Hamilton Books
Pages: 162
Trim: 6 x 8¾
978-0-7618-7223-8 • Paperback • August 2020 • $38.99 • (£30.00)
978-0-7618-7224-5 • eBook • August 2020 • $37.00 • (£30.00)
Daniel Ross Goodman is a writer, rabbi, and scholar from western Massachusetts. He writes on art, film, literature, and sports for the Washington Examiner, and his academic and popular articles have appeared in numerous journals, magazines, and newspapers. He is also the author of the novel A Single Life.
Foreword
Permissions
Also by Daniel Ross Goodman
Introduction
Chapter 1: To the Wonder
Chapter 2: Renoir
Chapter 3: The End of the Tour
Chapter 4: Nebraska
Chapter 5: Boyhood
Chapter 6: Exodus: Gods and Kings
Chapter 7: Ex Machina
Chapter 8: Adaptation
Chapter 9: Gravity
Chapter 10: Magic in the Moonlight
Chapter 11: Inside Llewyn Davis
Chapter 12: All is Lost
Chapter 13: Roger Ebert—In Memorium
Chapter 14: Hollywood, the Oscars, and the Missing Modern Jew
Chapter 15: The Great Beauty
Chapter 16: Grand Budapest Hotel
Chapter 17: The Big Short
Chapter 18: La La Land
Chapter 19: Blue Jasmine
Chapter 20: The Wolf of Wall Street
Chapter 21: Museum Hours
Chapter 22: Life Itself
Chapter 23: The Great Gatsby
Chapter 24: Tree of Life
Chapter 25: The Revenant
Bibliography
Index of Films Referenced
About the Author
This book takes its readers on a fascinating journey through recent Hollywood films that illustrate the deep experiential similarities between cinema and religion in bringing together the heavenly and the human, the sublime and the mundane. The appreciative, but also analytical and critical, treatments of individual movies engage with Jewish and Christian themes and texts, and are punctuated here and there with excurses on the life and legacy of Roger Ebert and the image of Jews in Hollywood film. An enjoyable, informative, and inspiring read for all film-lovers. — Adele Reinhartz, professor and chair, Department of Classics and Religious Studies, University of Ottawa
Goodman invites us into a conversation about film that stimulates the emotions and the intellect. He produces a rich fusion of insights from literary, philosophical, biblical, and rabbinic sources, while keeping the conversation light-hearted and accessible.
— Claudia Setzer, Professor of Religious Studies, Manhattan College
This is a serious book but it is fun to read. On page after page, it surprises us with new insights drawn out of old iconic screen moments. After reading Goodman, you will reverse the old adage. Instead of saying “I lost it at the movies,” you will say: “I found it (vision/divinity/global connectivity) at the movies.” Thank God and thank Goodman.
— Irving Greenberg, President of the J.J. Greenberg Institute for the Advancement of Jewish Life