Saturday 26 April 2014

The Holy Land Revisited

 Bethlehem; Starring Tsahi Halevi and Shadi Mar'i. Directed by Yuval Adler. In Hebrew and Arabic with English subtitles.
 


    Do Palestinians and Israelis ever agree on anything? Sometimes they do. For they've both recently made films on young Palestinians who have links to Israeli intelligence agents.
    'Bethlehem' directed by Yuval Adler an Israeli, isn't a love story like 'Omar' that was directed  by a Palestinian. Yet like 'Omar' this film doesn't have a happy ending.
     In 'Bethlehem' the young Sanfur (Shadi Mar'i) is in constant contact with Razi (Tsahi Halevi) an Israeli agent. Yet Sanfur has a brother Ibrahim who is  a       terrorist, at least according to the  Israelis. The Arabs would call him ' A freedom fighter'.
     "You want to search my underwear too?" Sanfur snaps at an Israeli soldier. And a freedom fighter/terrorist  says after Ibrahim is captured, "We will turn Tel Aviv into a big graveyard."
     No Israeli or Arab film I've seen has caught so well the terrible hostilities that erupt between Israeli and Palestinian and between Palestinians and Palestinians as 'Bethlehem' does. Armed men pop up everywhere, all of them ready to kill and be killed. A wonderful scene in a hospital where a wounded Razi plays backgammon with an older Palestinian, tells us graphically what happens to Palestinian informants.
     Yet here I think director Adler goes overboard and weights the film in favour of Israel. Nor is this the only time when the film seems stacked against the Palestinians.
     Still, perhaps this is the only fair viewpoint of many Israeli citizens .
     In any case Sanfur does get his revenge. "Don't ever call me again," Sanfur tells Razi over the phone. Yet the two do get together one last time with tragic results.
      Maybe one day Israelis and Palestinians will live together in peace and harmony. Yet as 'Bethlehem' shows, as did 'Omar', that day may be a long way off.

Thursday 10 April 2014

Violence in Cuba but not from Castro

'3 Days in Havana' Starring Gil Bellows and Greg Wise. Directed by Tony Pantages and  Gil Bellows.


 Be careful of Canadian tourists.
   That's the message Cubans and others may take away after seeing '3 Days in Havana'. Jack Petty (Gil Bellows) seems like a polite Vancouver-based insurance salesman  who comes off the tarmac in Havana looking like innocence itself.
     Bellows played in t.v.'s 'Ally McBeal'  for many years.
     Then he meets a Scotsman named Harry Smith. He's supposedly a travel journalist. Yet played by Greg Wise, a t.v. star from the U.K., Smith in fact is a cocaine-sniffing gangster.
     Co-directors Vancouver's Tony Pantages and Bellows  show us all the sights and sounds of touristy Havana. There's crumbling sidewalks, dance halls full of exotic-looking women, dozens of Cuban cigar smoking people, old model U.S. cars and even synchronized swimmers who do their stuff in near empty swimming pools.
    Cinematographer Peter Stathis has given a wide view of Havana which includes a visit to Ernest Hemingway's old drinking spot. Here, a bronze statue of Hemongway leans on the bar waiting to be served another whisky.
    "You've been playing both sides, haven't you?" one man who follows Petty around, tells him. Soon Petty ends up in the hands of gangsters who nearly beat him to death.
    "You're the unluckiest fuck in this planet," one of his torturers tells him.
     Yet the beginning and end of this film don't seem to fit the film. Some other scenes seem pasted on for effect. And Petty's sudden turning from a regular insurance salesman into a snarling man of action, strikes me as unreal.
     In any case, '3 Days in Havana' is full of fun, drinking, and alas, murder. So Cubans beware! Some Canadian tourists could be dangerous, even if they say, "I just sell insurance."