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"Estate": Rainbow Feeds Us Immature | Israel today

2020-11-22T11:07:01.152Z


In "Nachla" there are no punches like in "Sabri Mernan", but there are also no recorded laughs • What it does have are stereotypes and a boring plot | TV


In "Nachla" there are no punches like in "Sabri Mernan", but there are also no recorded laughs • What it does have is stereotypes and a boring plot

  • Also periphery, also moshavniks.

    "endowment"

On the regular slot of "Sabri Mernan" landed "Friday" - the estate - and it is difficult not to compare the two great hopes of Keshet.

"Sabri" has already managed to prove that it is the viewers' first choice, while "Nachla" will have a harder job.

Despite this, when the alternative on the net is "Shai on Broadcast", "Nachla" achieves 13% for the first episode and almost 11% for the second - compared to 4.8% for "Shai on Broadcast".

While "Sabri" is a comedy based on ethnic stereotypes that will always be identified with, even in 2020, and families of urban types, "Nachla" tells the story of a family in the "Ma'ale Hashlosha" moshav whose children return to their father's house, who are in debt, to help with the avocado orchard.

Neither the periphery nor the moshavniks - not even the tip of the iceberg can be seen on the horizon.

Shlomo Braba is Arik, the father of the family, his daughter Shiri (Nelly Tagar) and her husband Erez (Erez Shalem) have returned from Tel Aviv to the moshav, daughter Dafna (Shani Cohen) is a carefree single mother raising her son Nachat, and son Geva (Moshe Ashkenazi) remains In a seat and working in the family plantations.

In "Nachla" there are no punches like in "Sabri", or at least they do not protrude above the surface.

On the other hand, there are also no recorded laughs, and you will now explain to viewers when Punch passed here.

But do not worry about the "estate", the stereotypes have not escaped them: if Erez makes good hummus he fails to sell it because hummus, as is well known, goes with an Arab who shouts in the background and makes messes.

This is the only way customers will come.

Shiri and Erez, who came from the big city, are of course smarter than their brothers or the primitives from the seat with the old-fashioned opinions.

The writers of "The Estate" are Erez Shalem, Natalie Marcus and Assaf Beiser.

The last two are the creators of "The Jews Are Coming" and it seems that they should have put their talent aside so as not to be too clever in "Nachla", which, God forbid, will not go too high for them.

The problem is that they succeeded, and "The Estate" looks like an anemic and castrated comedy with punches that won't make anyone laugh and a boring plot.

Rainbow is probably building on the lack of an alternative, so it can continue to feed the viewers an unripe avocado that will never ripen, until the pots with the shingles and shlups are ready.

"The Estate," Rainbow, 12 Friday 9:30 p.m.

Source: israelhayom

All life articles on 2020-11-22

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