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Product Description WALL (Mur) is a cinematic meditation on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in which the filmmaker blurs the lines of hatred by asserting her double identity as Jew and Arab. In an original documentary approach, the film follows the separation fence that is destroying one of the most historically significant landscapes in the world, while imprisoning one people and enclosing the other. .com The hypnotic documentary Wall--subtitled "a cinematic meditation on the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict"--immerses viewers in the rhythms of life around the wall being built by the Israeli government to section off the Palestinian regions of Israel. Much of the movie is simply long pans of the wall itself, which is made of concrete barriers in some places (where the government feels there is a higher risk of gunfire) and a fence topped with razor wire in others, while the filmmakers hold off-screen conversations with children, Israelis, and the Palestinians who have been hired to build the wall. Periodically the movie returns to a brusk interview with the Director General of the Israeli Ministry of Defense, who defends the wall and shrugs off concerns about the damage the wall--which may end up being over 500 kilometers long--is doing to the natural environment as well as the political one. "This fence blocks the artery that feeds the Israeli heart," says one dismayed Israeli in an eloquent interview. But documentarian Simone Bitton refrains from metaphor; the considerable impact of Wall arises from her simple and matter-of-fact approach, ranging from scenes of teenage soldiers refusing entry to a woman hanging her clothes with the fence in the background. --Bret Fetzer
E**K
Intifada!
A bit slow, but I appreciate any exposure of the sociopathic state of Israel. The general obviously doesn't even believe what he is saying.The truth will come out, one way or another. The world is not only waking up to the Zionist lies and crimes, but it is starting to take action.Intifada! Intifada!
M**.
Best film about Israel's Apartheid Wall
Best film about Israel's Apartheid Wall - the most nuanced the relationship between Mizrahi and Ashkenazi Jews and Palestinians, great photography, amazing interviews, and a riveting end.
F**N
"First of all, we see both sides as ours."
In the documentary film "Wall", filmmaker Simone Bitton travels to Jerusalem to chronicle the building of the immense concrete wall that separates the Jewish population from the Palestinians. The wall--which is about 500 kilometers long--is built at the cost of $2,000,000 per kilometer, and it winds in and around Jerusalem.The film begins with one section of the wall and just the voices of children--many of Bitton's interviews do not include the faces of those filmed. The children speculate about the ethnicity of the filmmaker before she begins to ask them questions about the purpose of the wall. From the voices of these children, Bitton moves onto the construction of the wall itself--it's made from huge interlocking concrete slabs, and the camera focuses on the placement of these slabs until the entire skyline and the beautiful view is entirely blocked."Wall" contains moments of startling purity--a young Israeli settler named Moti speculates exactly how he'd attempt to create peace between the Israelis and the Palestinians, and he also expresses skepticism that the wall will achieve anything except further alienation. One Israeli drives out into a Palestinian area that was empty of settlements in 1942, but now the farmers in a Palestinian village are separated from the olive trees (and the rotting crop) on the other side of the wall.Other parts of the film are weak--the film concentrates with an almost morbid fascination on long camera shots--we watch a bus unload, a wall being built, and equipment preparing the land. It's no doubt all relevant, but after a while, such prolonged study of the mechanics behind building the wall becomes tedious. Several scenes show Palestinians trying to get through checkpoints, and while the nuisance, delays and refusals to entry were obvious, the system itself (why some were allowed and not others) remains vague--additional background explanation here would be helpful.The best scenes in the film occur when Bitton interviews the Israeli Defense Minister. He deserves some points for staying put in the chair when he clearly can't wait for the interview to finish, and his remarks are the most significant in the film. He frankly admits to Bitton that Israel considers all the land is theirs--"First of all, we see both sides as ours." Plus he insists on calling this concrete monolith a "fence." When pinned on the semantics, he argues, that there's "no need to get ideological about different names." Just one look at the design system of the wall is enough to convince the rational minded that semantics, in this case, are an intriguing issue. For anyone interested in the subject, it's an interesting--but flawed--film to watch. Many of the static meditative shots should have been replaced with explanations, background information and maps, and "Wall" would be a better film as a result. As it is, the film still makes a powerful argument that the wall is just "explusion in disguise." In Hebrew and Arabic with English subtitles--displacedhuman
J**V
Israel.....wow
They are becoming the same people that prosecuted them in WWII , it seems that they learned how to apply their previous suffering onto others. Sad.
A**Y
Dull
Dull. Boring. I can't describe just how sleepy this documentary made me feel. Outside of that, it is a political hit-job in the guise of a documentary. If you want to watch an anti-Israel diatribe (more subtle than most, but so subtle as to be dull), go ahead and watch this. If you want to know about the thousands of lives that were saved by keeping suicide bombers out of Israel, go visit Israel..but you won't hear that mentioned in this movie.
D**Y
Don't Mention the Holocaust
Someone should call B'nai B'rith .. I can't believe I watched an entire movie about Israel and not once did anyone mention the Holocaust. Clearly this is a movie by self-hating Jews; the ones who actually think for themselves. Shame on them. (They're probably French. You'd never find people like that in America).The movie is pretty good though ... if you like thinking for yourself. And, it doesn't have one of those holier-than-thou Narrator Voices telling you which side of the fence you should be on. (Although, I guess, that's pretty obvious really).
D**N
protection or partition?
In 2002 Israel began constructing a 400-mile "fence" along the Green Line that separates Israel and the West Bank. This "wall" consists of 25' concrete panels, trenches, endless razor wire, guard towers, sensors, alarms, cameras, radars and check points. It is only 50 yards wide, but in fact it symbolizes an immense geo-political gulf. Director Simone Bitton was born in Morocco, educated in Paris, and resides in Jerusalem. Fluent in Hebrew, Arabic, French and English, she uses the crude architecture of this "wall" as a rich metaphor of the political debacle in the region. Yes, in some sense the wall "protects" Israelis from terrorists, but of course it also imprisons them, exacerbates the strife, and partitions normal citizens on both sides, almost all of whom who were interviewed in this documentary hate the wall. "Without peace," remarked a foreman on the job, "this fence is worthless." In Hebrew and Aramaic with English subtitles.
E**N
Moving film
I think this was a good documentary that shows what is there--a wall of separation.
A**R
Should be made compulsory viewing
Stark reality, demonstrates the brutality of what's going on.
L**N
A new Berlin wall...
"Wall" is an unremarkable documentary about a large barrier that has been constructed in Israel to keep the two communities there apart. The film is neutral about the Wall ,neither pro nor anti it ,with much of the film spent interviewing people involved in its construction or impacted by it's presence."Wall" is a little overlong at 95 minutes; an hour long TV documentary would have been quite sufficient and the film's subject matter never quite managed to engage me.
P**N
The Wall across Israel
An interesting view of why the wall is there.
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