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1983 • Music / Drama • 132m

Yentl

"In a time when the world of study belonged only to men, there lived a girl who dared to ask..."why?""

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In a time when girls were forbidden to study religious scriptures, a Jewish girl masquerades as a boy to enter religious training and unexpectedly finds love along the way.

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Top Cast

Barbra Streisand
Barbra Streisand
Yentl
Mandy Patinkin
Mandy Patinkin
Avigdor
Amy Irving
Amy Irving
Hadass
Nehemiah Persoff
Nehemiah Persoff
Rebbe Mendel
Steven Hill
Steven Hill
Reb Alter Vishkower
Allan Corduner
Allan Corduner
Shimmele
David de Keyser
David de Keyser
Rabbi Zalman
Bernard Spear
Bernard Spear
Tailor
Doreen Mantle
Doreen Mantle
Mrs. Shaemen
Lynda Baron
Lynda Baron
Peshe
Miriam Margolyes
Miriam Margolyes
Sarah
Ian Sears
Ian Sears
David
Kerry Shale
Kerry Shale
Yeshiva Student
Danny Brainin
Danny Brainin
Yeshiva Student
Jonathan Tafler
Jonathan Tafler
Yeshiva Student
Peter Whitman
Peter Whitman
Yeshiva Student
Norma Atallah
Norma Atallah
Debra (uncredited)
Derek Lyons
Derek Lyons
Yeshiva Student (uncredited)
Screenplay: Barbra StreisandExecutive Producer: Larry DeWaayScreenplay: Jack RosenthalProducer: Rusty LemorandeProducer: Barbra StreisandDirector: Barbra Streisand

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Reviews

CinemaSerf
2025-01-17
60%

The eponymous young woman (Barbra Streisand) has been brought up by her father (Nehemiah Persoff) to be a free thinking and curious young girl, and one who is determined to get an education even though it is only boys who are allowed to go to university. When he dies, she hits on quite a riskily innovative idea. She will cut her hair and dress as boy. Voilà - "Anschel" is born and of he goes to further study the Talmud. Once there, she befriends "Avigdor" (Mandy Patinkin) and his fiancée "Hadass" (Amy Irving) and her association with them gradually makes her realise that there is much more to life than books and philosophy. Life must be for living. Except, well perhaps no-one would be prepared for the favour her new friend asks of her; one that compromises the very purpose of her study and search for independence. It's at this point that what was a powerful and personable drama starts to come off the rails. There is a cruelty to the narrative that no amount of power-ballading is going to mitigate. I went from being broadly engaged by the "Yentl/Anschel" character to being really rather disgusted by the selfishness on display. Certainly that's partly a testament to the acting of Streisand and to the scene-stealing Irving, and it's a potent indictment of marital traditions that don't just exist within the Jewish community, but I still found the preparedness of this would-be scholar to engage in something quite so unkind rather put me off a story about which I no longer cared. The production design is authentic looking and the supporting cast for the first part of the film are engaging, lively and even a little mischievous. "Papa" and "A Piece of Sky" clearly demonstrate the Legrand/Bergman/Streisand partnership at it's most musically powerful but in the end did this film show us a woman bent on self-improvement or one just concerned about herself? I think however pertinent the purpose of a film may be, it's important for the audience to feel some sympathy with the plaintiff, so to speak. Here I started off like that, but quickly felt a lack of objectivity around the development of the lead characterisation led to the creation of a persona I didn't especially respect and I certainly didn't trust.

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Details

Status
Released
Origin
US, GB
Languages
English
Studios
Ladbroke, United Artists, Barwood Films
Budget
$12,000,000
Box Office
$30,400,000

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