A Room of His Own, directed and written by Matan Yair, premiered at the Jerusalem Film Festival last night. It is a wonderful coming-of-age film about a teenager learning to handle the expectations of others and the difficulties of maturing. This is Matan Yair’s third feature film. His debut film was Scaffolding, an award-winning film which was reviewed on this blog.
Similar to Scaffolding,
this film is also about a 17-year-old high school senior who has trouble
understanding how to curb his impulsiveness and his enthusiasm for sharing what
he is thinking, even if it is not terribly socially polite or correct.
The film touches on many subjects such
as dealing with divorce, awakening sexuality, and how to handle his
relationship with his sister who is in the army and only comes
home on the weekends. Much of the film, however, is about Uri’s desire for a relationship
with his disappearing and clueless father, and, on the other hand, his strong
relationship with the sports teacher at his school. It is also about the crude way that comments
based on the Holocaust, on memory, on the terror of the Nazis, and about
Goebbels and Goring, creep into his conversation.
According to the remarks by the
filmmaker at the screening last night, this film has autobiographical details
and is about “the period that my mother and my siblings tried to keep our heads
above water.” His mother, weary and suffering from the separation from the father, is
portrayed in a wonderful way, as a woman working hard to move ahead in her job,
and as a loving figure to her son and her daughter.
This is not a film with a lot of action. Rather, Matan Yair provides us with insight into the high school years which can be so difficult for young people. He is a talented filmmaker, with a subtlety and preciseness as he casts his gaze on a particuilar period or situation.
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