Sameer Callahan
It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.
Haven Kaycee
It is encouraging that the film ends so strongly.Otherwise, it wouldn't have been a particularly memorable film
cashley-3
I was shocked to learn that the Israeli-built "Wall" entirely encircles one small Palestinian town, whose name I cannot remember now, and also completely encircles the city of Gaza. The question leaps to mind: what's the difference between this encirclement of a Palestinian town and the large city of Gaza and the creation of the Warsaw Ghetto or the pogroms instituted by Hitler. This encirclement is just the beginning; worse will likely follow in the name of "security". Interviewee after interviewee on both sides, Israeli and Palestinian alike, say it's a waste of money. Scene after scene of residents scaling the wall to get to jobs on the other side were eloquent testimony to its ineffectiveness. The comment by the Israeli military chief overseeing construction of the wall, "Both sides of the wall are ours. We're the rulers." says it all.
sven-netpimp
Simone Bitton etches a haunting portrait of one of the most profound geographical markers of our time: the wall of separation constructed by Israel that shields it from adjacent, conflicted Palestinian territories. With masterful restraint, Bitton both abstracts her subject and extracts its key contradiction as a strangulating protector of life.Traversing various regions, Bitton interviews Palestinian and Jewish subjects (many off camera) regarding the wall's significance. These, along with an Israeli Defense official interviewed in his office, alternately decry Palestinian terrorism and alleged crimes, or term the construction of the wall a disguised Israeli landgrab. Many question the wall's efficacy and its long-range benefits, bemoaning their separation from neighbors and friends.Bitton, herself an Arab and a Jew, presents the barrier in stark visual schemes that emphasize its stultifying surface and scarring of idyllic landscapes where, previously, "sides" might not have been so distinct. This exquisite visual aridity, an austere editorial pace, and magnificently layered ambient sound create an atmosphere of stagnation and futile clamor, fairly compelling the wall to speak its own irony. It is through such sparing means that Bitton most strikingly confronts her implacable subject, its dialogue of silence implicitly debating all the things that silence signifies and conceals. Shannon Kelley
bwvball14
I viewed this documentary as part of a community program designed to bring Israelis and Palestinians together in Columbia, Missouri. Simone Bitton the director flew in from Paris especially for this event. I would highly recommend this film for someone who already knows quite a bit about the conflict between the two peoples, but not if you intend on going to actually learn more about the tension as I had intended. The film only focuses on the sentiments of the people regarding the construction of the barrier which allows the viewer to relate more without the influence of politics. Some of the construction scenes drag on leaving some viewers bored but there are also unexpected moments of humor. If one can sit through the whole thing and keep up with the subtitles there is a lot to gather and understand from the documentary as a whole.
spmkk
The film-makers went well out of their way to find ONLY the following demographics: Palestinians that have the appearance of peace-loving, solution-seeking good will, Palestinians (particularly older women and families with children) who are especially inconvenienced by the security fence, and Israelis that don't believe in the security fence, sympathize heavily with its alleged effect on Palestinians, and consider it unnecessarily divisive and/or a waste of money. Oh yes, they do put in one member of the Israeli government that does support the fence, but they do what they can to portray him as inhumane and uncaring, and ask him very leading questions that are really statements (e.g. "The wall is bad for the environment...it is destroying everything").I have no problem with any (well, most) of this being presented in the movie. However much I may disagree with the people they interview, their opinions are valid enough for a documentary. HOWEVER: there are at least two sides to the issue of Israel's security fence, and despite the fact that an overwhelming majority of Israelis (and many others) support the construction of the fence and believe it is having an overall positive influence, this "documentary" does not present the opinion of even ONE such person. They even go so far as to interview an Israeli Jew who claims that "all Israelis support the fence" and are thus insane, and then stubbornly refuse to interview even one such "crazy" Israeli. Oh, and to top all this off, they set the tone for the film by interviewing a couple of young Israeli children (truly exceptions to the rule -- I've been there) that are laughing at/about their Arab neighbors from across the fence.A "documentary" is a film that explores an issue and presents a full array of facts, opinions, and perspectives. Unfortunately, this is not a documentary. This is an unabashed PROPAGANDA FILM that very clearly, very pointedly offers a battery of support for only one side of a heavily disputed, emotionally and politically charged issue. It is no more of a documentary than, say, Fahrenheit 9/11.