Also available on VTIFF’s Virtual Cinema April 8-10
Winner – Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival.
Y, a celebrated Israeli filmmaker, arrives in a remote desert village to present one of his films at a local library. Struggling to cope with the recent news of his mother’s fatal illness, he is pushed into a spiral of rage when the host of the screening, a government employee, asks him to sign a form placing restrictions on what he can say at the film’s Q&A. Told over the course of one day, the film depicts Y as he battles against the loss of freedom in his country and the fear of losing his mother. Lapid ( The Kindergarten Teacher, Synonyms) wrote the film soon after the death of his own mother, who worked as an editor on many of his works. This masterfully detailed, complex drama offers a sharp critique of the censorship, hypocrisy, and violence instigated by Israel and repressive governments everywhere. The fact that Lapid’s film was produced, largely funded, and highly acclaimed in Israel highlights the complexities of a national cinema that refuses to be muzzled, born of the divisions of society itself.
- Excerpt from the Director’s notes: “In the script I wrote, the film director goes down a road I couldn’t possibly take. He’s willing to
sacrifice the Libraries’ deputy director to slow down the fast-moving fascist tank. Is he a hero? Or a villain? Is he bringing a disaster on a noble, young woman? On a much more honest, brave woman than he is? Or is he dealing with a cowardly woman, doing a rogue state’s dirty work? In those dark days, isn’t the divide between victims and offenders, the strong and the weak, those higher up and those below, fading? Borders are blurred, we’re all together on the same sinking ship.” For the full Director’s statement download the PDF HERE. 
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