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Review:  Senior’s precarious trip to Israel in ‘Next Year Jerusalem’

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Eight elderly souls (average age, 91) from a Fairfield, Conn., nursing home take a last-chance trip to Israel in “Next Year Jerusalem,” an affecting but cursory documentary.

Producer-director David Gaynes, though clearly well-intended, seems so eager to put the happiest — or at least pluckiest — face on the group’s precarious 2011 journey that he excises most of the film’s potential drama, conflict and tension. The result, although involving, is a brief, at times random, routinely shot and edited (by Gaines) video diary.

The film first introduces us to an engaging group of mostly Jewish nursing home residents — of varying degrees of strength and mobility — as they anticipate their journey to the Holy Land. They include the good-humored but severely disabled Selma (she calls herself “the crooked woman”), Belgian-born Regine, 97-year-old jokester Bill and the kindly Helen, an observant Roman Catholic.

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How the travelers are chosen, as well as most of the trip’s financial, practical and preparatory considerations, goes underexplored. There’s also no sign of — nor input from — the participating residents’ family members, many of whom must have had serious concerns about this risky undertaking.

Once in Israel, we follow, with no discernible route, the 10-day tour’s various sightseeing stops: the Western Wall, the Masada, the Dead Sea, a Holocaust museum and elsewhere. While the sites are stirring and it’s wonderful to witness the travelers’ collective joy at this dream-like experience, discussion of most practical matters — meals, lodging, medical needs — is again missing.

It’s a privilege getting to know these determined, inspiring seniors, to whatever extent Gaynes allows. But a more deeply revealing, fully candid approach would have made for a more satisfying cinematic excursion.

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“Next Year Jerusalem.”

No MPAA rating.

Running time: 1 hour, 10 minutes.

At Laemmle’s Royal Theatre, West Lost Angeles; Laemmle’s Town Center 5, Encino.

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