"World Cinema: Israel"

My book, "World Cinema: Israel" (originally published in 1996) is available from Amazon on "Kindle", with an in-depth chapter comparing and analyzing internationally acclaimed Israeli films up to 2010.

Want to see some of the best films of recent years? Just scroll down to "best films" to find listings of my recommendations.

amykronish@gmail.com

Monday, July 24, 2023

Searching for Holocaust Memory

The Delegation (המשלחת), directed by Asaf Saban, won the award for best screenplay at the 40th annual Jerusalem Film Festival, this past week.

According to the jury for Israeli feature films at the festival: “With a very contradicted and difficult subject matter, this script finds a very clever and special perspective which does not ignore the past of the topic, but also finds a fresh answer for the new generation.”

About a class trip to Poland, this is a joyful film, full of warmth and good spirit.  The story focuses on three good friends, 2 boys and a girl – Ido is popular with the girls, Frisch is hoping to have a first sexual experience, and Nitzan is the glue that holds them together.  There is the fooling around in the hotel, some drinking, and also some serious moments. 

It was nice to see that there is a section of the story that deals with encounters with the local Polish population (because most trips to Poland ignore the contemporary reality completely).  When Frisch gets left behind as the bus pulls out from a rest stop it leads to his meetings with the local people, which adds an interesting perspective to the film.  

Just as I was feeling that the film doesn’t deal enough with memory and how the viewer, as the younger generation, fits into that picture, Nitzan, who is a bit crazed by what she sees, steals a shoe from those masses of old shoes in a scene that is very hard-hitting.  Nevertheless, I was left feeling a bit disappointed since it seemed to me that the young people didn’t seem to understand or even care about why they went on this journey to visit the death camps. Similarly, the filmmaker wasn’t adequately able to express it. There just wasn’t enough grappling with Holocaust memory and its implications for young Jews growing up in Israel today.


 

 

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