Akiva Barkin (1934-2014) was a director, author, film teacher, and founder of the Tel Aviv Cinematheque. Born in Warsaw, at the age of four Barkin and his family immigrated to Argentina on the cusp of World War II. When he was 19, he moved to Israel and joined the ranks of the IDF’s Nahal infantry brigade. In the early sixties, Barkin headed to Italy to study in Rome’s Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia where he directed the critically acclaimed short, One Thousand (1965).
After his return to Israel, Barkin directed a number of documentary shorts and news stories (e.g. Zalman the Old Tractor, 1960), in addition to writing several plays and novels including the autobiographical book, Emil: The Rise and Fall of a Film Director. In 1973, Barkin established the Tel Aviv Cinematheque which he also ran during its inaugural year. He was also the founder of two prominent Tel Aviv high schools’ film departments: Tichon Hadash (‘new high school’) and the Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium, where he also taught. In 1980, Barkin directed Morning Star – his one and only feature-length film.

Feature

Morning Star

Directed by Akiva Barkin, 1980
כוכב השחר
Rental English subs.

77 min.

Student Film

Aleph (Mental Asylum)

Directed by Akiva Barkin, 1965
אלף (בית משוגעים)

11 min.

Documentary

Let There Be Light

Directed by Akiva Barkin, 1974
ויהי אור

28 min.

Documentary

The Fortune of a Torah Scroll

Directed by Akiva Barkin, 1970
מזלו של ספר תורה

9 min.

Documentary

Zohar in the Galilee

Directed by Akiva Barkin, 1969
זוהר בגליל

15 min.

Documentary

Beyond the Dividing Line

Directed by Akiva Barkin, 1968
מעבר למחיצה

11 min.

Documentary

Students

Directed by Akiva Barkin, 1968
סטודנטים

14 min.

Documentary

Jerusalem Campus

Directed by Akiva Barkin, 1966
קמפוס ירושלמי

16 min.

Documentary

The Blind in the Age of Computer

Directed by Akiva Barkin, 1966
העיוורים בעידן המחשב

17 min.

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