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A visually dazzling, Kafkaesque murder mystery, Isaac draws on Cold War thriller and film noir tropes to create an ambitiously novelistic Euro-drama in which personal treachery resonates across a broader historical canvas, one haunted by a grisly real-life massacre. In 1941, a Lithuanian man kills his Jewish neighbor, Isaac, at the Lietukis garage massacre during which an armed mob tortured and murdered between 40 and 60 Jews in front of a baying crowd, a savage preview of the incoming Nazi occupation of the Baltic states. Twenty-five years later in Soviet Lithuania, a feted writer and film director returns from the USA with a screenplay of a film that portrays, in detail, the Lietukis garage massacre and describes a particular situation where Isaac, the Jewish neighbor, is killed. The screenplay is brought to the attention of and investigated by the KGB, who question why his screenplay is so unusually historically accurate, as though he might have witnessed it himself. Perhaps he knows someone who attended the massacre themselves? The aftermath of this vicious murder comes to suggest that Europe's brutal totalitarian past is not safely dead and buried. Like Pawel Pawlikowski's Cold War, Vaclav Marhoul's The Painted Bird (MJFF 2020 Critics Prize Winner), and other recent ruminations on Eastern Europe's enduring post-war wounds, Isaac is a trip into the past as it confronts themes of guilt, friendship, love, regret, and self-liberation in the difficult historical context of Lithuania during the Holocaust and postwar Soviet.


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The Miami Jewish Film Festival virtual program is made possible with the generous support of Benjamin Nahum and Tamar Roodner.

  • Year
    2020
  • Runtime
    104 minutes
  • Language
    Lithuanian, German, Russian
  • Country
    Lithuania
  • Premiere
    Southeast US Premiere
  • Director
    Jurgis Matulevicius
  • Screenwriter
    Jurgis Matulevicius, Saule Bliuvaite, Nerijus Milerius
  • Cast
    Aleksas Kazanavicius, Severija Janusauskaite, Dainius Gavenonis
  • Cinematographer
    Narvydas Naujalis
  • Editor
    Jurgis Matulevicius
  • Music
    Agne Matuleviciute, Domas Strupinskas