A new Israeli feature film, Sand Flakes, directed by Gitit Kabiri and Yahel Kabiri, a mother and son team, is about life in a development town. It also offers a portrait of a compelling family, its vulnerabilities, its sadness, and its joy.
David is a teenager, living in
Dimona, a development town in the south which is windy, sandy and
desolate. His mother is suffering from
MS and his father, who works at the Dead Sea Works, is dreaming of leaving and moving
to Tel Aviv.
David is a bright kid who enjoys
reading and writing stories. He is a devoted son and big brother. His closest
friends seem to be kids that he meets through an on-line chat room where they
share the stories they have written. In a beautifully-written
literary style, David writes about his own family’s story, but he hides under a
false identity and pretends to be a kid from a wealthy suburb outside of Tel
Aviv.
The film offers a compelling look
at adolescence, at coping with a physical handicap within the family unit, and the
pressures of a development town kid who is trying to fit into Israeli society
in general.
Sand Flakes is distributed by Go2Films.
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