sdyer@bbnccv.UUCP (Steve Dyer) (06/06/85)
The opening night of the festival saw the New England premiere of two Israeli films, certainly raising some curiosity, given the rather dreadful reports of gay life there. The first film, "Drifting", is a rather aimless, self-indulgent exercise about a would-be filmmaker who lives with his grandmother. The bottom line is that to be gay in Israel is to be totally alienated from one's family and one's culture. There are some interesting denisens of this world who seem to have walked out of "Liquid Sky," but overall, the movie has next to nothing new to say about gay lieb und leben. It is tedious in only 90 minutes, with a totally despicable protagonist, and terribly misogynistic in its treatment of the female characters. This is interesting as a sociological brief, but it fails miserably as entertainment, not to mention art. The other feature, "Each Other", is a 1979 movie that could best be described as an Israeli "Entre Nous." It describes the intense friendship two women develop after a chance meeting on a train to Jerusalem, and their attempts to recapture this intensity four years later. I found the two leads immensely appealing, and most of all, I believed 100% in their infatuation. This is the kind of movie that spends as much time on the silences as the conversations between the two women, a rather heady romantic mixture, which will appeal to some but probably cause others to run screaming out of the theater. As to whether this movie belongs in a gay film festival, it depends: the primary anima between the two women is friendship, and both women are more straight/ bisexual than exclusively lesbian. But the emotions ring true, regardless of the particulars of their sexual orientation. Some other points: the men in this movie, as is so often found in "women's movies", might as well come from Mars as from Jerusalem. They are depicted as slightly stupid boors, full of machismo, but lacking totally in sensitivity. Also, the movie does well as a travelogue for Jerusalem: the cinematography is gorgeous, outshined only by the city itself. -- /Steve Dyer {decvax,linus,ima,ihnp4}!bbncca!sdyer sdyer@bbnccv.ARPA
sophie@mnetor.UUCP (Sophie Quigley) (06/07/85)
> The other feature, "Each Other", is a 1979 movie that could best be described > as an Israeli "Entre Nous." > > Some other points: the men in this movie, as is so often found in "women's > movies", might as well come from Mars as from Jerusalem. They are depicted > as slightly stupid boors, full of machismo, but lacking totally in sensitivity. > /Steve Dyer I don't think this is an entirely fair characterisation of "women's movies". I certainly didn't think that the men in "Entre Nous" were depicted this way. The main male character (the husband of the blonde woman - sorry can't remember any of their names (except for one daughter: Sophie <-:)) was not stupid, and was quite sensitive even if he had lots of trouble expressing it. I actually felt quite sorry for him. The other male character, on the other hand, certainly fitted the description you gave. -- Sophie Quigley {allegra|decvax|ihnp4|linus|watmath}!utzoo!mnetor!sophie