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Ajami

  • 2009
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 4min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.2/10
6.7 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Ajami (2009)
Ajami Trailer - Five stories about the everyday life in Ajami - a religiously mixed community of Muslims and Christians in Tel Aviv.
Reproducir trailer1:42
1 video
18 fotos
CrimenDrama

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAjami is the religiously mixed community of Muslims and Christians in Tel Aviv. These are five stories about the everyday life in Ajami.Ajami is the religiously mixed community of Muslims and Christians in Tel Aviv. These are five stories about the everyday life in Ajami.Ajami is the religiously mixed community of Muslims and Christians in Tel Aviv. These are five stories about the everyday life in Ajami.

  • Dirección
    • Scandar Copti
    • Yaron Shani
  • Guionistas
    • Scandar Copti
    • Yaron Shani
  • Elenco
    • Fouad Habash
    • Nisrin Siksik
    • Elias Saba
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.2/10
    6.7 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Scandar Copti
      • Yaron Shani
    • Guionistas
      • Scandar Copti
      • Yaron Shani
    • Elenco
      • Fouad Habash
      • Nisrin Siksik
      • Elias Saba
    • 37Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 100Opiniones de los críticos
    • 82Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado a 1 premio Óscar
      • 15 premios ganados y 11 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    Ajami
    Trailer 1:42
    Ajami

    Fotos18

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    + 13
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    Elenco principal17

    Editar
    Fouad Habash
    • Nasri
    Nisrin Siksik
    • Ilham
    • (as Nisrine Rihan)
    Elias Saba
    • Shata
    Youssef Sahwani
    • Abu-Lias
    Abu George Shibli
    • Sido
    Ibrahim Frege
    • Malek
    Scandar Copti
    Scandar Copti
    • Binj
    Shahir Kabaha
    Shahir Kabaha
    • Omar
    Hilal Kaboub
    Hilal Kaboub
    • Anan
    • (as Hilal Kabob)
    Ranin Karim
    Ranin Karim
    • Hadir
    Eran Naim
    Eran Naim
    • Dando Ben David
    Sigal Harel
    • Dando's sister
    Tamar Yerushalmi
    Tamar Yerushalmi
    • Dando's mother
    Moshe Yerushalmi
    • Dando's father
    Dana Abed
    • Hasna
    Ghassan Ashkar
    Tony Copti
    • Abed Salem
    • Dirección
      • Scandar Copti
      • Yaron Shani
    • Guionistas
      • Scandar Copti
      • Yaron Shani
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios37

    7.26.6K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7planktonrules

    Well made but also rather unpleasant.

    I noticed that one reviewer said that this film was for all tastes. Well, I cannot see that at all. The film is pretty depressing and violent--and I'd never recommend it to anyone who is depressed or who doesn't want to see a film like this. It's gritty, tough and not something for all tastes. However, it was recognized by the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences (i.e, the Oscar folks) and was nominated for Best Foreign Language movie.

    This film is very unusual because it is seen from several different viewpoints. I never would have imagined an Israeli film where the main characters are divided up into chapters and each one stars such different people--such as Palestinian Muslims, Palestinian Christians as well as Jews. This is the best thing about the film--it humanizes everyone and shows motivation of everyone. None of them are evil, exactly---just people for good or for bad.

    As far as the story goes, here's where it gets depressing. Different folks NEED money and need it fast--such as the young man who must gather an astronomical sum to keep a violent gang from wiping out his family and another who needs to pay for his mother's life-saving surgery. What these folks do to try to get the money as well as the sad story of the dead Jewish young man all make for a compelling but incredibly depressing story. Death abounds and life is cheap in this film.

    Overall, it IS well made and the acting is quite nice. But I just found myself feeling awful by the time is was finished. Maybe you'll get more out of it than me...I dunno.
    9Chris Knipp

    Israel's mean streets

    Ajami is a first film by the team of Scandar Copti, an Israeli Arab (with a Christian family name), and Yaron Shani, an Israeli Jew. It gained recognition at Cannes and in Israel; and is nominated for the Best Foreign Oscar. Using locally recruited non-actors, shooting in the Ajami neighborhood of Jaffa, which has become a mostly Arab ghetto outpost of Tel Aviv, 'Ajami' is full of improvisation and hand-held camera work that give it an intense feeling of immediacy -- and seethes with action disturbing enough to leave you feeling bruised. Israeli cinema is remarkable for a tiny country; it's a pity more Arabs outside Israel can't see this film. Despite the myriad hostilities and misunderstandings 'Ajami' depicts -- between Palestinians from the territories and Israeli Arabs; Arab Christians and Arab Muslims; Israelis and Arabs; rich and poor; old and young -- there is hope in the fact that an Arab and a Jew could team up for such passionate film-making.

    'Ajami' interweaves multiple story-lines with a documentary feel using a large cast and, to make matters more complicated but also underline interconnections, it's divided into chapters that are not quite in chronological order so some events are seen again, from a different angle the second time. Most of the scenes are in Arabic but some are in Hebrew or a mixture of Hebrew and Arabic. All the location inter-titles and the end credits are rigorously both Hebrew and Arabic -- a practice not uncommon in Israeli cinema, but especially resonant here.

    The action begins with a drive-by shooting -- of the wrong person. A young boy, Nasri (Fouad Habash), who narrates the film, his soft voice giving it a kind of clarity and delicacy, is present when his cousin is shot while working on a car in the street. The hit man meant to get Nasri's brother Omar (Shahir Kabaha), as revenge for Nasri's uncle's killing of an extortionist. Omar is now clearly in mortal danger.

    The neighborhood leader and restaurant owner Abu Elias (Youssef Sahwani) arranges a deal-brokering among village elders at a bedouin camp where men bid back and forth as to how much protection or payoff money is required for Omar to stay alive. Omar can't possibly raise the sum finally arrived upon, but he's indentured at Abu Elias' restaurant; and there, Omar turns out to be in love with his boss' daughter Hadir (Ranin Karim), a serious no-no, since her family is Christian and Omar's is Muslim. Next there arrives a bright-eyed and innocent teenager, Malek (Ibrahim Frege) who sneaks in from the occupied territories and is an illegal worker in the restaurant, an Arab exploited by an Arab, the harsh Abu Elias. Malek also has an impossible financial burden, needing to raise many thousands to pay for a bone marrow transplant for his seriously ill mother.

    Eventually both Omar and Malek are drawn into trying to deal dope to raise money, against the strong objections of Nasri, and totally against the wishes of Abu Elias, who wishes to appear to function within the law, even if he doesn't.

    Meanwhile there are the Israeli and near-Israeli parts of the story. Dishonest Israeli cop Dando (Eran Naim) appears both as a bastard, when persecuting the boys who're clumsily attempting to sell cocaine, and a softy, when it comes to the disappearance of his younger brother from the army, perhaps captured by Palestinians, an event that devastates his family (these are the all-Hebrew scenes). The Arab co-director Copti himself plays Binj, a Palestinian who speaks fluent Hebrew and has a non-Arabic speaking Jewish girlfriend. He is pressured by his Arab friends for this, and his life turns tragic when he holds drugs for the others after his brother has stabbed a Jewish neighbor in an argument over noisy animals, and the cops manhandle him, with Dando on hand in his bad-cop role. This sequence about Binj seems to dramatize the futility of cross-over dreams in this harsh world. (The problems faced by Arabs living in a Hebrew-speaking Israeli environment has also been dealt with in the hit Israeli sitcom "Arab Work.")

    It doesn't necessarily seem as though Dando is more dangerous, in a sense, for the young Palestinians than the brutish Abu Elias, who threatens to break Omar's bones if he continues his courtship of Hadir. Partly it is the elders who appear as the villains, more threatening here than Israeli checkpoint guards.

    One has to grapple with all these plot elements to follow 'Ajami.' The intersections get complicated, and the film is a bit under-edited at two full hours, but there is a wealth of cultural material that gets across along with the insistent problems and an overwhelming sense of hopelessness for young Arabs. There is great warmth among friends and family members of all stripes. But even fun moments seem framed in scariness, like a birthday celebration for Malek which he's sent to by threatening him that the "government" (الحكومة, i.e. police) is after him. Even the birthday present they give Malek, an electrified tennis racket, has an edge of menace. 'Ajami' doesn't stop for a breath or a moment of happiness: it succeeds in convincing you that isn't possible.

    Further proof of that impossibility came early this month (February 2010) and life imitated art when Scandar Copti's brother Tony, a supporting actor in the film, was arrested after Israeli police accused some Ajami teenagers of hiding drugs who said they were only burying a dog. This led to a brawl in which Tony Copti and another brother were arrested and hauled off to the police station for questioning, according to a 'Haaretz' article.
    7deastman_uk

    Mean streets

    I just saw this at the London Film Festival. Oh, what a treat.

    Taking on the fashionable use of related threads and retelling the same narrative from a different angle, this film delivers a bullet tough view of street life and crime around Jaffa.

    The audience is sucked into the maelstrom so quickly, that we forget the media view of the great enmity and realise that there are, of course, many smaller ones. While much eventually revolves around Israeli governance, this is not a blame game but a Shakespearean tragedy.

    Unlike City of God, the casual viewer is not always given heavy clues about a characters background - and which side of the racial / religious divide they are on. And subtle differences can end up being of major (often fatal) importance. Beware.

    This is not a film destined for multiplexes. Its a man's world where women are a distraction. There is no victory for political correctness. But more to the point, we are not given any particular reason to believe that Things Will Get Better.
    7Nozz

    Confusing but well acted, holds interest

    There is the sensitive kid thrust into a situation that requires more maturity and smarts than normal for his age, there is the couple whose love incurs disapproval because it crosses ethnic lines, there is the authority figure who protects you today but may turn against you tomorrow... the problem is, this movie has two of each of those. The cast of characters is huge and hard to keep track of, the plot is artificially discontinuous, and in short if you want to get the movie straight, you'd better be ready to see it twice. Which you may want to, because the acting is convincing and although the characters are used from time to time to make a clear and didactic sociopolitical point, they win considerable sympathy from the viewer-- without, for the most part, being oversentimentalized.
    10ruth44

    Extraordinary film

    Ajami is the first full length feature film directed by two young Israelis Scandar Copti and Yaron Shani.

    They have produced an extraordinary film which features five separate stories set in Ajami, a poor Arab neighborhood situated in the city of Tel-Aviv/Yafo. The many characters are played mostly by non professionals, i.e. are not working actors, and the result gives a documentary feel to the film. Amazingly the level of acting is very high and ensures that the film is completely believable and absorbing from beginning to end. Perhaps the only drawback is the limited time available to develop each main character. The viewer wants to know more about them and their lives but time is limited.

    The film shows a part of Israeli society rarely shown in Israeli films (Arab Moslem and Arab Christian families living in Ajami) and the makers are to be commended for their achievement in showing a rather hidden side of our society.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      Most of the scenes in this film are improvised. Often the actors didn't even know what's going to happen.
    • Citas

      Dando Ben David: A guy was murdered in Jaffe. The whole department worked 24 hours nonstop. I haven't slept, because the kids drove me nuts. Bless their hearts.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Valentine's Day/Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief/The Wolfman/Ajami (2010)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is Ajami?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 17 de septiembre de 2009 (Israel)
    • Países de origen
      • Israel
      • Alemania
      • Reino Unido
    • Idiomas
      • Árabe
      • Hebreo
    • También se conoce como
      • Bạn Tốt
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Jaffa, Israel
    • Productoras
      • Inosan productions
      • Twenty Twenty Vision Filmproduktion GmbH
      • ARTE
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • USD 1,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 622,403
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 35,792
      • 7 feb 2010
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 1,331,651
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      2 horas 4 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
      • Dolby SR
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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