Legendary Jewish sports club Hakoah ("The Strength" in Hebrew) Vienna was founded in 1909 in response to the notorious Aryan Paragraph, which forbade Austrian sports clubs from accepting Jewish athletes. Its founders were eager to popularize sport among a community renowned for such great minds as Freud, Mahler and Zweig, but traditionally alien to physical recreation. Hakoah rapidly grew into one of Europe's biggest athletic clubs, while achieving astonishing success in many diverse sports. In the 1930s Hakoah's best-known triumphs came from its women swimmers, who dominated national competitions in Austria. After the Anschluss, the political unification of Nazi Germany and Austria in 1938, the Nazis shut down the club, but the swimmers managed to flee the country before the war broke out, thanks to an escape operation organized by Hakoah's functionaries.
Sixty-five years later, director Yaron Zilberman meets the members of the women's swim team in their homes around the world, and arranges for them to have a reunion in their old swimming pool in Vienna, a journey that evokes memories of youth, femininity, and strengthens lifelong bonds. Told by the swimmers, now in their eighties, Watermarks is about a group of young girls with a passion to be the best. It is the saga of seven outstanding athletes who still swim daily as they age with grace.
Director: | Yaron Zilberman |
Studio: | Kino International |
Producer(s): | Yaron Zilberman, Yonatan Israel |
Cast: | Judith Haspel, Trude Hirschler, Anni Lampl, Hanni Lux, Anne Marie Pisker, Nanne Selinger, Greta Stanton, Elisheva Susz |
Writer(s): | Ronen Dorfan, Yonatan Israel, Yaron Zilberman |
Official Site: | www.kino.com/watermarks/ |