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Bar Bahar

  • 2016
  • Not Rated
  • 1 Std. 43 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,3/10
3210
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Mouna Hawa, Sana Jammelieh, and Shaden Kanboura in Bar Bahar (2016)
Laila is a criminal lawyer who loves to burn off her workday stress in the underground club scene. Her roommate Salma is an aspiring DJ and bartender who falls in love with a female medical intern. Their new roommate Nur is a reserved, religious university student whose conservative fiancé is horrified by the hard-partying lifestyle of her secular roommates and asks her to leave Tel Aviv, hasten their marriage, and assume her role as a dutiful wife. Laila and Salma face their own turmoil. Laila has found love with a modern Muslim man whose acceptance proves less than unconditional, and Salma discovers that her Christian family is not as liberal as they claim to be.
trailer wiedergeben1:41
1 Video
17 Fotos
Drama

Drei palästinensische Frauen, die in einer Wohnung in Tel Aviv zusammenleben, versuchen, ein Gleichgewicht zwischen traditioneller und moderner Kultur zu finden.Drei palästinensische Frauen, die in einer Wohnung in Tel Aviv zusammenleben, versuchen, ein Gleichgewicht zwischen traditioneller und moderner Kultur zu finden.Drei palästinensische Frauen, die in einer Wohnung in Tel Aviv zusammenleben, versuchen, ein Gleichgewicht zwischen traditioneller und moderner Kultur zu finden.

  • Regie
    • Maysaloun Hamoud
  • Drehbuch
    • Maysaloun Hamoud
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Mouna Hawa
    • Sana Jammelieh
    • Shaden Kanboura
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,3/10
    3210
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Maysaloun Hamoud
    • Drehbuch
      • Maysaloun Hamoud
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Mouna Hawa
      • Sana Jammelieh
      • Shaden Kanboura
    • 16Benutzerrezensionen
    • 43Kritische Rezensionen
    • 78Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 16 Gewinne & 17 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:41
    Official Trailer

    Fotos17

    Poster ansehen
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    Poster ansehen
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    Topbesetzung32

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    Mouna Hawa
    Mouna Hawa
    • Leila Bakhr
    Sana Jammelieh
    Sana Jammelieh
    • Salma
    • (as Sana Jammalieh)
    Shaden Kanboura
    Shaden Kanboura
    • Nour
    Mahmud Shalaby
    Mahmud Shalaby
    • Ziad Hamdi
    • (as Mahmood Shalabi)
    Henry Andrawes
    • Wissam
    Ahlam Canaan
    Ahlam Canaan
    • Dounia
    Aiman Daw
    Aiman Daw
    • Saleh
    Riyad Sliman
    Riyad Sliman
    • Qais
    Firas Nassar
    Firas Nassar
    • Rabia
    Tamer Nafar
    Tamer Nafar
      Suhel Haddad
      Suhel Haddad
        Hadije Satel
        • Leg waxer
        Samar Qupty
        Samar Qupty
        • Rafif
        Khawlah Hag-Debsy
        Khawlah Hag-Debsy
        • Salma's mother
        • (as Khawla Haj Debsy)
        Amir Khoury
        Amir Khoury
        • George - Salma's brother
        Eyad Sheety
        • Mahmoud - Noor's father
        Nisrin Abou-Hanna
        • Nour's mother
        • (as Nisrin Abou Hanna)
        Shir Sterenberg
        • Bartender
        • (as Shir Sternberg)
        • Regie
          • Maysaloun Hamoud
        • Drehbuch
          • Maysaloun Hamoud
        • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
        • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

        Benutzerrezensionen16

        7,33.2K
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        Empfohlene Bewertungen

        9Red-125

        Breaking with tradition

        The Israeli film Bar Bahar was shown in the US with the title "In Between" (2016). It was written and directed by Maysaloun Hamoud.

        Three Palestinian women live in an apartment in Tel Aviv. Two of them (Leila Bakhr and Salma) have more or less abandoned traditional values. They drink, smoke, attend raves, and do coke. We assume that their love lives also don't correspond to traditional values, although that is implied, not stated.

        The third woman is Noor, who is striving to maintain tradition. Noor is engaged to be married to a man who grudgingly accepts that fact that she is a computer scientist, but would much rather she stay at home once they are married. Not a good sign. The plot revolves around all three of the women, but especially Noor.

        Three exceptional actors portray the women. Mouna Hawa plays Leila Bakhr, Sana Jammelieh is Salma, and Shaden Kanboura plays Noor. All three women are strong actors, but I was especially impressed by Shaden Kanboura.

        I have to admit that, although I'm hardly a traditionalist, I wish that women who want to cast off tradition could find less toxic ways of demonstrating their independence. (One of my friends says that this is the point--if you want to cast off tradition, you cast it off and take any path you like, including toxic paths.) I see his point, but smoking will still take ten years off their non-traditional lives.

        We saw this film at the beautiful JCC Hart Theater as part of the Rochester International Jewish Film Festival. This is always an excellent festival, but it has been even better this year. The festival is almost over as I write this review. We've seen eight films of the ten we plan to see, and I've given every one of the eight an IMDb rating of 9 or 10. If you live in Upstate New York, get on the RIJFF mailing list, because some of the movies will be re-shown later in the year. Also, if you love movies, plan to attend the RIJFF in 2018.

        This film is carrying a strong IMDb rating of 7.5. That's good, but I think it's even better than that. If it's available for the small screen, see it that way. It's an exceptional film.
        8dloft59

        Terrific portrait of young women in transit between tradition and modernity

        This Israeli production about Palestinian roommates in Tel Aviv presents a rich and moving array of the quandaries faced by young women on the uneven ground between traditional values and self-determination in a modern, urban landscape.

        Leila, a young lawyer, and Salma, who begins the story as a sous chef and then takes a job as a bartender but also moonlights as a rave DJ, are modern young party girls who drink, smoke cigarettes, and do occasional pot and coke when their male friends are offering. Into their apartment moves Noor, an ostensibly traditional Muslim girl who never appears in public without a hijab, and is affianced to an activist who works in an NGO devoted to helping Muslims get by. He's not happy that she's studying computer science at university, and hopes she'll stay at home to raise their children eventually.

        All three women collide with their culture's - and especially families' - traditional expectations. Salma's parents introduce her to various unappealing bachelors; Leila meets and dates a filmmaker who has studied and worked in New York but turns out to have some sticking points about her choices. Noor hits the hardest wall, but the way her initially unsympathetic roommates come together for her is beautiful and very satisfying.

        Although this story centers on young women, and most of the men are forgettable at best or unpleasant (save for a queen-y gay friend of Leila's and, surprisingly, Noor's father, in a pivotal scene late in the movie), I wouldn't call it a "chick movie." It's well written and acted, and I found it not a great stretch to recognize that some men and families oppress young women in the U.S. in ways that are not so different, even today.

        "In Between" is a lovely and solid piece of work.
        8Nozz

        Not a lot of action, but well presented

        I don't know what "Bar Bahr" means in Arabic, but I liked the English title-- "In Between"-- less than the Hebrew, which is "Neither Here Nor There." The movie is about how its three heroines suffer from belonging neither to traditional Arab society nor to secular Westernized society. Any base that they may seem to have established for themselves "in between" seems to crumble beneath their feet.

        Despite the serious predicament, though, the movie is also very much about sisters doing it for themselves. There's an automatic solidarity whereby women-- at least young women of similar ages-- are all automatically soulmates; and men, it almost goes without saying, are swine. (Well, the gay guy is of course okay and a bit amusing.) Despite those stereotypes, the movie holds interest by virtue of believable acting and believable situations. My wife says it's one of the best we've seen in recent years, and she had the chance to appreciate it a little better than I did not only because she's a woman but also because she understands Arabic somewhat. For those who don't understand Arabic, though, there's still the added benefit of a look into another culture. The Israeli press was particularly impressed that not only traditional Arabic life is glimpsed, but also the small, rarely-explored community of young Arabs in Tel Aviv. (Is it possible that they all really smoke that much?) We see a succession of situations that by no means always involve much action or even much tension, although a couple of crises do come up. Mostly the appeal of the movie is in allowing us to feel like a fly on the wall among interesting people facing interesting day-to-day challenges.
        10gailspilsbury

        Three Palestinian women in Tel Aviv--different religious backgrounds but the same issues in their love relationships.

        In Between, directed by Maysaloun Hamoud, continues the dialogue about the equality of women. The movie begins with an older woman waxing a young female leg and sharing advice: "Don't raise your voice, men don't like women who raise their voices. Remember to always say a kind word, and cook him good food. Don't forget to put on perfume and to keep your body smooth so that he desires you."

        Music then explodes and we're at a wild, co-ed, bachelorette party in Tel Aviv with drinking, drugs, and dancing—the central characters' regular singles backdrop. Beautiful Laila (Mouna Hawa) with long curly locks and a cigarette always in hand, appears bored with this dating scene. Back home the next day, she and her housemate Salma (Sana Jammelieh ) meet an unexpected visitor, Noar (Shaden Kanboura), who's come to stay with them until she can find her own apartment. Noar explains that her cousin Rafif—Laila and Salma's absent roommate— said it would be all right. These few opening scenes set the stage for a look at the experience of young Palestinian-Israeli women in today's urbane Tel Aviv. Laila's a non-religious feminist lawyer, Salma's a fringe DJ from a Christian family, and Noar's a senior at the university and wears full Islamic garb.

        Through each of the women's stories related to their love lives, the film explores male domination, male attitudes toward women, and male abuses when their authority is crossed. Although the film focuses on experiences in today's diverse Palestinian-Israeli culture, the treatment of Laila, Salma, and Noar is universal. The take-away, as the three women process the denouements of their relationships, is sad, to both them and to us: Men (or most), from lovers to fathers, just don't get it, they can't see it, so they can't change. As if cemented into their behavioral genes, the men in the film (with parallels in other cultures) believe they are right about their entitlement to dominate—to tell women how to dress modestly, to not smoke, to stay at home with the kids—or to abuse them if the women resist. Women in the audience of this important movie freeze at moments when Laila, Salma, or Noar stand up for themselves to their men. We freeze fearing a physical blow, a bashing silencer instead of meaningful conversation. How do men in the audience feel during these tense, cowering moments? Undoubtedly the same. Then why can't recognition of the problem on the screen translate to real-life consciousness about equality?

        We witness one atrocious punishment against Noar by her fiancé Wissam (and compliments to Henry Andrawas for playing such a horrid role). The camera and audio focus intently on Wissam's zipper going back up after he's committed his brute crime of authority, and this focus makes the audience think how a man's "instrument of lovemaking" also serves as a violent weapon. The three women helping each other through their relationship traumas give the audience another universal: women support, comfort, and work for each other and always have, and this community based on gender solidarity is the basis for their strength—their stamina, wisdom, friendship, and bedrock role in all societies. These qualities, so deep in women, contrast to the male strength of body and physical force. Thus the movie honors women but cannot say there will ever be changes in their relationships with men.
        8michael-kerrigan-526-124974

        Free spirits

        In Between. A drama about three Palestinian housemates in Tel Aviv, Israel. Aptly named film as all three are to some degree caught between a liberal 'western' secular culture and their Muslim faith and associated family values. Laila is a chain smoking heavy drinking free spirit. When she falls for a pot smoking seemingly hedonistic guy, how will he expect her to behave when she meets his family? Salma's parents are trying tirelessly to find her a perfect husband. She rejects all would be suitors because she has not told her parents that she is a lesbian. Noor is from a very strict family and is already engaged to be married. But will living with these free spirits change something within her? A brave portrayal of oft-colliding cultures (the director has received death threats for apparently glorifying female emancipation). A powerful and original 8 out of ten.

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        Handlung

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        • Wissenswertes
          Early in the film, Leila stops her car in the street when a male friend hails her and asks if she want him to pick up a ticket to see the band Tiny Fingers. One of the songs on the soundtrack is by this band.
        • Verbindungen
          Featured in Hayom BaLayla: Folge #2.12 (2017)
        • Soundtracks
          Arab Party
          Composed by M.G. Saad

          Lyrics by Tamer Nafar, Mahmood Jrere & Maysa Daw

          Mixed by Neal Gibbs

          Performed by Dam

        Top-Auswahl

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        • How long is In Between?Powered by Alexa

        Details

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        • Erscheinungsdatum
          • 5. Januar 2017 (Israel)
        • Herkunftsländer
          • Frankreich
          • Israel
        • Offizieller Standort
          • Peccadillo Pictures (United Kingdom)
        • Sprachen
          • Hebräisch
          • Arabisch
        • Auch bekannt als
          • In Between
        • Drehorte
          • Tel Aviv, Israel
        • Produktionsfirmen
          • Channel 10
          • DBG / deux beaux garçons
          • En Compagnie Des Lamas
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        Box Office

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        • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
          • 107.977 $
        • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
          • 5.888 $
          • 7. Jan. 2018
        • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
          • 1.679.952 $
        Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

        Technische Daten

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        • Laufzeit
          1 Stunde 43 Minuten
        • Farbe
          • Color
        • Seitenverhältnis
          • 2.35 : 1

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        Mouna Hawa, Sana Jammelieh, and Shaden Kanboura in Bar Bahar (2016)
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        By what name was Bar Bahar (2016) officially released in Canada in English?
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