Zila
Set in mid-70's, 12-year old Dvir Avni navigates between the equality values of his home-born Kibbutz and the relationship with his undermined mother, whom the Kibbutz members will to denounce.
Dalia Baum
Balding advertising executive Mr. Baum spends more time on a new ad campaign for purple sunglasses than he does with his own family. But suddenly he is forced to reexamine his life after a doctor tells him that he has an 'aggressive' brain tumor and will die in 90 minutes.
A story of an army colonel who is fighting the accusations in committing war crime but his only witness is comatose in the hospital.
Tania
Two interconnected stories in the 1930s, one set in Berlin, the other in Palestine: Mania Vilbouchevich Shohat (1880-1961), called Tania, a Russian Jew and revolutionary, goes from Minsk to Palestine to live on a collective. She promotes feminism and laments a shift in the men from self-defense to aggression. Her friend, Else Lasker-Schuler (1869 - 1945), expressionist poet and German Jew, is in Berlin, writing, caring for her son, watching Hitler's movement take power. She goes to Jerusalem and imagines a park for Arab and Jew. Her poems, voiced from within, capture her experience. The film meditates on the violence at the root of Israel's birth: of the Nazis and of the Zionists.
Mary
Jesús (también conocida como "La vida pública de Jesús") es una película de 1979, dirigida por John Krish y Peter Sykes y protagonizada por Brian Deacon como Jesús de Nazaret. Esta película corre a través de la vida de Jesús empezando con su nacimiento y culminando con su ascensión a su hogar celestial. El Evangelio de San Lucas de la Santa Biblia, fue escogido como la base del diálogo y acción para la película. Cinco años de cuidadosa preparación antecedieron la filmación en Israel en los lugares donde se llevaron a cabo los hechos reales en el evangelio. Las escenas son emocionantes y muestran muchos de sus milagros.