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Category Archives: Movies

The Israeli Film Shines In the European Film Awards!

The Band's visit poster Saleh Bakri as Haled Shlomi Avraham as Papi and Rinat Matatov as Yula the band's visit - the band arrival

The 20th European Film Awards was held in Berlin and hosted by French actress Emmanuelle Beart and German actor Jan Josef Liefers.

Britain’s Helen Mirren won yet another award on Saturday for her performance in “The Queen”, winning the best actress crown at the 2007 European Film Academy and that after she won the Oscar for the same movie a few moths ago.

Also on the same note, the Israeli actor Sasson Gabay won the best actor award on his role in “The band’s visit” a comedy about an Egyptian police band who finds itself in Israel as a result of a cultural exchange, and that we already recommended to you few weeks ago.

This was a great achievement for the Israeli film industry, other Israeli actors have been nominated in the past but Gabay is the first to win. At the same award show the director Eran Kolirin won the award for the European discovery of 2007.

The awards mark the great work and progress the Israeli film industry has been making for the last few years with movies who won awards like: “walk on water” “meduzut” etc. The only sad thing about last night is the big sense of missing the opportunity to win the Oscars, as a couple moths ago “The band’s visit” was disqualified from competing in the Oscars due to the fact that the language spoken in the movie is mostly English and not Hebrew or Arab.

We keep hoping that Israeli films will keep making it big not only in Israel but all around the world.

Jerry Seinfeld buzz In Israel!

Jerry Seinfeld In Israel 2007 Jerry Seinfeld visited Israel this past week as part of his movie “Bee Movie” promotion. The trip to the Holy Land got so much hype it rivaled news of key upcoming Middle East talks.

The Jewish comedian visited Israel for the first time since 1971. When he was 15 years old he volunteered in a Kibbutz helping to grow Bananas.

Seinfeld got to meet both Israeli President Shimon Peres and Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. He also visited places such as Holocaust Museum Yad Va’Shem and Historical Massada Mountain.

Newspapers devoted nearly full-pages to his trip. And references to his humor crept into serious items in the news. “Yada, yada, yada,” said TV political analyst Amnon Abramovitz Sunday about the Mideast meeting called by President Bush, quoting one of the best-known phrases from Seinfeld’s TV show.

Seinfeld was surprised by the reception received and said it is quite a contrast to what he experienced during his last trip to Israel.

“I would be in the fields, and nobody wanted my autograph and nobody wanted to take their picture with me,” he told reporters in Tel Aviv. “They just let me hack away at those banana leaves, and no, I didn’t meet the prime minister even once.”

Jerry Seinfeld Press Conference

Seinfeld Meets Israeli President Shimon Peres:

Jerry Seinfeld interview in Chanel 10:

A Movie You Must See! "The Band’s Visit"

 

Once, not long ago, a small Egyptian Police band arrived in Israel. They came to play at an initiation ceremony but, due to bureaucracy, bad luck, or for whatever reason, they were left stranded at the airport.

They tried to manage on their own, only to find themselves in a desolate, almost forgotten, small Israeli town,

somewhere in the heart of the desert. A lost band in a lost town. Not many people remember this. It wasn’t that important.

postervisit

DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT (ERAN KOLIRIN - Director and Script Writer)

When I was a kid, my family and I used to watch Egyptian movies. This was a fairly common Israeli family practice, circa the early 1980’s. In the late afternoon on Fridays, we’d watch with bated breaths the convoluted plots, the impossible loves and the heart-breaking pain of Omar Sharif, Pathen Hamama, I’del Imam, and the rest of that crew on the one and only TV channel that the country had. This was kind of weird, actually, for a country that spent half of its existence in a state of war with Egypt, and the other half in a sort of cold, correct peace with its neighbor to the south.

Sometimes, after the Arab movie, they’d broadcast a performance of the Israel Broadcasting Authority’s orchestra. This was a classical Arab orchestra, made up almost entirely of Arab Jews from Iraq and Egypt. When you think of the IBA orchestra, maybe the custom of watching Egyptian movies ceremony sounds a little less odd.

The Arab movie has long since disappeared from our screens. TV became privatized, and has sunk out there among the five hundred fifty seven or who knows how many channels that have descended on us. And then the IBA orchestra was disbanded. We got MTV and BBC and RTL and “Israeli Idol” and pop songs and 30-second commercials. So who cares about quarter-tone songs that last half an hour any more?

Afterwards, Israel built the new airport, and they forgot to translate the road signs into Arabic. Among the thousands of shops they built there, they found no room for the strange, curling script that is the mother tongue of half of our population. It’s easy to forget the things that H&M and Pull and Bear and Levi’s etc. make us forget. Over time, we’ve forgotten ourselves too.

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A lot of movies have been made touching on the question of why there is no peace, but it seems that fewer have been made about the question of why we need peace in the first place. The obvious is lost on us in the midst of conversations centering on economic advantages and interests. At the end of the day, my son and my neighbor’s son will meet, I am sure of that, in some neon-blinking mall under a giant McDonald’s sign. Maybe that’s some kind of comfort, I don’t know. What’s certain though is that we’ve lost something on the way. We traded true love for one-night stands, art for commerce, and the human connection, the magic of conversation for the question of how big a slice of the pie we can put our hands on.

This audience-pleasing sensation of Cannes’ Un Certain Regard and winner of eight Israeli Oscars follows the comic plight of the Alexandrian Police Orchestra. These eight slightly bewildered Egyptian officers, after getting lost at the airport, arrive in a remote, slightly empty Israeli village, their powder-blue uniforms standing out against the desert landscape. Fortunately, they connect with Dina, a ballsy, sexy café owner (Ronit Elkabetz, three-time winner of the Israeli Oscar), who helps them find lodging for the night. In the very first images of his first theatrical film, writer-director Elan Kolirin displays a mastery of low-key deadpan visual humor in the manner of Tati and Jarmusch. By the movie’s second half, however, he pushes boundaries as several of the characters unexpectedly confront what one refers to as “tons of loneliness.” With its precise portions of tact, irony and sweetness, Director Eran Kolirin’s film gives ‘humanist cinema’ a good name, and offers yet another example of the resurgence of Israel’s vibrant, provocative and increasingly varied film culture.

The movie was selected to be Israel’s Official Submission to the Best Foreign Language Film Category of the 80th Annual Academy Awards (2008), but it was disqualified by AMPAS because more than 50% of film’s dialogue was found to be in English, as opposed to Arabic and Hebrew.

The Movie Won 13 International Awards:
Won Best Actor (Sasson Gabai),Best Actress (Ronit Elkabetz),Best Costumes (Doron Ashkenazi),Best Director (Eran Kolirin),Best Film,Best Music (Habib Shadah),Best Screenplay (Eran Kolirin) and Best Supporting Actor (Saleh Bakri) at Awards of the Israeli Film Academy 2007.
Won Un Certain Regard - Jury Coup de Coeur (Eran Kolirin) at Cannes Film Festival 2007.
Won Special Mention (Sasson Gabai & Ronit Elkabetz) at Flanders International Film Festival 2007.
Won Audience Award at Sarajevo Film Festival 2007.
Won Golden Eye (Eran Kolirin) and New Talent Award New Talent Award at Zurich Film Festival 2007.

SCR: Eran Kolirin
DIR/SCR: Eran Kolirin
PROD: Eilon Ratzkovsky, Ehud Bleiberg, Yossi Uzrad, Koby Gal-Raday, Guy Jacoel
CO-PROD: Sophie Dulac, Michel Zana
DP: Shai Goldman
ED: Arik Lahav Leibovitz
PROD DES: Eitan Levi
MUS: Habib Shehadeh Hanna
CAST: Sasson Gabai, Saleh Bakri, Khalifa Natour, Ronit Elkabetz, Rubi Moscovich, Uri Gabriel

More information about the great movie you can find in the official web site here.

Haifa Film Festival 2007

Haifa International Film Festival The Haifa International Film Festival is held each year during the holiday of Succoth on the ridge of Mount Carmel overlooking the Mediterranean Sea. The Festival was founded in 1983 and was the first of its kind in Israel. Over the years, the Festival became the biggest and most important film celebration in Israel.
The Haifa International Film Festival brings together each year an ever-growing audience of 60,000 spectators along with hundreds of Israeli and foreign professionals from the film and television industries. 180,000 people in total take part in the activities of the festival, including the outdoor events, screenings, workshops and more, and dozens of journalists from both the print and broadcast media, from Israel and abroad, cover the event.
During its eight days of celebration, the Festival proudly premieres 150 new films from the best and most recent international productions and holds 220 screenings in seven theaters and under the sky: feature films, documentaries, animation, short films, retrospectives and tributes.
Festival Program:
Gala screenings - the biggest film productions from Hollywood and Europe are premiered at the Festival before moving on to commercial distribution.
Panorama - the very best films world cinema has to offer; films that have won enthusiastic reviews and awards at international Festivals over the past two years and are not intended from commercial distribution in Israel.
Israeli Film Competition - new Israeli films that are competing for awards in a number of categories: feature films, documentary films, TV dramas, animation and student films.
The Golden Anchor Competition for Mediterranean Cinema - a competition of quality productions from Mediterranean countries.
The Fipresci Competitionfor new directors
Doc-Talks - American Documentaries with an introduction before each film.
Retrospectives and tributes - this category promotes filmmakers and themes that celebrate the history of filmmaking and its milestones
New German Cinema - The Latest and the best of the German Productions
East of the West - Cinema from Eastern Europe
The Festival’s Board of Directors is composed of film and culture professionals and members of the public.
Each year the Festival enjoys the support of the City of Haifa, the Ministry of Education, Science and Sport - the Israeli Film Council, and the European Union. It is also sponsored by commercial companies.

You can visit the official site of Haifa Festival Film here.

AJAXed with AWP