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Between the Temples

  • 2024
  • R
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
Carol Kane and Jason Schwartzman in Between the Temples (2024)
Watch BETWEEN THE TEMPLES | Official Trailer (2024)
Play trailer2:09
3 Videos
25 Photos
Comedy

A cantor in a crisis of faith finds his world turned upside down when his grade school music teacher re-enters his life as his new adult Bat Mitzvah student.A cantor in a crisis of faith finds his world turned upside down when his grade school music teacher re-enters his life as his new adult Bat Mitzvah student.A cantor in a crisis of faith finds his world turned upside down when his grade school music teacher re-enters his life as his new adult Bat Mitzvah student.

  • Director
    • Nathan Silver
  • Writers
    • C. Mason Wells
    • Nathan Silver
  • Stars
    • Jason Schwartzman
    • Carol Kane
    • Dolly De Leon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    3.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nathan Silver
    • Writers
      • C. Mason Wells
      • Nathan Silver
    • Stars
      • Jason Schwartzman
      • Carol Kane
      • Dolly De Leon
    • 30User reviews
    • 65Critic reviews
    • 83Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos3

    Between the Temples
    Trailer 2:09
    Between the Temples
    BETWEEN THE TEMPLES | Official Trailer (2024)
    Trailer 2:09
    BETWEEN THE TEMPLES | Official Trailer (2024)
    BETWEEN THE TEMPLES | Official Trailer (2024)
    Trailer 2:09
    BETWEEN THE TEMPLES | Official Trailer (2024)
    Between The Temples: Jdate
    Clip 0:53
    Between The Temples: Jdate

    Photos25

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Jason Schwartzman
    Jason Schwartzman
    • Ben Gottlieb
    Carol Kane
    Carol Kane
    • Carla Kessler
    Dolly De Leon
    Dolly De Leon
    • Judith Gottlieb
    Caroline Aaron
    Caroline Aaron
    • Meira Gottlieb
    Robert Smigel
    Robert Smigel
    • Rabbi Bruce
    Madeline Weinstein
    Madeline Weinstein
    • Gabby…
    Matthew Shear
    Matthew Shear
    • Nat
    Lindsay Burdge
    Lindsay Burdge
    • Darcy
    Julia Walsh
    • Twin #1
    Brittany Walsh
    • Twin 2
    Diane Lanyi
    • Cindy
    Keith Poulson
    Keith Poulson
    • Bartender
    Jason Grisell
    Jason Grisell
    • Priest
    Annie Hamilton
    Annie Hamilton
    • Rachel
    Jaden Waldman
    Jaden Waldman
    • Bar Mitzvah Boy
    Simona Sickler
    • Nerdy Girl
    Pauline Chalamet
    Pauline Chalamet
    • Leah
    Cindy Silver
    • Yael
    • Director
      • Nathan Silver
    • Writers
      • C. Mason Wells
      • Nathan Silver
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    6.23.2K
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    Featured reviews

    5mark-67214-52993

    Sweet Story Meets "Harold and Maude"

    Nathan Silver's "Between the Temples" is widely acclaimed by critics. Your experience may vary. Mine did.

    Following the accidental death of his wife, Ben (Jason Schwartzman - "Asteroid City" and other Wes Anderson projects) is bereft. Although he works as the cantor for a local synagogue, he is unable to sing. After his latest failed attempt during services, Ben rushes out of the synagogue. He lies down in the middle of the road to end it all but instead gets a lift from the truck driver to a nearby bar. He gets drunk. In a related matter, he gets punched in the face. In the process, he becomes reacquainted with his childhood music teacher, Carla (a fantastic Carol Kane). Eventually, Ben begins to tutor the 70ish Carla for the bat mitzvah denied her by her Russian Communist parents.

    Silver uses this story, which begins with tremendous potential, to explore the themes of many of his previous films, particularly the paralyzing consequences of anxiety and fear and why people fall in love or even put up with each other. At the same time, he offers a gentle critique of Jewish culture that features an explosive Shabbat dinner, mothers (Ben has two) fixated on immediately finding him a nice Jewish girl and a rabbi who's willing to negotiate and haggle about everything. Robert Smigel as the rabbi and Madeline Weinstein as Gabby, the rabbi's daughter and very available Jewish girl, offer strong performances.

    The oddball relationship between Ben and Carla is mesmerizing. It's sweet, kind, confusing, funny, quirky and completely charming. Schwartzman and Kane's performances are well worth the price of admission.

    What sunk this film - and it's a sinking of Titanic proportions in my view - is the muddled tone. On the one hand, there's a pervasive sweetness and a kindness in the face of everyone's frailties that's quite endearing. This sweetness encourages, even compels, the moviegoer to really invest in what's happening with these characters. So it's jarring to have slapstick scenes injected into the story along with diversions into broad, bawdy, absurdist comedy that shove us away from the feelings being so carefully nurtured. At times, I felt manipulated by these jolting shifts in tone and perspective. For me, this tonal inconsistency was a deal-breaker. Even the title of this film can't seem to make up its mind. Is the film to be an assessment of Jewish culture? Is it to be a treatise on behavioral neuropsychology? Or is it just trying to be too clever for its own good?

    "Between the Temples" is a step forward from Silver's very low-budget previous films, many of which starred his mother. It's thoughtful, sometimes insightful and occasionally hilarious. Unfortunately, it's a film that never decides whether it wants to be sweet and earnest or "Harold and Maude." I left the theater feeling confused by an unfocused story (and an incomprehensible conclusion) that felt more lazy than layered.
    6evanston_dad

    Sweet Performance by Carol Kane

    Not being Jewish myself, it's always hard for me to understand movies about devoutly Jewish people. Like the way parents treat their kids in films about Jewish families seems almost abusive, and I never understand why the kids put up with such controlling behavior. And I'll never understand parents setting their kids up with presumptive spouses, as that wasn't part of my upbringing at all.

    So some of the conflicts in "Between the Temples" felt more frustrating than compelling to me, because they seemed so easily resolvable. But otherwise, this is an amiable enough movie that has a sweet performance by Carol Kane. Her complicated relationship with Jason Schwartzmann, a kind of "Harold and Maude" situation that doesn't go quite as far, gives the film its central plot, and the movie is at its best when those two are on screen together.

    I didn't care for the film's visual style at all. It's like a John Cassavetes movie, with a roving, jittery camera that zooms in for extreme closeups. The film looks like a documentary, which doesn't fit its tone at all.

    Grade: B.
    5eric12808-527-585297

    Disjointed

    Between the Temples in s an exercise in " randomness" without much thought as to how the scenes fit together.

    Really? Is this the best the editing could do?

    Even the writing is very uneven, as though more than one writer threw out different ideas and then clipped them together.

    Some of the scenes were not consistent with the character's personality but it seems as though the anything goes!

    I really wanted to like this movie but it did not pick up traction and I was surprised at how little humor there was.

    I'm not sure how long it took to make this film but it was disappointing!

    So disappointing!

    Carol King was terrific !
    8annelsalzberg

    Touching and Hilarious!

    I was not Bat Mitzvahed, but had the opportunity to learn to read Torah at the age of 50. As soon as I saw a review of this film, I knew that I had to see it. I thoroughly enjoyed myself and was moved on a very personal level.

    The performances were superb, the script was sharp and funny. Most of the details were spot-on, many of them recalling my own and my family's experiences. That said, I can understand why viewers who are less familiar with Jewish ritual and culture might be left cold by the film.

    Coming to Torah later in life, I, of course, related strongly to Carla's character. The one glaring flaw I felt was the absence of a Torah scroll in film. Reading from the scroll, copied and produced exactly as it had been for milennia, was an overwhelming part of the experience for me. It gave me a connection to ritual and history that I'd never experienced before.
    8bjacob

    Delightful

    I loved Between the Temples. Not so much for the slightly predictable plot -- twenty minutes in, you get no prizes for guessing where the story is going -- but for the fresh, improvisational camerawork, for the observations, the attention to the sheer physicality and texture of reality, of bodies, of objects. Some sequences are almost Vertovian: the one where the protagonist watches the video of his younger self, in particular: its tempo is so precise, so funny and poetic, it made me want to applaud.

    The references to the cinema of the 70s are so pointed that it occasionally borders on the pastiche; it wasn't before the appearance of the first modern car that I became sure I wasn't watching the reedition of a forgotten vintage indie movie. But, heck, it works, in spite of its occasional weaknesses it's fun, fun, fun.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The rabbi has a personalized license plate that says TKNOLUM. This refers to the Hebrew phrase "Tikkun Olam" meaning "Repair the World".
    • Goofs
      While being picked on at the bar, Benny finishes his mudslide and noisily places the empty glass on the bar. As seen from the big guy's point of view, the mudslide in front of Benny is hall full.
    • Quotes

      Rabbi Bruce: Anyone is entitled to love anyone, but not while pretending and giving other people the impression that he loves someone else.

    • Connections
      References The Philadelphia Story (1940)
    • Soundtracks
      Kol Ehad
      Performed by Mordecai Arnon (as Pupik Arnon)

      Written by Miki Gabrielov and Mordecai Arnon (as Mordechai 'Pupik' Arnon)

      Courtesy of Phonokol Record Company

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 23, 2024 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 聖殿領唱的幸福指南
    • Filming locations
      • Congregation Emanuel of the Hudson Valley, 243 Albany Avenue, Kingston, New York, USA(synagogue)
    • Production companies
      • Fusion Entertainment
      • Ley Line Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,084,122
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $647,757
      • Aug 25, 2024
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,316,693
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 51m(111 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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