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All for ten shekels: what should you see on Israeli Cinema Day? - Walla! culture

2021-10-25T21:01:39.934Z


No less than 32 fresh Israeli films will be screened as part of the Israeli Cinema Day, which will take place this coming Wednesday. All tickets are only ten shekels, so who can and should get them for?


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All for ten shekels: what should you see on Israeli Cinema Day?

No less than 32 fresh Israeli films will be screened as part of the Israeli Cinema Day, which will take place this coming Wednesday.

All tickets are only ten shekels, so who can and should get them for?

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  • Israeli Cinema Day

  • Avi Nesher

  • And there will be morning

  • Nadav Lapid

  • What to do with

Avner Shavit

Tuesday, 26 October 2021, 00:40

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Trailer for "Release My Edge" (United King)

Tomorrow is a holiday: Israeli Cinema Day. It comes in the midst of what was probably the most difficult period in the history of the industry. Even during the most terrible wars, there was no such thing: at first, the halls were closed for an unprecedented period of a year and a half, and even when they opened, the situation did not necessarily improve. "Release My Edge" has been an unprecedented success, but it masks the frustration experienced by the other films that have been released. The local audience did not really return to the halls, especially not the older audience that usually supported the local making, and as a result films that under other circumstances would have become commercial successes had a hard time finding their viewers.



Tomorrow (Wednesday) these films will get another chance, and with them will also be shown a variety of pre-premieres of films that are already ready but the time has come for their official distribution, because such a large bottleneck has been created. And most importantly: tickets for all these, in all halls, will cost only ten shekels (not including online booking fee and the like).



In total, 32 films (!) Will be shown and out of respect for the creators in the difficult hour, we will refer to all of them here, even if briefly.

We will also note that as part of the celebrations, the creators and stars of "Release My Edge" will be honored in honor of the film's dizzying success, and it will also be screened as part of the celebration and could further increase the astronomical amount of tickets it has already sold.

More on Walla!

Israeli cinema needed a hit.

Too bad he actually got this hit

To the full article

From "Let There Be Morning" (Photo: Dori Media)

Pre-premieres for the big winners of the Ophir Awards

Cinema Day takes place about a month after the Israeli Oscars, in which the big winner was, as I recall,

"Let there be morning

.

"

Eran Kolirin's film is based on Sayed Kashua's book about a Palestinian village under siege by the IDF. As usual, many criticized the film without watching it, and the irony is that unlike most Israeli works, which are just pseudo-leftists, this is a sharp and sharp text , which has strongly criticized Israel, but the Palestinian society. In short: Expect it, and we'll have a lot to talk about.



great rival of "Let there be morning" was

"picture of victory"

Avi Nesher, like the previous films, is expected to become blockbuster Once win wide distribution. also it's a political film, which is set against the background of the '48 war, and my impression of the pre-premiere screenings in their previous home crowd drifted inside, confined to a wheelchair throughout screening and finishes her tears.



another pre-premiere screenings will be shown

"The house on Finn Street "

Of Amir Manor, who won the Raymond Amsalem Award for Supporting Actress at the recent Ophir Awards,

and "More Than I Deserve"

by Pini Tabger, who was nominated at the ceremony in several categories, including the screenplay and acting awards, for the works of Anna Dubrovitz, Micha Prudovsky and Yaakov Zada ​​Daniel.

From "The Picture of Victory" (Photo: The Israeli Academy of Film and Television)

Pre-premieres for the big winners of the Jerusalem Festival

Hadas Ben Aroya and Tom Shoval are the senior representatives of the younger generation of Israeli cinema. This year, they both completed their second feature film -

"Someone Will Love Someone"

by Ben Aroya, which deals with the pains of young men and women in Tel Aviv, and

"Remove worry from your heart"

by Shoval, a Hebrew and English-speaking social satire inspired by Buñol's classics, starring Bernice Beige And the Frenchwoman, who starred in "The Artist," won an Oscar. Both were premiered at the Jerusalem Festival last summer and shared the main prize in the Israeli plot competition, and are now coming to pre-premieres. In this context, we will also mention

"Tel Aviv"

, his first film as a screenwriter and director of Mert Farhumovsky, who was previously known as a theater man, researcher and critic (including on this site), and won the Haifa Film Prize for his debut film.The one who competed against him in Haifa and will also be presented in the pre-premiere will be

"Abu Amar"

Of Roy Crispel starring Case Nashef.



In the previous edition of the Jerusalem Festival the big winners were

Danny Rosenberg's

"The Death of the Cinema and My Father"

, starring Roni Koven in his first film role - and

"Here We Are

" by Nir Bergman based on a screenplay by Dana Idisis ("On the Spectrum") Starring Shai Avivi.

The two have been raising dust for quite some time and have even managed to win commercial distribution in France, where they were praised, but have not yet been released here, and Israeli Cinema Day will be an opportunity to watch them in pre-premiere screenings, until it finally happens.

In this context, we will also mention

Yevgeny Roman's

"Background Voices"

, one of the best films made here about the Russian aliyah, which came up in the United States two weeks ago but not yet here, and will also be shown in a pre-premiere.

From "Someone will love someone" (Photo: Meidan Arma)

The docu

Two docu-films about significant artists who died prematurely will also be shown.

The first is

"Anat Gov, on life and death"

by Tamar Tal produced by HOT 8, which has been presenting in theaters for a long time, and the second is

"Black Notebooks - Vivian"

by Shlomi Alkabetz here 11 which was premiered at the Cannes Film Festival last summer but has not yet

aired

in Israel. And the general public will now be able to be impressed by it for the first time.

From "Black Notebooks - Vivian" (Photo: Cannes Film Festival)

Star-studded

The film celebration will feature a pre-premiere screening of several films with a rich, intriguing and often eclectic casting, to say the least in

Danny Reisfeld's

"Don't Wait For Me"

starring Omar Hazan, Taylor Malkov, Einat Shroff and Israel Oglebo;

Arik Lubetzky's

'The Meal'

presents Keren Peles in a cinematic premiere;

Marco Carmel's

"Paris Boutique"

boasts Benali Tagar and Morris Cohen;

"Getting Married"

by Eran YB waving law Mrsnikob, Anat Waxman, Leah Schnirer and Michael Lewis;

"Snowland"

by Yoni

Zichholtz

presents Uri Pepper, Shlomi Kuriat and Tali Sharon;

And "Aspiration for Life"

is a summit meeting of several screen legends and in fact a cinematic mini-incarnation of "That's It." Gov and Moshonov are missing, but Braba, Debla Glickman and Avi Kushnir are here, as well as Gadi Yagil.



Above them all stands

"perfect strangers",

Lior Ashkenazi's first film as a director, based on the Italian hit of the same name that has already spawned cover versions in a variety of other countries.

Who's inside?

Take a deep breath - Moran Atias, Avi Greinik, Hanan Savyon, Guy Amir, Shira Naor, Avi Greinik and more.



We will also mention

Amos Gitai's

"Night in Haifa"

, which, as usual, raises talent and spends it on an invisible film.

This time the victims are Hannah Leslau (who appears in only one scene), Naama Price, Tzachi Halevi, Maria Zarik, Clara and Makram Khoury and more.

In

Doron Eran's

"The Last Hour of Mr. Cole"

, a kind of solo film, there is only one actor - Ohad Shachar.

From "One in the Heart" (Photo: Yaron Sharaf)

second chance

Few Israeli films have been released since the Corona, and even fewer have been successful at the box office. On the hits shelf one can mainly mention

"Release My Edge"

and to a lesser extent about

"One More Story"

, Guri Alfi's first film as a director, both of which will also be screened in this festive setting.



Nadav Lapid's "Knee" won the Jury Prize at Cannes but was less commercially successful;

"One in the Heart"

by Talia Lavie starring Ran Danker, probably the most prolific Israeli artist of the past year, was not as successful as her previous film, "Zero in Human Relations";

Gidi Der's

Legend of Destruction

, an animated film about the destruction of the house, was crowned as a groundbreaking masterpiece by critics but did not reach its box office potential, .Everyone will try to win a new life.



In this context we will mention four more films, all of which are suitable for the whole family.

Prominent among them is the

"raft"

of Oded Raz, which due to the corona damage did not receive the respect it deserved.

This is one of the most beautiful and reliable children's films made in Israel, and I hope that this time it will resonate even more.



The other three are

Kobi Mehat's

"Paul Speed"

, the pledge of "Paul Gaz" which came out in better days and then gained greater popularity;

The adaptation of the classic tale

"Hanahal'a's Shabbat Dress"

starring none other than Michal the Little and Hani Nachmias, as well as the nature film

"Kinneret - Sea of ​​Life".

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Source: walla

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