The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

A film about Israel that is as divided as its subject

Unrated. Contains strong language, violence and images of war. Running time: 109 minutes. of four)

- By Pat Padua

“Ahed’s Knee”

At once a fevered study of the creative process and of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, “Ahed’s Knee” is as divided - and perhaps as irreconcil­able - as the region in which it is set. Even its title contains two wildly different references.

The first is to Ahed Tamimi, a Palestinia­n teenager who in 2017 was arrested for slapping an Israeli soldier. (At the time, a prominent Israeli politician remarked that she deserved to be shot, at least in the knee.) The second is to French filmmaker Éric Rohmer’s “Claire’s Knee,” a 1970 drama about a middleaged man who becomes fixated on a teenage girl. Yet the eponymous joint is merely a jumping-off point for Israeli director Nadav Lapid (“Synonyms”), whose fragmented, unpredicta­ble drama is as maddening as it is moving.

The film begins with a young actress on a motorcycle speeding to a film audition where she flashes her knee; she’s there for a filmmaker known as Y (Avshalom Pollak), who’s working on a new project called “The Knee of Ahed Tamimi.” But after a tryout in which the actress yells along to “Welcome to the Jungle” by Guns N’ Roses, the character never appears again. The sequence quickly gives you a sense of Lapid’s audacious methods, which happen to include avoidance.

The action shifts abruptly to the arid Arabah valley, where Yahalom (Nur Fibak), a representa­tive of the Israeli Ministry of Culture, has invited Y to screen his latest film. But there’s a catch: The ministry requires Y to sign a form stating that his work covers one of several prescribed

subjects. Unfortunat­ely, these approved subjects do not leave room for the artist’s true theme, which is the cruelty of the Israeli government: as Y laments, the fact that “anyone who dissents is crushed.”

In short, this sounds like we’re in store for a straightfo­rward polemic against government oppression. But Lapid has an annoying habit: He can’t help but introduce whiplash-inducing diversions

and camera movements, again and again.

Such devices worked well in “Synonyms,” whose protagonis­t was a kind of overgrown, inattentiv­e, feral child. In “Ahed’s Knee,” Lapid amps up the interrupti­ons, and if his restless aesthetic seems vibrant at first, it soon gets tedious. Even in a quiet scene in which Y and Yahalom are having a leisurely indoor conversati­on, the camera rapidly cuts from her face to the desert landscape outside and back - not once but several times.

“Ahed’s Knee” is mostly about Y’s inability to confront his own traumatic experience as an Israeli soldier, and these visual ruptures may be a metaphor for a part of the world that has been fought over for centuries. But on the way to a powerful final act, Lapid gets lost in his seemingly arbitrary aesthetic. In one throwaway sequence, a peripheral character dances along to the song “Lovely Day,” by Bill Withers. It’s all entertaini­ng enough, in a shaggy way. But if the director can’t stay focused on his own subject, how are we expected to do so?

Lapid clearly has a distinct and potent vision. For much of the film, Y and Yahalom wander together through a desert landscape that might as well be the surface of the moon. These scenes have an apocalypti­c resonance: The world has already ended, and strife is eternal. Late in the story, during a pivotal scene, Lapid’s concerns pour forth in a painfully candid monologue in which the camera is so close to the protagonis­t’s face that you can’t see his mouth. Here the quirky compositio­n finally makes sense; Y can’t face himself - let alone the world, or a state as brutal as his own. He finally gets Yahalom to admit that she works for a “minister of the arts who hates art, in a government that hates all human beauty.” It’s a big payoff, but it comes almost too late, after meandering for so long.

The desert setting is the film’s central metaphor, for a homeland that looks like nowhere, with infertilit­y at its core. Even if Lapid had reined in his worst impulses and concentrat­ed on the theme at hand, “Ahed’s Knee” might have been too difficult to watch. On the other hand, his distractio­ns don’t do his art - or his audience any favors either.

 ?? Kino Lorber / Contribute­d photo ?? Avshalom Pollak, left, and Nur Fibak in “Ahed’s Knee.”
Kino Lorber / Contribute­d photo Avshalom Pollak, left, and Nur Fibak in “Ahed’s Knee.”

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