Welcome to the Soundtrack Tel Aviv Film Festival 2025. Grappling with the challenging year that we’ve had, ultimately drives home for us the reason why we do what we do. We create and curate in a world gone mad, because we believe that through art we can find some sense. And there is nothing like cinema and music – together – to clarify how we feel, and to connect us to meaning, which in the past two years seems to constantly elude us. We create and curate because we believe that art comes to expand and connect, to be a mirror and a gate. To break the heart but also to redeem the soul.
This is why among the themes of this year’s festival films you will find American gospel, Caribbean calypso, Spanish flamenco, as well as post-punk from communist Poland and German metal, which channels the trauma of the Holocaust into music that provides catharsis for hatred and violence. Over all of this hovers the black cosmic philosophy of Sun Ra, which binds everything together in perfect irrationality. What a wondrous world.
The program also includes a retrospective of the master composer Philip Glass, and the premiere of the new British award-winning documentary “The Last Musician of Auschwitz” – whose director, Toby Trackman, is our special guest.
As always, we also have a rich Israeli program – including tributes to George Ovadiah, Shmuel Imberman, and the classic TV show “Zehu Ze!”. We have a new Israeli music video competition, as well as live shows, lectures, workshops, one-time events, and a rich program for children and the whole family.
We’re opening this year’s festival with two new films, delving into two completely different worlds: a comprehensive documentary about Billy Joel, one of the great creators of American popular music, and a film about the Butthole Surfers, who are also American, but are everything Joel is not. As mentioned, a mirror and a gate.
Elvis Costello’s song “Almost Blue”, as sung by the legendary Chet Baker, one of the protagonists of this year’s festival films, expresses the feeling of “almost doing things we used to do.” This could describe how we feel in Israel 2025. From the almost, certainty will arise. Because that’s what happens when you combine text with music. So, imagine what happens when you add an image to both.
Say Amen, Somebody One of the greatest music documentaries ever made, this beloved documentary masterpiece stands as both a celebration and testament to the power of gospel music and Black American heritage. Through intimate portraits of gospel legends—including pioneer Thomas A. Dorsey, revered matriarch Willie Mae Ford Smith, and electrifying performances by the Barrett Sisters and O'Neal Twins "Say Amen, Somebody" delivers a profoundly moving cinematic experience. The film pulses with the same spiritual energy and heartfelt devotion that defines the music at its center, creating a documentary that uplifts audiences while honoring a rich cultural tradition with authenticity and...
The pioneering art-punk band Butthole Surfers emerged in Texas in the 1980s and broke through with the success of alternative rock in the 1990s. Their very name was a fuck you to the straight, conformist, homophobic Reagan ethos. Instead, they were radically inclusive weirdo pioneers who pushed the limits of artistic expression and lifestyle. When they started, their name was so shocking newspapers wouldn’t print it. Ten years later, Beavis and Butthead and David Letterman were saying it on primetime TV. Perry Farrell asked them to perform at the first Lollapalooza, Led Zeppelin’s John Paul Jones produced their first major...
This intimate two-part HBO documentary reveals the man behind the piano through unprecedented access to personal archives, home movies, and candid interviews. Billy Joel opens up about the love, loss, and personal demons that shaped his legendary songbook, creating an expansive portrait of one of America's most enduring singer-songwriters. Part 1 delves into Joel's formative years: his working-class Long Island childhood, the devastating impact of his father's abandonment, and his early musical journey through local bands. The episode traces his pivotal first marriage to Elizabeth Weber—the muse and manager behind many early hits—and his breakthrough deal with Columbia Records that...
This intimate two-part HBO documentary reveals the man behind the piano through unprecedented access to personal archives, home movies, and candid interviews. Billy Joel opens up about the love, loss, and personal demons that shaped his legendary songbook, creating an expansive portrait of one of America's most enduring singer-songwriters. Part 2 of the documentary covers Billy Joel's life and career from the 1980s onwards, focusing on his musical evolution, well-known marriages to Christie Brinkley and Katie Lee, his struggle with alcoholism, and his eventual return to live performances after the "12-12-12" concert.
The Last Musician of Auschwitz How can there be music in the worst place in the world? The Last Musician of Auschwitz reveals how music became a lifeline and form of resistance amid the Holocaust's horrors. At its center is 99-year-old cellist Anita Lasker-Wallfisch, the last living survivor from the camp orchestras, whose testimony frames this powerful documentary. The film examines the SS’s perverse relationship with music – forcing prisoners to perform for their entertainment and accompany slave labourers, turning art into another form of torture. It also celebrates three other remarkable musicians – Ilse Weber, Szymon Laks, and Adam...
The Thin Blue Line Music: Philip Glass Errol Morris's classic The Thin Blue Line – placed fifth on a Sight & Sound poll of the greatest documentaries ever made – stands as a landmark achievement that transforms documentary filmmaking into a powerful instrument of justice. This masterwork of investigative storytelling follows the case of Randall Dale Adams, wrongfully convicted of killing a Dallas police officer and facing execution for a crime he didn't commit. Morris crafts a compelling narrative through innovative techniques – dramatic reconstructions, probing interviews, and Philip Glass's mesmerizing score – creating a film that functions simultaneously as...
Documentary. Mister Vibes, a sensitive and humorous musician, embarks on a musical journey across Israel in a solar-powered car – from the north all the way to Eilat. Along the way, he meets with local artists, plays unique instruments, and shares personal, moving stories. Among other things, the film reveals Ronen’s family history, including their role in draining the swamps in the early 1900s and involvement in the NILI underground network. The film reflects an inner journey of a 50-year-old artist searching for meaning and dreaming against all odds. Unexpected disruptions during production humorously and humanly highlight the challenges of...
Linus O’Brien, son of “Rocky Horror Show” creator Richard O’Brien (who also played Riff Raff in the movie), documents how a quirky London theater production evolved into cinema’s most beloved and enduring culא phenomenon. “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” didn’t just find an audience – it created devoted midnight movie disciples who transformed passive viewing into participatory ritual. Through candid conversations with his father, Tim Curry, and fans including Jack Black and Trixie Mattel, “Strange Journey” reveals how a simple story about sexual awakening became a timeless celebration of outsider joy and community belonging. For more of Rocky Horror’s Jubilee...
Robert Mugge’s documentary is an affectionate portal into the mind of the extraordinary Black philosopher, musician, poet, and revolutionary. Mugge filmed jazz great Sun Ra on location in Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, D.C. between 1978 and 1980. The resulting 60-minute film includes multiple public and private performances, poetry readings, a band rehearsal, interviews, and extensive improvisations. Transferred to HD from the original 16mm film and lovingly restored for the best possible viewing experience. The film will also be screened at Matmon (Romano House) on Saturday, November 29th, as part of Soundtrack's collaboration with the Tel Aviv-Jaffa Jazz Festival. After the...
Celebrating the 40th anniversary of this classic Sting documentary with an original 35mm film screening! Sting: Bring On the Night This intimate documentary classic captures Sting at a career crossroads, leaving The Police behind to forge a bold new jazz-fusion path with virtuoso musicians like Branford Marsalis. It was filmed during a pivotal moment in his career - the period right after The Police's massive success when he was establishing his new musical identity. Michael Apted's camera follows the creative process from rehearsals to triumphant Paris concerts, revealing the vulnerability behind the superstar facade. The film's most talked about moment...