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Gett - Le Procès de Viviane Amsalem

Titre original : Gett
  • 2014
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 55m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,7/10
7,1 k
MA NOTE
Ronit Elkabetz in Gett - Le Procès de Viviane Amsalem (2014)
Trailer for Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem
Liretrailer1 min 47 s
2 vidéos
20 photos
Drama

Après plus de vingt ans d'un mariage sans amour, une femme fait appel à la compassion de son mari pour obtenir l'acte de divorce tant désiré devant un tribunal, ce qui se révèle plus diffici... Tout lireAprès plus de vingt ans d'un mariage sans amour, une femme fait appel à la compassion de son mari pour obtenir l'acte de divorce tant désiré devant un tribunal, ce qui se révèle plus difficile qu'elle pourrait s'y attendre.Après plus de vingt ans d'un mariage sans amour, une femme fait appel à la compassion de son mari pour obtenir l'acte de divorce tant désiré devant un tribunal, ce qui se révèle plus difficile qu'elle pourrait s'y attendre.

  • Directors
    • Ronit Elkabetz
    • Shlomi Elkabetz
  • Writers
    • Ronit Elkabetz
    • Shlomi Elkabetz
  • Stars
    • Ronit Elkabetz
    • Simon Abkarian
    • Gabi Amrani
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,7/10
    7,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Directors
      • Ronit Elkabetz
      • Shlomi Elkabetz
    • Writers
      • Ronit Elkabetz
      • Shlomi Elkabetz
    • Stars
      • Ronit Elkabetz
      • Simon Abkarian
      • Gabi Amrani
    • 26Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 97Commentaires de critiques
    • 90Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 15 victoires et 19 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem
    Trailer 1:47
    Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem
    GETT: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem - Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:45
    GETT: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem - Official Trailer
    GETT: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem - Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:45
    GETT: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem - Official Trailer

    Photos20

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    Rôles principaux17

    Modifier
    Ronit Elkabetz
    Ronit Elkabetz
    • Viviane Amsalem
    Simon Abkarian
    Simon Abkarian
    • Elisha Amsalem
    Gabi Amrani
    Gabi Amrani
    • Haim
    Dalia Beger
    Dalia Beger
    • Donna Aboukassis
    Shmil Ben Ari
    Shmil Ben Ari
    • Ya'akov Ben Harouch
    Abraham Celektar
    Abraham Celektar
    • Shmuel Azoulay
    Rami Danon
    Rami Danon
    • Rabbi Danino
    Sasson Gabay
    Sasson Gabay
    • Rabbi Shimon
    • (as Sasson Gabai)
    Eli Gorenstein
    Eli Gorenstein
    • Head Rabbi Salmion
    • (as Eli Gornstein)
    Evelin Hagoel
    Evelin Hagoel
    • Evelyn Ben Chouchan
    Albert Iluz
    Albert Iluz
    • Meir
    Keren Mor
    Keren Mor
    • Galia
    Menashe Noy
    Menashe Noy
    • Carmel Ben Tovim
    David Ohayon
    • David
    Roberto Pollack
    Roberto Pollack
    • Rabbi Abraham
    • (as Roberto Pollak)
    Ze'ev Revach
    Ze'ev Revach
    • Simo
    Ruby Porat Shoval
    Ruby Porat Shoval
    • Rachel Amzalleg
    • (as Rubi Porat Shoval)
    • Directors
      • Ronit Elkabetz
      • Shlomi Elkabetz
    • Writers
      • Ronit Elkabetz
      • Shlomi Elkabetz
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs26

    7,77K
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    Avis en vedette

    8proud_luddite

    A small- budget gem

    The title character is a secular Israeli Jew trying to get a divorce from her devoutly religious Orthodox husband who refuses to comply. As the Israeli court system cannot grant a divorce without the husband's consent, Viviane has a very uphill struggle.

    With the exception of a minute or so, all of this film takes place in a small courtroom with occasional scenes in an adjoining waiting room. As the courtroom looks bland and ordinary, this film deliberately takes on the challenge of maintaining viewers' interest within such constraints. In doing so, it succeeds with flying colours.

    This is due to a detailed script with various surprises and a superb cast especially Ronit Elkabitz in the title role. (She is also the co-director and co-writer with Shlomi Elkabitz, her brother.) She has a couple of explosive scenes that are riveting especially one in which she cathartically expresses the views of many of us in the audience.

    The various accounts of the plaintiff, defendant, witnesses, and lawyers provide all the detail in what could have been a solid movie about a disintegrating marriage, Ingmar Bergman-style. Incidentally, some of the witness accounts from relatives and neighbours are the most revealing aspects of the story and of the culture of a religious community.

    In the end, it is the audience who are the true witnesses and judges of a legal system that is absurd and harshly unfair to women.
    8jakob13

    A Beit Din in disarray

    Determined in its aim, the brother and sister Elkabetz have brought to the screen to much acclaim 'Gett: the Trial of Viviane Amsalem'. Like many Israeli film that attacks Israel's sacred cows, 'Gett' takes place in a closed universe of a courtroom, as though we are in a theater. Viviane Amsalem sues for divorce--a 'Gett'Only a religious court can dissolve the marriage, but Elisha Amsalem refuses to allow it, to the extent he at first refuses to appear in court; then does but remains firm in his refusal. Israel like most Muslim and Arab countries leaves issues such as divorce and inheritance and other matter touching the personal sphere in the hands of religious authorities. A practice that goes far back in time. So during five years, Viviane Amsalem suffers abuse by the rabbis and the contempt of her accusers for not being a good Jewish wife. Her husband initially is seen as a model spouse, but mittendrin it turns out that Elisha is intolerant, intransigent and contentious. So, after 30 years of marriage, Viviane files for divorce; she has moved out of the house, gone to her sister's. Nonetheless, she prepares food daily for husband and her only son who remains at home. She is a hairdresser with her own business and a will of her own. On the other hand, Elisha treats her as his property--professing undying love--but won't let go until at the end he signs the divorce, but at a price which prejudices Viviane's happiness. Yet, she is free of him. It is good to see Simon Abkarian in the role of Elisha. This seasoned actor gave a good turn in Michel Deville's 'Almost Peaceful'. Ronit Elkabetz us a study in wifely suffering, and absolutely beautiful. The Hebrew is peppered with words of Moroccan Arabic, and moments of French since the protagonists are of Moroccan origin settled in Israel of long date. 'Gett' is a blow for women's rights. And a winner. In Europe and North America say Beit Dins exist to grant divorce for Orthodox Jews. (In Israel only Orthodox practices are allowed for a gett.) Luckily, divorce exists in the civil sphere, but in the eyes of the pious Jews, a woman without a gett is wayward and nothing better than a prostitute. A word or two, on the presence of Arab Jews in Israeli cinema and stage, although they are not considered the equal of Jews of European ancestry. Isn't Israel a European construct, with non-European Jews for the numbers to take possession of land?
    8ferguson-6

    You don't see me

    Greetings again from the darkness. Personal views on Politics and Religion are purposefully avoided in my film reviews as I prefer to view the work from the perspective of art and storytelling. Sometimes, however, a film exposes such an injustice that stifling one's opinions is just not practical. Such is the case with this latest from the brother-sister co-directing and co-writing team of Shlomi and Ronit Elkabetz.

    This is the final piece to the creative siblings' trilogy on Israeli marriage that began with To Take a Wife (2004), and was followed by 7 Days (2008). That's right, the two characters of husband Elisha (Simon Ebkarian) and wife Viviane (played by director Ronit Elkabetz who was also in the excellent 2007 film The Band's Visit) have been followed through the stages of marriage, separation, and now divorce court. Only their divorce court is not what most of the world thinks of when we hear that term. In Israel, divorce is not a civil matter, but rather falls under Jewish law and the proceedings are overseen by a triumvirate of rabbinical judges. If that's not difficult enough to stomach … it's the husband who holds ALL the power. The husband must agree to grant his wife the divorce. Without his permission, the judges can do nothing and the wife is bound to the marriage.

    With the story unfolding almost exclusively in the bleak courtroom, Viviane trudges through delays, no-shows, desperate negotiations, and other time-wasters; only occasionally succumbing to an outburst, rather than her usual quiet dignity. Elisha maintains a seemingly proud and determined look when he does show for hearings, only periodically shooting a look of disgust at his wife. His confidence stems from the power in knowing that grounds for divorce do not include irreconcilable differences. The camera work puts us right in the courtroom and we soon recognize Elisha's mannerisms as not just passive-aggressive, but also manipulative and misguided. He is not an awful man, but this is an awful marriage.

    Long a fan of courtroom dramas, I was mesmerized by the dumbfounding process as well as the stellar performances, excellent script and POV camera work. Ms Elkabetz is terrific as Viviane, and her work is complimented by Mr Ebkarian as her husband, Sasson Gabay as his brother and advocate, and Menashe Noy as her advocate and admirer. The film is a strange blend of hypnotic and infuriating and heart-breaking. It's uncomfortable to watch, but one we can't turn away from … especially as Viviane shouts "You don't see me!" to the judges.
    9vsks

    Emotionally powerful depiction of the true "desperate housewives"

    The Israeli movie Gett is the story of Viviane Amsalem and her five-year struggle to obtain a divorce (gett) through Israel's Orthodox rabbinical courts. The only roadblock: her husband says "no," and under Jewish religious law, a divorce cannot be granted unless the husband agrees. The entire movie takes place in the courtroom and just outside it, as witnesses come and go and the couple and their lawyers face off, in confrontations that rapidly switch between absurdity and tragedy. This may sound as if there's not much action, but there is plenty going on emotionally. Except for the lawyers' confrontations, much of the power of the film comes from the way feelings simmer (mostly) below the surface, through the outstanding performances by the wife (played by Ronit Elkabetz) and husband (Simon Abkarian). He is torturing her in front of the three rabbis who serve as judges, who alternately don't see it, don't acknowledge it, and don't act when they do. This also makes the film a cautionary tale about the difficulties of male-dominated religious courts, intent on shoring up a patriarchic system and oblivious to individual and women's rights. Not surprisingly, in real life, Israel's rabbinic judges claim the movie misrepresents them, which, as Israel's oldest daily newspaper Haaretz says, "misses the underlying point: that the rabbinical courts will not approve a divorce unless the man agrees to it," citing a 2013 survey that one in three women seeking divorce in Israel is "subject to financial or other extortion by her husband." The term for these truly "desperate housewives" is "chained women." Lest you think these difficulties are confined to the Jewish State or some historical period, in 2013 in New York, criminal prosecutions resulted when rabbis kidnapped and tortured several estranged husbands to persuade them to approve their divorces. (Although the United States regulates marriage, divorce, and remarriage through the secular laws, for these proceedings to be religiously recognized, Orthodox Jews must also have them approved in rabbinical courts.) Elkabetz and her brother Shlomi directed the film, which was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the 72nd Golden Globe Awards and won the Israeli Film Academy Ophir Award for Best Picture.
    10Red-125

    A great film about a greatly flawed system

    Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem (2014) is an Israeli film written and directed by the sister-and-brother team of Ronit Elkabetz and Shlomi Elkabetz. Ronkit Elkabetz also stars in the movie. She plays Viviane Amsalem, who is married to Elisha Amsalem (Simon Abkarian), from who she wants a divorce. In order to be divorced from Elisha, Viviane must obtain a Gett--the approval of her husband for the divorce. That is the basic plot of the movie. In fact, it's the only plot of the movie. Can Viviane obtain the divorce that she so desperately wants.

    I learned--after watching the film--that Gett is actually the third movie in a trilogy about this couple. Although it would probably make sense to watch the trilogy in chronological order, Gett stands on its own as a powerful and complete film. The script contains references to earlier events, but they are presented clearly enough to allow us to understand them.

    All of the actions take place in the rabbinical courtroom in Israel, and in the waiting room of the courtroom. There's not a single shot of anything outside the courtroom. It's a truly claustrophobic setting, especially because the courtroom and waiting room are devoid of any color or any objects of interest, other than the actors.

    Both of the leading actors are superb. Our heart goes out to Viviane Amselem, who simply wants a divorce. She appears to be a fine person--honest, honorable, and someone who has made a real effort to be and remain a good wife. However, the marriage for her is dead, and she wants to leave the marriage and move on with her life. She has wanted this for five years, and still she is not divorced.

    Her husband, Elisha, is not a cardboard cutout villain, which would actually make things easier for us as viewers. He is a handsome, intelligent, well-spoken man. However, he appears emotionally cold and aloof. I wonder if he might have a condition somewhere along the autism spectrum. Certainly, his interactions with others--the judges, his wife, the witnesses--are uniformly cold and almost robotic.

    What we learn is that there is no such thing as a "civil court" for divorces in Israel. The rabbinical court is the only court. In the United States, a highly observant Jewish woman might go to a rabbinical court to obtain a Gett. If her husband refuses to give her a Gett, she can't be divorced from a religious point of view. However, if she is desperate enough, she has the choice of going to a civil court and getting a legal divorce. (This may not be considered an option by a highly observant woman, but she has the legal option, whether she chooses to use it or not. In Israel, she doesn't have the legal option.)

    What I took away from this film is that the Israeli legal system is broken in respect to divorce. The rabbis can ponder. They can quote from the Talmud. They can subpoena witnesses, they can freeze someone's bank account or credit cards. They can cajole, they can reason, they can fume. What they can't do is make a husband give his wife a Gett.

    This film was shown at the excellent Dryden Theatre in Rochester, NY as part of the matchless Rochester International Jewish Film Festival. Unfortunately, we were unable to be at the theater that night, so we bought the movie on DVD. It worked very well on DVD--it's basically a courtroom drama, so there's not any scenery or action shots that would do better on a large screen.

    Note: A booklet was Included in the DVD, which contained commentary about the film. That's how I learned about the two earlier movies: To Take a Wife (2004) and Seven Days (2008).

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Ronit Elkabetz's final film before her death.
    • Gaffes
      Vivian wears only one big ring on her forth finger of her left hand throughout most of the movie. Somewhere in the middle of the movie, Vivian is shown sitting at the bench in the "court" and there is also a second ring on her second finger.
    • Citations

      Viviane Amsalem: Why are you making me run around in circles? Why, Your Honor? Why? Why have I come in and out for years now and nothing's changed? Why? You can't force him to divorce nor to appear, and you can't this or that, and what about me? When will you see me? When I'm too exhausted to stand before you? When? If it were up to you, it could go on for 10 years. I could drop dead in front of you and all you'd see was him! But nobody is above the law. There's a God and there's justice and He'll judge you as you judge me. Mercilessly. You don't care about me!

    • Connexions
      Featured in 72nd Golden Globe Awards (2015)

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Gett?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 25 juin 2014 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Israel
      • France
      • Germany
    • Langues
      • Hebrew
      • French
      • Arabic
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Gett
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Israël
    • sociétés de production
      • Arte France Cinéma
      • Canal+
      • DBG / deux beaux garçons
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 988 150 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 24 210 $ US
      • 15 févr. 2015
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 1 259 160 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 55 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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