Award at the Berlinale for the script of ‘My sweet euthanasia’, on which ‘The farewell party’ is based. That controversial and acclaimed film has since then been selected as part of the 2014 editions of Venice International Film Festival’s Venice Days and won the people choice award and the brian award. The Farewell party screened also at the Toronto International Film Festival and was distributed in over 25 countries around the world. Their second feature ‘HaNeshef’ premiered in Tribeca 2019. Their latest feature was led by Andie MacDowel alongside British actresses Miriam Margolis, Tamsin Grieg, Sally Phillips and Rakhee Takarar. Sharon Maymon also wrote the short film ‘Skin’ which won an Oscar for best live action short 2019.

Monday, January 26 7:00 PM

In a Jaffa bra shop’s fitting room, women’s love-hate affair with their bosom buddies unfolds. As each heroine struggles to find the perfect bra, she bares not just her chest, but her soul, sharing tales of triumph, tribulation, and the occasional wardrobe malfunction. For breasts aren’t just fleshy accessories—they’re the protagonists of our life’s epic. From the awkward moment they first break out, to the sobering reality checks of mammograms, our relationship with our “girls” is a bouncy roller-coaster of ups and downs because life, much like a poorly fitted bra, is full of surprises. This film unravels the mystery, myth, and full support between women and their breasts. It’s a story that’s written on our bodies, in every curve, contour, and stretch mark.

Partnership with Sharsheret

Director: Michal Cohen 2024 / Israel / 68 min

Hebrew

2024 / Netherlands / 88 min

English | Dutch

Technion 10

Documentary

Sponsor: Hon. James and Paula Breese

Neshoma

Documentary

Tuesday, January 27 1:00 PM

Neshoma brings pre-war Jewish Amsterdam to life. Through archival material the film depicts the fictional story of Rusha, her family and friends; her misjpoge. The documentary, at the intersection of fiction and history, is inspired by the Jewish community’s testimonies about their lives before World War II.

Tuesday, January 27 4:00 PM

In 1924, the first Technion class opened in Haifa. Today, it is hard to believe that this modest class, taking place in the far reaches of the British Empire was the start of the Technion – one of the leading technological research institutions in the world. The story of this institution’s hundred years on Mount Carmel provides a fascinating prism through which to describe the history of the State of Israel. It is hard to imagine a modern-day Israel, with its strong economy and scientific and technological achievements, without the Technion playing its part. From the prestate period, through dramatic moments in times of war, to the birth of the startup nation and breakthroughs in global-scale research – the Technion was always there.

Director: Uri Rosenwaks

2024 / Israel / 77 min

Hebrew

Director: Sandra Beerends

Directors: Rebecca Shore & Oren Rosenfeld

2025 / Israel / 90 min Hebrew, English

Marathon Mom

Documentary

Tuesday, January 27 7:30 PM

Marathon Mom tells the story of Beatie Deutsch, a young mother of five who is racing to fulfill her dream of becoming an Olympic athlete. Beatie defies the stereotypes assigned to Ultra-Orthodox women by the world and mainstream media. She’s young, hip, inspiring, liberated, and a world-class athlete. Most importantly, she’s a woman of faith, proud to share her beliefs and inspire everyone she touches—an inspiration to women of all faiths. When the COVID epidemic derails Beatie’s qualification for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, the trajectory of her career takes an unexpected turn. Over the next three years, she competes in the UK, Berlin, Seville, Kenya, and Tokyo in pursuit of a race time of 2:29:30. We watch her grapple with setbacks, injuries, and psychological challenges, including struggles with body image and an eating disorder. Will the single-minded pursuit of qualifying within the Olympic standard extinguish her joy and passion for what she loves?

Encore! Family and Feeding Friendly

Full Support

Documentary

Sponsor: Marci Penner & Diane Waldman

Wednesday, January 28 10:00 AM

In a Jaffa bra shop’s fitting room, women’s love-hate affair with their bosom buddies unfolds. As each heroine struggles to find the perfect bra, she bares not just her chest, but her soul, sharing tales of triumph, tribulation, and the occasional wardrobe malfunction. For breasts aren’t just fleshy accessories—they’re the protagonists of our life’s epic. From the awkward moment they first break out, to the sobering reality checks of mammograms, our relationship with our “girls” is a bouncy roller-coaster of ups and downs because life, much like a poorly fitted bra, is full of surprises. This film unravels the mystery, myth, and full support between women and their breasts. It’s a story that’s written on our bodies, in every curve, contour, and stretch mark.

Partnership with Sharsheret

Director: Michal Cohen

2024 / Israel / 68 min Hebrew

Double Feature

Director: Carol Isaacs

2024 / UK / 4 min

Hebrew

Soul of a Nation

Documentary

Torn Documentary - Short

Wednesday, January 28 12:45 PM

After October 7th the walls of one London neighborhood became an unexpected battleground between pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli activists with the hostage posters caught up in the crossfire. Following a shocking discovery, Torn is a poignant and very personal reflection on the ripped posters of the kidnapped and on reclaiming them as a symbol of hope and healing.

Wednesday, January 28 12:45 PM

Written and directed by Jonathan Jakubowicz (Resistance with Jesse Eisenberg, Hands of Stone with Robert De Niro). Soul of A Nation is the first great documentary of 2025, inspiring and eye-opening, the film delves into Israel’s most perilous chapter in recent history, a time of profound internal conflict and external danger. Faced with deep divides, political unrest, and tremendous threats, the nation found itself shaken and on the brink of collapse. But amid this crisis, triggered by the horrific October 7 attack—the deadliest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust—a profound and inspiring transformation took place. What seemed like a breaking point ignited an extraordinary movement of solidarity, uniting Israelis in ways never before seen.

Jonathan Jakubowicz

2024 / USA, Israel / 105 min English, Hebrew

Director:

Shorts Package One

Director: Benny Zelkowicz

2025 / USA / 12 min

English

Of the Heart Documentary – Short

THE FOLLOWING SHORTS WILL BE SHOWN TOGETHER

The Sacred Society Documentary – Short

Wednesday, January 28 4:00 PM

In the end, our bodies are as fragile and ephemeral as paintings made of sand. Who will care for them when our time is over? There is a group of volunteers in Jewish tradition who clean and prepare and dress the dead. The Sacred Society is about these men, why they choose this work, and how it changes them. Illustrated with flowing, haunting sand animation, this documentary explores the importance of sacred ritual in helping us find meaning in our brief lives.

Wednesday, January 28 4:00 PM

Of The Heart is a unique documentary capturing real and raw moments of intergenerational friendship through recorded conversations between four pairs of friends, illustrated by charming an inventive animation. These friends talk about everything: walks, smells, hope, regret, loss, dementia, the medical system, with plenty to laugh about too.

Director: Alex Salsberg 2024 / USA / 12 min

English

Shorts Package One

THE FOLLOWING SHORTS WILL BE SHOWN TOGETHER

A Name That is Not Mine

Narrative

– Short

Director: Dario Piana

2025 / Italy / 12 min Italian

Wednesday, January 28 4:00 PM

One only has to walk through the streets of any Italian city to realise how many Nazi-related signs still f ill the walls we pass. Mostly swastikas. So we asked ourselves: is it possible that there are still people today, in the 21st century, who are attracted to that symbol? Is it possible that there are still those who find fascination in a swastika, a symbol that carries so much pain? So we thought that in order to tell what horrors lay behind the swastika and what nefarious deeds had been committed in the shadow of that sign, we needed to tell the story of those who had experienced those horrors first-hand. This is where we thought of Irena Sendler, the Polish nurse, also known as ‘the Schindler of Warsaw’, who saved almost 3,000 Jewish children from the ghetto. We are convinced that, never before as today, it is necessary for us to make ourselves the living memory of that past, specially now that the direct protagonists are disappearing and anti-Semitism is returning even more fiercely in the daily news around the world, although it has never disappeared completely, unfortunately. There is a need for children to know those stories, to imagine the lives of those bodies piled on top of each other outside a hut in one of the concentration camps that they are shown, especially on Holocaust Memorial Day.

War Before Bedtime

Animation – Short

Wednesday, January 28 4:00 PM

One only has to walk through the streets of any Italian city to realise how many Nazi-related signs still fill the walls we pass. Mostly swastikas. So we asked ourselves: is it possible that there are still people today, in the 21st century, who are attracted to that symbol?

Director: Tehila Lapidot 2024 / Israel / 2 min Hebrew

Shorts Package One

Wednesday, January 28 4:00 PM January 28

THE FOLLOWING SHORTS WILL BE SHOWN TOGETHER

The Windows on Rue Saint-Dominique

Documentary – Short

On a visit to Montreal several decades ago, a young man visited his uncles’ egg distribution warehouse. In a dusty storeroom filled with clutter, he discovered stacks of matching stained-glass windows, each with a Star of David in the center. By the time the building was sold some 20 years later, all of these windows had vanished from the storeroom. The Windows on Rue Saint-Dominique follows the filmmaker’s quest to find the windows and the surprising discoveries that unfold along the way. While the film centers on the filmmaker’s personal immigrant family story from the last century, it also weaves a broader portrait of early Jewish immigrant life in Montreal. It addition, it explores the issue of material culture, and the meanings we attribute to objects — meanings that shift with time, place and circumstance.

Director: Simcha Shtull

2025 / Canada / 28 min

English

Guygu

Animation - Documentary – Short

Wednesday, January 28 4:00 PM

A short animated documentary about Guy Gilboa Dalal, who was kidnapped from the Nova party and is being held as a hostage by Hamas. The short film features Guy’s story through the voices of his family. They share memories from his childhood, recount the traumatic events of his abduction, and describe Guy’s love of anime and his hopes for the trip of a lifetime to Japan. The film blurs the lines between reality and fantasy – between the horrifying moments of the kidnapping, drawn from real footage provided by Guy’s family, and the agonizing silence that followed. What has he endured in captivity? How does he pass the time? We focused on the hope that, in his darkest hours, Guy might find solace in the fantastical worlds he conjured up, inspired by the anime he adores. This film was created using 2d animation, with art design and direction heavily inspired by anime films and TV shows.

Director: Chen Heifetz, Jordan Barr

2025 / Israel / 7 min

Hebrew

28

Double Feature

Directors: Tallis Clarke, Noam Genet

2024 / USA / 16 min Hebrew, English

Looking Up

Documentary

THE NEXT TWO FILMS WILL BE SHOWN TOGETHER

Healing Trails

Documentary – Short

Wednesday, January 28 7:00 PM

Healing Trails is a powerful 17-minute documentary that follows 6 veterans as they embark on a transformative journey deep into the wilderness of Montana. Battling the invisible wounds of PTSD, they find solace under open skies. Guided by nature’s tranquillity and the camaraderie of shared struggles, the group experiences a profound healing process, culminating in a magical moment of unity and heartopening connection. This film captures the raw beauty of the human spirit, the wilderness, and the resilience born from shared hope and healing.

Wednesday, January 28 7:00 PM

Looking Up is the inspiring story of Eitan Armon, a young man facing encroaching blindness who takes on the challenge of climbing the world’s most epic granite wall. At age 20, while serving in the military, Eitan is diagnosed with Retinitis Pigmentosa, a rare and incurable genetic disease that causes blindness. With time running out and only 5% of his central vision remaining, Eitan decides to challenge himself and ascend Yosemite’s daunting El Capitan. Looking Up documents Eitan’s journey and resilience, demonstrating the endless possibilities for those who approach life with positivity.

Director: Elena Neuman 2025 / Israel / 72 min English

Midlife

Drama

Thursday, January 29 1:00 PM

Ahinoam, an ultra-Orthodox wife takes her daughters and walks out on her husband. The police pick them up and send the children back to their father. She goes to see her sister, Sari (Moran Cohen Gross), who left the fold years before, now living in Tel Aviv and married to Yonatan, an Israeli pilot (Tsahi Halevi). Pregnant Sari and Yonatan face a crisis of their own when Sari becomes ill. Yonatan has strong feelings of guilt over his philandering. Sari feels guilty about having turned her back on her sister, but would not welcome her into her new secular life, and turns her away. Ahinoam goes back to the streets, where Nissim (Shalom Assayag), a spiritual leader in a West Bank Jewish settlement offers her a place to live. Sari and Yonatan seek out to Ahinoam and try to make amends, leading them to move to the settlement and embrace a very different lifestyle, which then leads to a new love story.

Jaffa Stories

Comedy

Thursday, January 29 4:00 PM

Five stories that combine fairy tales and fantasy with wisdom, crime, and lots of original and unique humor. The common denominator in all of them is the Jaffa atmosphere as seen through the eyes of Jaffa’s community: the Big Solomon, the boy Jacob, Hazuka, the laughing Samson, old Hatzura, Babula, and a host of colorful characters surrounding them.

Directors: Danni Reisfeld, Yariv Horowitz 2024 / Israel / 98 min Hebrew
Directors: Arik Lubetzki, Matti Harari 2024 / Israel / 81 min Hebrew

Date Night

Director: Jonah Feingold

2025 / USA / 90 min

English

31 Candles Comedy

Thursday, January 29 7:00 PM

When a Jewish film director who makes Christmas movies in New York City decides to have his Bar Mitzvah at the age of 31, he must navigate situationships, exes, and family to complete his Mitzvah project and impress his childhood camp crush.

Inspired by Jonah Feingold’s life, 31 Candles is a heartwarming rom-com about love, identity, and growing up – eventually.

His Own Way

Documentary – Feature

Friday, January 30 10:00 AM

The Monkey House – 2024, Portrait of Victory – 2021, The Other Story – 2018, Past Life – 2015, The Matchmaker – 2010, Turn Left at the End of the World – 2004: for the past five decades this legendary gemstone maker, Avi Nesher, has been Israel’s most prominent and influential filmmaker. Nesher’s recent films are as hugely successful as his earlier works. Many of his films have remained cult favorites of Israeli audiences, years after their initial theatrical release. When Nesher was 24 he directed The Troupe – an ageless favorite that was titled “The all-time best Israeli film” by Haaretz daily. 46 years and twenty movies later, Nesher is now in front of the camera. “All my movies are personal without being autobiographical”, he says while combining both his life and the history of Israel in his films. His Own Way examines the DNA of Nesher’s cinematic creations, which include musicals, dramas, and comedies, chronicling the homeland in which he started his career in his early twenties and where he continues to create at 71.

Turn Left at the End of the World –Digitally Restored

Drama

Friday, January 30 1:15 PM

A group of families emigrates from India to Israel in the late sixties, seeking a better life in what they believe to be the first outpost of the West in Asia. To their surprise, they are sent to a new settlement in the middle of the desert, populated mostly by Moroccan Jews. The two cultures clash as the group tries to integrate into the community, and are faced by harsh realities. But despite the conflicts and prejudices, young love develops between two girls from opposite sides of the struggle. The film finds a perfect combination between humor and sentiment in a very real and very difficult situation. Turn Left at the End of the World was selected as a “New Israeli Classic” in a special event by the Tel Aviv Cinemateque in October 2024 exhibiting the new digitally restored version made for the film’s 20th anniversary.

Director: Yair Raveh 2024 / Israel / 118 min Hebrew
Directors: Avi Nesher 2004 / Israel / 108 min Hebrew, French

Date Night

Kissifum

Drama

Hidden Documentary

Saturday, January 31 8:15 PM January 31

Saturday, January 31 6:15 PM

Hidden – The Kati Preston Story is a powerful journey seen through the eyes of a child—a firsthand account of a society’s slow and insidious descent into authoritarianism, dictatorship, and tyranny. Kati Preston’s joyful childhood in Hungary came to an end in 1944. Bit by bit, law by law, action by action, her world was dismantled. Everything she knew and loved was stripped away. What unfolded over seventy years ago now echoes disturbingly in our present day: a society manipulated by fear, emotions weaponized, old hatreds reignited. It was a time when the worst instincts were rewarded, and the best were silenced. This is also an intimate family story—a poignant look at the bond between mother and daughter under the unimaginable strain of war. It is a story of antisemitism, of fascism, and of the communist dictatorship that followed. Above all, it is a story of how a society can be dismantled by ideology and the thirst for power, told by an 85-year-old survivor remembering the world through the eyes of her five-year-old self. Because sometimes, children see truths that adults refuse to face.

Based on true events, and set between the tragic aftermath of the 1973 Yom Kippur War, and the 1977 visit by the Egyptian President to Israel, a group of 20-year-old Israelis, heads into the final stage of their army service where they volunteer on a Kibbutz, adjacent to the Gaza border. Grappling with love, lust, morality, and their evolving identities, they struggle to come to terms with what it means to be young Israelis in the late seventies.Upon their arrival to the kibbutz, YOAV (20) a charismatic pacifist soldier, tries to manipulate his best friend RON (20) shy, hasty, sensitive, to stay away from ELI (20) a strong, independent woman, whom they’re both secretly in love with. The free-spirited group clash with the political tensions of the time when they meet ELDAR (24) a militant paratroop officer. MICHAELA (20) witty and sexually liberated, falls for Eldar’s charms and cheats on her sensitive boyfriend, UDI (20), with Eldar. Yoav and Eli grow closer, causing Ron’s jealousy to mount when a group of German volunteers arrives, including ANKA (20), who befriends Eli and encourages her to explore her womanhood beyond Israeli conservatism. Ron confronts Yoav about Eli and the two best friends grow apart. After witnessing the historic visit by Anwar El Sadat to Jerusalem, with the hopes it encompassed, the friends take a spontaneous trip to Gaza. On their way, a grenade is tossed into their vehicle and and the free-spirited, cheerful, and awfully optimistic part of their life shatters and comes to a close.

Director: Daniel Matmor
2025 / Canada / 76 min Hebrew, French
Director: Keren Nechmad 2024 / Israel / 88 min Hebrew

Shorts Package Two

Director: Keren Nechmad 2024 / USA / 14 min

English

Double Happiness

Narrative

– Short

THE FOLLOWING SHORTS WILL BE SHOWN TOGETHER

Here I Am Documentary – Short

Sunday, February 1 10:00 AM

Here I Am is a powerful documentary that follows the transformative journey of Moshe, a trans man seeking a deeper connection to his true self through Judaism. Through intimate footage and candid interviews, the film captures Moshe’s path— from embracing a new spiritual identity to navigating deeply personal decisions, including the complexities surrounding circumcision. Here I Am is a moving exploration of identity, resilience, and the courage it takes to fully step into who you are.

Sunday, February 1 10:00 AM

After the death of her husband of 50 years, a life-affirming Jewish widow and the tightly-wound Chinese-American restaurateur who serves her family every Christmas, find themselves drawn into an unexpected late-in-life romance.

Director: Shari Albert 2025 / USA / 17 min

English

1

Shorts Package Two

KosherSoul Documentary – Short

THE FOLLOWING SHORTS WILL BE SHOWN TOGETHER

Sunday, February 1 10:00 AM

James-Beard-Award-winning author and culinary historian, Michael W. Twitty emphasizes that cooking is not just about the recipe, but the people who create it. He highlights the importance of representation in the culinary world, particularly among chefs of color, and how their unique backgrounds contribute to the richness of the food they prepare. This documentation encapsulates the essence of culinary identity and community. Twitty discusses the significance of a kosher meal prepared by Black Jewish chefs, marking a historic moment for the African Jewish diaspora. He emphasizes that this event is about community and bridging gaps through shared meals, showcasing how food can foster dialogue and understanding among diverse groups.

Director: Dan Pavlik

2024 / USA / 14 min

English

Director: Ilja Sarro

2025 / USA / 13 min

English

Lox

Narrative – Short

Sunday, February 1 10:00 AM

In the span of time it takes to order bagels & lox, Ruth Gold meets, remembers, and ultimately forgets a young man in a bittersweet story of fading memory.

LGBTQ+ Brunch

LGBTQ+ Brunch to follow Shorts Package Two. Queer community connections and food! Sunday, February 1 11:30 AM

Hebrew

Janis Ian: Breaking Silence

Documentary

Sponsor: Jane E Rosenbaum

Sunday, February 1 1:00 PM

In 1965, Janis Ian, a 14-year-old singer-songwriter from New Jersey, wrote “Society’s Child” about an interracial relationship. Recorded and released a year later, the song launched Ian’s career, but its subject matter ignited controversy, even resulting in death threats. The fallout plunged Ian into an emotional tailspin–and yet a few years later she emerged from the ashes with an even bigger hit, “At Seventeen.” Over six decades, Janis Ian gained ten Grammy nominations in eight different categories, saw her song “Stars” recorded by such luminaries as Nina Simone and Cher, and overcame homophobia, misogyny, and a life-threatening illness to produce an indelible body of work that continues to draw audiences around the globe. Featuring Janis Ian, Joan Baez, Jean Smart, Arlo Guthrie, Lily Tomlin, and Tom Paxton, among other icons.

Music in the Mizel Lobby

Sunday, February 1 3:00 PM

Music in the Mizel Lobby to follow Janis Ian: Breaking Silence film.

Diane Warren: Relentless

Sunday, February 1 4:00 PM

Documentary | Honoring Michael Rudnick

Sponsor: Robin Chotin

Diane Warren: Relentless is a groundbreaking documentary that reveals the unique genius of a woman who has shaped an entire generation of music. Having written over 400 songs for iconic artists such as Cher, Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, Celine Dione, Lady Gaga, Whitney Houston, Britney Spears, and Aerosmith, Diane Warren resides in the pantheon of music greats. This is her untold story.

Director: Bess Kargman 2024 / USA / 91 min

English

Director: Varda Bar-Kar 2024 / USA / 114 min

Matchmaking 2

Comedy

Sponsor: Mark and Krista Boscoe

Sunday, February 1 7:00 PM February 1

Baruch Auerbach (Maor Schweitzer), a mature Yeshiva student who missed every opportunity to marry, is left to live in a small room in the Yeshiva where he studies and serves as the faithful assistant to the matchmaker Malki (Irit Kaplan). When Malki assigns him the task of escorting her young daughter Shira (Omer Nudelman) from the airport - he decides that it is time to get married. Baruch asks for Malki’s help, but when she tries to match him with Ruth (Niv Sultan), he decides to do everything he can to thwart the matchmaking with Ruth and win Shira’s heart. Only when he realizes how much he has misinterpreted the circumstances of his life will his heart open to the love he deserves.

Director: Erez Tadmor
2024 / Israel / 107 min
Hebrew

30th Annual DJFF Print Sources

31

Candles

7th Art Releasing Udy Epstein | udy@7thart.com

Eunice Tan | eunice@7thart.com

A Name That is Not Mine Independent Annamaria Onetti annamaria@brand-cross.com

Among Neighbors

Panorama / Greenwich Films

Oded Horowitz ohorowitz@ greenwichentertainment.com

An American Tail Swank Pictures

Kiki Arechiga karechiga@swankmp.com

Diane Warren

Panorama / Greenwich Films

Oded Horowitz ohorowitz@ greenwichentertainment.com

Double Happiness

Independent Shari Albert sharimalbert@gmail.com

Elie Wiesel: Soul on Fire Panorama / Greenwich Films

Oded Horowitz ohorowitz@ greenwichentertainment.com

Full Support

Go2Films

Maya Zaltsman outreach@go2films.com

Guygu Independent Chen Heifetz chen.pixelstudio@gmail.com

Halisa

Go2Films

Maya Zaltsman outreach@go2films.com

Healing Trails

Independent

Tallis Clarke tallis@sparkstudio.io

Here I Am Independent Dar Dowling dardowling@gmail.com

Hidden Independent

Jody Glover jodyglover@hotmail.com

His Own Way

Israeli Films

Dov Gil-Har israelifilms@gmail.com outreach@go2films.com

Jaffa Stories

Israeli Films Dov Gil-Har israelifilms@gmail.com outreach@go2films.com

Janice Ian Panorama / Greenwich Films

Oded Horowitz ohorowitz@ greenwichentertainment.com

Kissifum

Israeli Films Dov Gil-Har israelifilms@gmail.com outreach@go2films.com

KosherSoul Independent

Ilja Sarro ilja@sarro.com

Labors of Love

Go2Films

Maya Zaltsman outreach@go2films.com

Looking Up

Cinema Collet nancy@cinemacollet.com

Lox

Independent Dan Pavlik

daniel.s.pavlik@gmail.com

Marathon Mom 7th Art Releasing Udy Epstein | udy@7thart.com

Eunice Tan | eunice@7thart.com

Matchmaking 2

Israeli Films

Dov Gil-Har israelifilms@gmail.com outreach@go2films.com

Midlife

Israeli Films

Dov Gil-Har israelifilms@gmail.com outreach@go2films.com

Neshoma Menemsha Neil Friedman neilf@menemshafilms.com

Of the Heart

Independent

Alex Salsberg alexsalsberg@gmail.com

Once Upon My Mother Menemsha Neil Friedman neilf@menemshafilms.com

Restraining Order EROIN Films contact@eroinfilms.com

Soul of a Nation

Panorama / Greenwich Films Oded Horowitz ohorowitz@ greenwichentertainment.com

Tatami Mean Streets Entertainment Tamar Simon tamar.simon@gmail.com

Technion 10 Menemsha Neil Friedman neilf@menemshafilms.com

The Lady in the Black Dress Go2Films

Maya Zaltsman outreach@go2films.com

The Last Twins Panorama / Greenwich Films Oded Horowitz ohorowitz@ greenwichentertainment.com

The Ring Israeli Films

Dov Gil-Har israelifilms@gmail.com outreach@go2films.com

The Sacred Society Independent Benny Zelkowicz bennyzelk@gmail.com

The Unburdened Independent Elana Safar elana.safar@gmail.com

The Windows on Rue Saint-Dominique Independent Simcha Shtull simchashtull@gmail.com

Torn Independent Carol Isaacs carolisaacs@gmail.com

Turn Left at the End of the World Israeli Films

Dov Gil-Har israelifilms@gmail.com outreach@go2films.com

War Before Bedtime 7th Art Releasing Udy Epstein | udy@7thart.com Eunice Tan | eunice@7thart.com

Special Thanks & Community Partners

30th Annual DJFF Sponsors

Barbara and Mark Goldstein

Betsy Brachfeld

Bobbi Ewelt

Chery Young / David Corsun

Celeste Grynberg

Diane Waldman

East Side Kosher Deli

Elisa and Gary Kleiman

Jane E Rosenbaum

Janet and Stuart Kritzer

Jews Who Care

Leah and Jeff Peer

Marci Penner

Mark Boscoe

Marsha and Gary Blum

Patricia Lackner

Paula and Hon. James Breese

Rob Schwartz

Robin Chotin

Strear Family Foundation

University of Denver

Thank you to our individual film donors for their contributions.

2026 DJFF Film Selection Committee

Mark Boscoe –Committee Chair

Gary Blum

Paula Breese

Bobbi Ewelt

Mark Goldstein

Paula Machlin

Marci Penner

Patricia Lackner

Diane Waldman

Betsy Brachfield

Jeffrey Peer

Mizel Arts and Culture Center Team

Stephanie Herm, Executive Director

Timothy Campbell, Program Director

Amy Mills

Amy Morris

Casey Shpall

Donald Turken

Julie Turken

Dorothy Resnick

Elisabeth Evans

2026 DJFF Pre-Screener Committee JCC Denver Board of Directors

Fran Berry

Gary Alexander

Ginger Kennedy

Jackie Chazan

Jill Giller

Jonathan Miller

Marissa Swanson, Assistant Program Director

Jacob Auten, Production and Technical Manager

Lexi Holtzer, Box Office and Rentals Coordinator

Kevin McVeigh, Theatre Technician

Greg Purcell, Theatre Technician

Judi Marcus

Leslie Schwartz

Linda Weiss

Lisa Thompson

Maureen Beigel

Renee Brilliant

Sandra Korn

Sara Kornfeld

Shari Freis

Shelly Toltz

Stacey Fleishman

Stephanie Shpall

Denver Collaborators

Daniel Siegel, Director of Engagement & Jewish Learning

Blair Becker, Engagement Program Manager

Katie Estroff, Engagement Program Manager

Keri Graves, Engagement Coordinator

Ari Shahbazi, Fine Arts Engagement Program Manager

Mizel Arts and Culture Center Board of Directors

Mark Goldstein, Board Chair

David Back

Sarah Bullock

Rhea Lyons

Sarah Rosen

Terry Rubin

Megan Seff

Julie Turken

Alan Frosh

Bevin Foley

Kathy Neustadt, Emeritus

Mike Kboudi, Board Chair

Garrett Barter

Katie Frisch

Kendra Goldstein

Jimmy Gulick

Paula Herzmark

Joe Hodas

Aaron Kremer

Rachel Kurtz-Phelan

Ed Nekritz

Rabbi Elizabeth Sacks

Zach Siegel

Lisa Walko

Rachel Wool, General Manager of Marketing & Philanthropy

Russell Chee, Director of Marketing

Charlie Sommers, Creative Strategist

Erin Goldfarb, Chief Development Officer

Bonni Raderman, Director of

Major Gifts & Corporate Relations

HONORING MARK BOSCOE

Congratulations Mark!

Angel, David and the Drucker Family

Mark has been the quiet heartbeat of our movie selection committee with his steady, passionate, and endless dedication. It’s Mark’s spirit that’s made the greatest impact. His legacy will inspire us for years to come.

Bobbi Ewelt

A fitting tribute to a leading member of our community. Best wishes from the Rosen family Irene and Arthur Rosen

Mazel Tov on the honor! Be careful on that bike!

Alana and Brian Story

Warm congratulations on this recognition. It is a joy to see your commitment honored, and we are glad to say yasher koach as you are celebrated.

GHP Investment Advisors

30th Annual DJFF Tributes – Honoring Mark Boscoe

To our Old Buffalo,

We are so proud of you and incredibly grateful for everything you ’ ve given to the Denver Jewish Film Festival over the years. Watching hundreds of films each year to help choose the best of the best takes real time, care, and love. Your dedication has made a meaningful impact on both the festival and the community it serves This milestone year is shaping up to be especially inspiring, and we know much of that is because of you

More than anything, we ’ re thankful for you as a dad, a zaidy, and a father-in-law. We love you so much, and we ’ re lucky to celebrate this moment with you

We love you!

Adam, Natalie, Libby, Jake, Sam, Alana, Stella, Leo & Gili

Dear Mark, Dad, and Zaidy. We are all so proud of the hard work you've done over the past 15 years to create an outstanding Denver Jewish Film Festival. Mazel Tov on this wonderful honor. Love, your family

Congratulations to Mark Boscoe for his 15 years of dedicated service to the Denver Jewish Film Festival.

Best regards, Celeste Grynberg

Dear Mark,

Thanks for leading us all these years! I still remember my interview with you to join the committee. We've certainly had our disagreements but I truly admire your taste in films, your dedication, and your genuine desire to put together the best program possible. Thanks! Diane Waldman

30th Annual DJFF Tributes – Honoring Mark Boscoe

Congratulations to Mark Boscoe for his involvement in the Denver Jewish Film Festival for 15 years. It is our honor and privilege to make this tribute to Mark. Mazel Tov.

Elisa Moran and Gary Kleiman

Mark, thanks for your years of kindness, patience, and knowledge in guiding the film selection committee to wonderful film selections.

Marsha and Gary Blum

Our community is enriched by your tireless dedication to the Denver Jewish Film Festival.

Helene Richard Martin

Congratulations to our dear friend Mark Boscoe. Ilene and Mike Rosen

Congratulations, Mark!

Jamie Sarche

Mazel Tov, Mark!

Joe Gensheimer

Mazal tov Mark! Thanks for the many years of of helping us pick which movies to see!

Heather and Jeff Wedgle

30th Annual DJFF Tributes – Honoring Mark Boscoe

Thank you, Mark, for your years of generous leadership. You have been a steadfast and dedicated leader who has helped us through the tough times, the lengthy meetings, and the difficult choices with calm and cheerful guidance. Yasher koach! best wishes, Paula and Hon. James Breese

Congratulations on this well-deserved honor.

You have been the driving force that has kept the Denver Jewish Film Festival vibrant and relevant for 15 years. I admire your committment and devotion. I wish you many more years of film watching and critiquing. With admiration, Jane E Rosenbaum

Mazel Tov, Mark!

Kathi Cramer

Mark, We are deeply grateful for all that you do for our community. Thank you for being both an inspiration and example to us all. With appreciation, Lisa and Vern Engbar

Mark, congratulations for a job well done.

Leah and Jeff Peer

30th Annual DJFF Tributes – Honoring Mark Boscoe

Thank you for your years of dedication to the Denver Jewish Film Festival and our community at large! Your insight and expertise are always valued and appreciated!

Penner

Dear Mark, On behalf of the Denver Jewish Film Festival, I want to express our deep gratitude for your outstanding leadership of the Selection Committee for more than a decade. Your keen understanding of film, collaborative spirit with committee members, and ability to guide a thoughtful and effective process have been instrumental in shaping many years of successful festivals.

Barbara and Mark Goldstein

Thank you for your many years of dedication and vision in bringing the film festival to life.

Mike Sophir

Thank you, Mark, for your years of generous leadership. You have been a steadfast and dedicated leader who has helped us through the tough times, the lengthy meetings, and the difficult choices with calm and cheerful guidance. Yasher koach!

Paula B.

In recognition of your outstanding contributions and exceptional dedication, we honor you with deep gratitude and respect.

30th Annual DJFF Tributes – Honoring Mark Boscoe

Thank you Mark for ALL your film reviewing and leadership, making the DJFF a premier event in our community for so many years. Dottie and Steve Resnick

Box Office

Make your reservations early to ensure the best seat selection!

All seating in the Wolf Theatre is reserved.

Ticket and Seat Exchanges are allowed prior to screening. Refunds and Cancellations are not allowed.

Box Office will open 1 hour prior to film start time during festival week.

Note: All seating in the Wolf Theatre is reserved. View the seating chart online to select your seats when you purchase your tickets.

Box Office Hours

During Festival

Mon, Wed, Thurs, Fri 1 hour before earliest screening that day – 30 minutes after the final screening starts.

Seating Policy: Seats for all in-person films in the Wolf Theatre can be selected at the time of purchase. Seats are reserved, first-come, first-served at the time of purchase, and will not be held for any other reason. Seats for all in-person films in the Pluss Theatre are general admission and are available first-come, first12:00 - 4:00 pm

303.316.6360

jccdenver.org/film

J P E R K S P A S S

This annual membership program provides many opportunities including member-only experiences, access to special events at the JCC and Mizel Arts and Culture Center, and priority i tration for Camps and Engagement programs

• 18% off Neustadt JAAMM Series and Denver Jewish Film Festival

• 10% off select Engagement classes

• Priority registration on select programs

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