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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Summary: award-winning brilliant first film by Eitan Gorlin,
By gaetano catelli "guy" (native New Yorker now in Oxford (Mississippi)) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Holy Land [VHS] (VHS Tape)
"The Holy land" is a coming of age story. but the protagonist, Mendy, is not just any run-of-the-mill naif. he is a rabbinical student in Tel Aviv, and the scion of a line of ultra-orthodox rabbis. his family is wonderfully wholesome, while Mendy is unbearably horny. the head rabbi at his yeshiva, noting Mendy's inability to concentrate on his studies, cites a passage in the Talmud (while denying that he is advising it) that states that a young man who visits a professional female companion will come away more focused on his religious studies.Mendy does not need to have his arm twisted. soon he finds a strip joint, goes in, meets the charming and beautiful Sasha, and falls in love with her. through Sasha he meets Mike, a larger than life character who owns a bar in Jerusalem where stock Arab and Jewish characters seamlessly mix in a sort of bizarre version of "Cheers". it is a timeless story about the conflict in the soul of every young adult (who has a pulse) between the idealistic pull from above to transcend our human nature, and the tug from below to experience the pleasures of the flesh precisely at that point in life when we are most able to enjoy them. having been raised as an ultra-orthodox Jew, Mendy has grown up in a culture second to none in its seriousness about avoiding the distractions of the secular world. yet, as an intelligent and sensitive young man, Mendy can't help but be elated by seeing the maps in an atlas, to give just one example of how sheltered his life had been before then. Oren Rehany deserves an Oscar for his performance as Mendy. he wordlessly conveys more emotion with the expressions on his face than most actors can deliver in a full blown soliloquy. Tchelet Semel, as Sasha, is not just "the girl". she's a fully developed character, with youth, beauty, and a mother back in Russia who needs money to pay for heat in the winter. and, all of this takes place against the backdrop of Jerusalem -- site of the world's longest running battle for the soul of man. so, what's the catch? the catch is that you can't dramatize the conflict between the sacred and the profane if you leave out the profane. and, if you love Israel, you may feel uncomfortable with a film that spends so much time on the dark side of life there, especially the IDF's routine treatment of Palestinians. (who wouldn't be uncomfortable seeing the warts of one's beloved displayed on the big screen?) but, if you can get beyond that, this movie is well worth seeing.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing experience,
By Anyechka (Rensselaer, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Holy Land (DVD)
The premise of this film actually had some promise. It features a rather unconventional quasi-love story and has the great added bonus of taking the viewer to parts of Israel that the average tourist doesn't even know about, like the seedy nightclubs and strip joints, the section of the Muslim Quarter known for being a Hamas area, and the places where the smuggling is taking place. The story starts out interestingly enough, when 20 year old Mendy is advised in a roundabout by one of his yeshiva teachers to go to a place where no one knows him and visit a harlot to get it all out of his system, and then he'll once more be able to concentrate on holiness. Little does the teacher know that Mendy grows fond of the life he begins making for himself in the outside world, as he works at Mike's Place, a bar where people from all walks of life congregate, and falls in love (or at least lust) with Sasha, a beautiful young prostitute who was brought from Russia to Israel via the booming white slave trade. While working at Mike's Place he also comes to meet a number of other colorful characters, such as the Messianic settler dubbed The Exterminator and Razi, an Arab involved in smuggling.However, the film seemed to be really uneven and slow-paced in many sections, and with a paper-thin plot. I didn't really sense just what the actual plot was supposed to be. What was supposed to be the conflict or the resolution? Where was the narrative? It was like a lot happened but none of it really contributed much to an actual structured plot. None of the characters seemed particularly likeable or sympathetic either, making it harder to get fully drawn into the story and to deeply care about them. I also didn't get much of a sense of character growth or development apart from Sasha's; her character was undoubtably the one with the most depth and transcendence of a stereotype. It would have helped had Mendy been given a bit more of a backstory. When, for example, did he start drifting away from his Orthodox lifestyle? What made him lose his concentration on studying in the yeshiva? And just what part of the Orthodox world are he and his family supposed to be from? Are they ba'alei teshuvah, Hassidic, Hareidi, right-wing Orthodox, Mitnagdim, Litvaks, what? Identifying their exact religious background might have helped a bit in getting to understand more about where his character was coming from. The scenes depicting his home life also seemed a bit shallow and unbelievable, like the lack of emotional warmth and closeness that these families are known for, and the atrocious sheitl (wig) his mother had on. They didn't seem like one of the more extreme groups in the Hareidi/Hassidic world, so it would have made more sense had she been wearing the type of sheitl most women do today, the type that's indistinguishable from one's own hair. The audio commentary was somewhat informative, but didn't answer a lot of the questions I had after watching it. I wish some of the extras had been some of the Q&A sessions the director and cast had when they were touring the film, since from their descriptions, they sounded really interesting. The other extras are trailers, a brief interview with director Eitan Gorlin, the opening night party, and a photo album narrated by Mr. Gorlin. Overall, the movie has enough surface interest (primarily the beautiful shots of these little-seen places in Israel), but the intentions of the director, however noble, just seemed to fall flat. The narrative arc never really picks up, and there's no real resolution of any conflict, no sense of character growth. I agree that the drastic ending may have been put in there because there seemed like no other way to conclude this neverending story in search of itself. It's a shame, since this story really did start out with promise and potential.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Holy Land,
By
This review is from: Holy Land [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Good movie, recommended. There is a 'director's and actors' voice-over of the film option, and after watching the movie, I watched it with the remarks and was greatly enlightened. Acting fantastic, it's so good it's completely invisible. And the environment is completely real, shot on location. Sound track wonderful. What can I say? Most excellent experience, thank you. It's a movie I enjoy watching again and again.
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