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Only Die Twice, a film by David Deri and, Yair Lev, is a compelling
historical and personal mystery. The
filmmaker, a second generation survivor, sets out on a journey to solve a
family mystery.
When
the filmmaker's mother inherits a cottage in an upscale neighborhood of London,
she has to prove who she is and how she is related to the deceased. The lawyer dealing with the case discovers
something unsettling in her father's records.
Ernst Bechinsky, her father, lived in Palestine since the 1930s and died
there. But the lawyer has discovered a
second death certificate from the 1980s for a man living in Austria, with the same name and the identical date of birth. How could this
be?
The
filmmaker, Yair Lev, travels to Innsbruck to discover who was this imposter who took his
grandfather's identity and why would someone steal another's identity?
The
story slowly unfolds as the filmmaker interviews people who might have known
the second Ernst Bechinsky, as he reconstructs the past, and considers what might
have motivated this man. He discovers a close connection to an Austrian Nazi
family and builds a surprising bond with the grandson of this family – a man his
own age, a man also grappling with living in the shadow of that time. This is a film about victims and
perpetrators and living with the burden of the past, about identity and about shattering our
own assumptions.
The
film won an award at DocAviv 2018 – the jury's comments: "Research is the
heart and soul of this film, a film where the director works as investigator,
uncovering a personal mystery to reveal a profound truth about family,
brotherhood and forgiveness."
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