AWARDS
BEST SHORT DOCUMENTARY Los Angeles Jewish Film Festival (2006)
NEW FILMMAKERS AWARD Philadelphia Jewish Film Festival (2005)
BEST DOCUMENTARY, SECOND PLACE Palm Springs International Festival of Short Films (2005)
AUDIENCE FAVORITE Documentary Short, Palm Springs International Festival of Short Films (2005)
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT, SECOND PLACE Warsaw Jewish Film Festival (2005)
FESTIVAL SCREENINGS
Shreveport Jewish Film Festival (2010)
Museum of Tolerance International Film Festival (2010)
San Diego Jewish Film Festival (2010)
Washington DC Jewish Film Festival (2007)
Maine Jewish Film Festival (2007)
San Francisco Jewish Film Festival (2007)
Vancouver Jewish Film Festival (2006)
New York Jewish Film Festival (2006)
Rhode Island International Film Festival (2006)
Washington Jewish Film Festival (2005)
New York Jewish Film Festival (2006)
Delray Beach Film Festival (2006)
NCJF Jewish Film Festival (2006)
One of the few documentaries to explore the stories of Jewish-American World War II soldiers, this film focuses on six Philadelphia veterans in their 80’s, and their individual experiences during the war and a bittersweet reunion they share in their old age. For Jews, the war to defeat Hitler had deeply personal significance. Combined with photographs from the men’s personal collections, the film includes rare archival footage, stills, and newsreels including Jewish soldiers celebrating Shabbat and Passover during wartime and the first Jewish service at Dachau after it was liberated. Milton Dank, a noted physicist and historian who flew glider planes in Word War II, contributed hundreds of photographs he took on the front lines.
Photographer Judy Gelles, who was very close to her father-in-law Sidney Gelles until his death in 1986, discovered a box of his World War II artifacts. In this box were Sidney's helmet, spats, tallis, dog tag, War Department manuals, photos, telegrams, and hundreds of letters to his future bride Clara. In these letters were hints of anti-semitism that he experienced during the five years that he served. He never talked about those years in the Army. This lack of information prompted Judy and her partner in the project photographer Marianne Bernstein to investigate the experiences of Jews who served in World War II. The film premiered at the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia as part of A Soldier's Story: Intimate Artifacts of World War II, an exhibition of still photographs and letters.
CRITICAL ACCLAIM
"I don’t find it at all ironic that the single best film in this year’s New York Jewish Film Festival is one of the shorter ones. Judy Gelles and Marianne Bernstein, the directors of From Philadelphia to the Front, knew exactly what they wanted to say, said it and got out."
-George Robinson,The Jewish Week 01/20/06
ARTICLES
"JEWISH VETERANS RECALL STRUGGLE"
The Jewish Advocate, August 2007 (PDF)
EXTERNAL LINKS
www.fromphiladelphiatothefront.com
PURCHASE DVD
HOME USE ONLY
$36.00 plus shipping
Home Use Only DVD (Not for Classroom/Institutional Use)Does not include Public Performance Rights
Home Use Policy (pdf)INSTITUTIONAL USE
$72.00 plus shipping
Classroom/Institutional Use Only DVDDoes not include Public Performance Rights
Institutional Use Policy (pdf)
![]()
From Philadelphia
to the Front2005, USA, 37 minutes
Directed by Judy Gelles and
Marianne Bernstein
$72 Institutional Use DVD
Buy Now
$36 Home Use DVD
Buy NowPublic Exhibition Beta Rental also Available
|