Marc Levin
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This article is about the filmmaker. For the conservative author, lawyer, and radio talk show host, see Mark Levin. For the Nim's Island director, see Mark Levin (director). For the liberal journalist, lawyer, radio, and television talk show host, see Mark Levine (journalist).
Marc Levin (born in 1951) is a Jewish American filmmaker who is perhaps best known for his film Slam (1998) which won both the Sundance Film Festival's Dramatic Feature Grand Jury Prize and the Cannes Film Festival's Golden Camera award. [1]
Levin recently finished his new movie, The Protocols, which is about resurgent anti-Semitism following the September 11, 2001 attacks. The film focuses on The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, an anti-Semitic forgery which supposedly describes the Jewish plan for global domination. Although the book has been repeatedly debunked as an obvious forgery, Levin continually discovers various groups presenting it as "proof" for their own anti-Semitic agenda. [2]