Close Menu
  • Support Us
  • Newsletter
  • News
  • Features
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
    • Video Games
      • Previews
      • PC
      • PS5
      • Xbox Series X/S
      • Nintendo Switch
      • Xbox One
      • PS4
      • Tabletop
    • Film
    • TV
    • Anime
    • Comics
      • BOOM! Studios
      • Dark Horse Comics
      • DC Comics
      • IDW Publishing
      • Image Comics
      • Indie Comics
      • Marvel Comics
      • Oni-Lion Forge
      • Valiant Comics
      • Vault Comics
  • Podcast
  • More
    • Event Coverage
    • BWT Recommends
    • RSS Feeds
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Support Us
But Why Tho?
RSS Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
Trending:
  • Features
    The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough keyart

    The First Descendant Season 3 Looks Like A Gamechanger

    05/11/2025
    Mafia: The Old Country promotional still

    Everything We Know About ‘Mafia: The Old Country’

    05/08/2025
    Sunderfolk Phone Players

    10 ‘Sunderfolk’ Tips To Help You And Your Party Thrive

    05/02/2025
    Bob in Thunderbolts But Why Tho

    ‘Thunderbolts*’ Visualizes Depression As Only A Superhero Movie Can

    05/02/2025
    Games to Play After Expedition 33

    5 Games to Play After Beating ‘Clair Obscur: Expedition 33’

    05/01/2025
  • Star Wars
  • K-Dramas
  • Netflix
  • Blood of Zeus
  • MCU
But Why Tho?
Home » Film » SUNDANCE 2024: A Cantor Learns To Love Himself In ‘Between The Temples’

SUNDANCE 2024: A Cantor Learns To Love Himself In ‘Between The Temples’

Jason FlattBy Jason Flatt01/29/20245 Mins ReadUpdated:08/27/2024
Between the Temples
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit WhatsApp Email

V’ahavta l’reiacha kamocha — love your neighbor as yourself. These words from the Torah were central to Cantor Ben’s (Jason Schwarzman) bar mitzvah in Between the Temples, written by Nathan Silver and C. Mason Wells and directed by Silver. They’re the same words his new adult bat mitzvah student Carla (Carol Kane) will read from the Torah too. Ben tells Carla early in their lessons that to become bat mitzvah, she not only has to learn the Hebrew of her Torah portion but understand what it means.

Becoming bat mitzvah, especially as an adult who left Judaism long ago, is about choosing for yourself to be part of a bigger Jewish community and living the values of our Torah and its tradition every day. But how can you love your neighbor as yourself when you don’t love yourself?

Get BWT in your inbox!

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter and get the latest and greated in entertainment coverage.
Click Here

Get BWT in your inbox!

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter and get the latest and greated in entertainment coverage.
Click Here

Ben’s wife died in an accident about a year ago, and ever since, he has lost his voice, literally and figuratively. He won’t sing anymore, even though it is his passion and his job. But he isn’t looking for his voice either. His mothers, played magnanimously by Dolly de Leon and Caroline Aaron, egg him on. He needs to get out of the house. He needs to go back to the temple. He needs to date the rabbi’s daughter, Gabby (Madeline Weinstein). But Ben himself has no ambition or desires of his own anymore.

Until Carla comes along. Between the Temples seems, at first, to suffer from one of the most annoying tropes in Jewish movie-making. It’s littered with nagging Jewish mothers, a dumb rabbi, and constant references to Israel if that’s the only cultural touchpoint American Jews have. Most confoundingly, the religious school students wear kippot every day, and the sanctuary has no instruments, indicating Ben works at a Conservative synagogue, yet they use Reform prayer books.

These are the kinds of things that perhaps annoy me personally more than the average viewer, but it’s a kind of design choice that feels like it’s purposefully caricaturing its Jewishness to create a broader mass appeal. It’s a tired way of Jewish movie-making and needs to stop.

But the context of Between the Temples at least makes the nagging Jewish mothers forgivable. While the movie’s undertones are quite sincere, it’s still a comedy through and through. If we can’t laugh at our existential dread and uncertainty about the universe, who can? Those mothers are nagging not just because it’s a heuristic for how much they care but because if they weren’t, it wouldn’t put Ben into constantly awkward situations with Gabby. And the movie certainly wouldn’t culminate in the most awkward dinner scene imaginable.

The camerawork and editing in Between the Temple accentuate the awkwardness. Everything is moving at a rapid clip with lots of facial close-ups. You’re supposed to feel the knot of tension tightening in Ben’s gut with every passing scene. But you’re also supposed to feel relaxed whenever Carla is in the scene, because she is the one sane person in the whole movie, despite being its most lovable kook. I’m not sure what it says about the state of Jewish comedy that she’s also the character the least connected to her being Jewish, that she plays this role in this story, but it’s very touching nonetheless.

If there is one Jewish stereotype the movie leans into that at least feels genuine and not overplayed in other Jewish movies, it’s the way Ben’s lost singing voice makes for a perfect metaphor for the way everyone else in his life constantly tries to speak for him. I’m sure this has been true his whole life, but especially since his wife’s death, he can’t get a single word in edgewise at home or at work. Everyone just wants to set him up or do his job for him all the time.

But he doesn’t want to run away from it all, either. Despite his crisis of consciousness, he clearly loves his job and his community. Carla, through her oddity and charm, gives him a space to speak for himself and practice doing what he loves without the judgment and derision everyone else heaps upon him.

Between the Temples is a thoroughly narrowcasted movie, but as somebody in the narrow scope of its audience, I think it’s excellent. The humor is subtle but also laugh-out-loud hilarious the whole way through. And despite some of its annoying tendencies to lean on Jewish stereotypes in an unnecessary attempt to appeal to a broader audience, there’s a strong message about how the loudness of Jewish families can silence our emotional depths. Rather than merely laughing the pain off as we so often (and validly) do, Carla helps Ben confront it head-on. In a truly lovely twist on the tradition, by learning to love his neighbor, Ben learns to love himself again.

Between the Temples is playing now in theaters everywhere.

Between the Temples
  • 8/10
    Rating - 8/10
8/10

TL;DR

Between the Temples is a thoroughly narrowcasted movie, but as somebody in the narrow scope of its audience, I think it’s excellent.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
Previous ArticleSUNDANCE 2024: ‘Dìdi’ Imagines The 2008 We Could Have Had
Next Article Day Of The Devs Becomes An Official Non-Profit
Jason Flatt
  • X (Twitter)

Jason is the Sr. Editor at But Why Tho? and producer of the But Why Tho? Podcast. He's usually writing about foreign films, Jewish media, and summer camp.

Related Posts

Josh Hartnett in Fight or Flight movie promotional still
9.5

REVIEW: ‘Fight or Flight’ Is The Single-Location Actioner You Need

05/06/2025
Jeanne Goursaud as Sarah in Netflix Original Film The Exterritorial
7.0

REVIEW: ‘Exterritorial’ Is A Netflix Action Movie Worth Watching

05/03/2025
Seohyun, Ma Dong-seok, and David Lee in Holy Night Demon Hunters
6.0

REVIEW: ‘Holy Night Demon Hunters’ Holds Nothing Back

05/02/2025
Oscar in The Rose of Versailles (2025)
3.5

REVIEW: ‘The Rose of Versailles’ Fails To Harness Its Potential

05/01/2025
The cast of the Thunderbolts
5.5

REVIEW: ‘Thunderbolts*’ Fosters A Half-Hearted Identity

04/29/2025
Spreadsheet Champions
8.0

HOT DOCS 2025: ‘Spreadsheet Champions’ Excels In Heart

04/28/2025
TRENDING POSTS
The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough keyart Features

The First Descendant Season 3 Looks Like A Gamechanger

By Kate Sánchez05/11/2025

At PAX East 2025, NEXON previewed the groundbreaking mega-update for The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough.

The Devil's Plan Season 2 key art
4.5
TV

REVIEW: ‘The Devil’s Plan’ Season 2 Is Off To A Rough Start

By Charles Hartford05/07/2025Updated:05/07/2025

The Devil’s Plan Season 2 challenges its contestants to outsmart and outmaneuver each other. Unfortunately, it does so in pace grinding ways

Razer Joro product image
9.0
Product Review

PRODUCT REVIEW: The Portable Razer Joro Is A Travel Gamechanger

By Kate Sánchez05/08/2025Updated:05/08/2025

Reliable and uncompromising in its gaming features on the go, the portable Razer Joro is a travel gamechanger.

Black Women Anime — But Why Tho (9) BWT Recommends

10 Black Women in Anime That Made Me Feel Seen

By LaNeysha Campbell11/11/2023Updated:12/03/2024

Black women are some of anime’s most iconic characters, and that has a big impact on Black anime fans. Here are some of our favorites.

But Why Tho?
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest RSS YouTube Twitch
  • CONTACT US
  • ABOUT US
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER
  • Review Score Guide
Sometimes we include links to online retail stores. If you click on one and make a purchase we may receive a small contribution.
Written Content is Copyright © 2025 But Why Tho? A Geek Community

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

But Why Tho Logo

Support Us!

We're able to keep making content thanks to readers like YOU!
Support independent media today with
Click Here