The Jerusalem Post

Three Israeli directors’ films top influentia­l ‘LA Times’ critic’s picks

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Three films directed by Israelis took center stage in the film listings of the Los Angeles Times’ senior critic Kenneth Turan.

In Hollywood, few newspaper items are scrutinize­d more intensely than the film reviews and rankings in the Times, making Friday’s list a boon for the films and their directors.

The top spot in the “Our Movie Pick” section went to Joseph Cedar’s Norman, which tracks the ups, and mainly downs, of a small-time New York fixer.

“Subtle, unsettling, often slyly amusing and always unexpected,” Turan wrote, adding: “This delicate, novelistic character study is what more American independen­t films would be like if more had thoughtful adult themes and gravitated toward nuance and complexity.”

The next Israeli pick on the list was Emil Ben-Shimon’s The Women’s Balcony, centering on a clash between a strict Orthodox rabbi and his more permissive congregant­s. Turan judged it as “an unapologet­ically warm-hearted comedic drama, a fine example of commercial filmmaking grounded in a persuasive knowledge of human behavior.”

Finally, a half-page of the paper was devoted to Asaph Polonsky’s feature debut, One Week and a Day, which focuses on a short-tempered father (played by Shai Avivi) sitting shiva for his son who died of cancer. The father forms an unlikely alliance with the young stoner (Tomer Kapon) who supplied his son with marijuana. “One Week and a Day keeps an impeccable balance between absurdity and sadness, comedy and heartbreak,” Turan observed. “Increasing­ly outrageous, but always plausible, it applies its pitiless, pitch black sense of humor to a very particular situation (i.e., sitting shiva.).”

Cedar and Polonsky are US natives who moved to Israel with their parents at a young age.

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? TOMER KAPON (left) and Shai Avivi star in ‘One Week and a Day.’
(Courtesy) TOMER KAPON (left) and Shai Avivi star in ‘One Week and a Day.’

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