Al-hadiya
- 2020
- 24min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,7/10
4202
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Per il suo anniversario di matrimonio, Yusef e la sua giovane figlia si sono recati in Cisgiordania per comprare un regalo a sua moglie. Tra soldati, strade segregate e posti di blocco, quan... Leggi tuttoPer il suo anniversario di matrimonio, Yusef e la sua giovane figlia si sono recati in Cisgiordania per comprare un regalo a sua moglie. Tra soldati, strade segregate e posti di blocco, quanto sarebbe facile fare shopping?Per il suo anniversario di matrimonio, Yusef e la sua giovane figlia si sono recati in Cisgiordania per comprare un regalo a sua moglie. Tra soldati, strade segregate e posti di blocco, quanto sarebbe facile fare shopping?
- Candidato a 1 Oscar
- 34 vittorie e 22 candidature totali
Recensioni in evidenza
Greetings again from the darkness. It may look like the crowd filing out of a sports arena after a big match, but in fact, it's actual footage of an Israeli checkpoint in Palestine along the West Bank. Another big difference ... heavily armed soldiers and cages to detain those while identification is checked.
This is the life writer-director Farah Nabulsi shows us in her 23 minute gem of a short film. She focuses on Yusef (an excellent Saleh Bakri), a man struggling to make ends meet for his wife and young daughter. Today is his wedding anniversary and he agrees to take daughter Yasmine (Miriam Kanj) along on a shopping trip. She witnesses her dad battle severe back pain, as well as the frustrations in dealing with the armed guards at the checkpoint - even as he endures the humiliation of being caged in front of her.
Yusef is a good man and strives to protect his daughter and shield her from the tension and danger - often through humor or a warm embrace. Something as simple as replacing a fridge on the fritz is part of the daily struggle for folks like Yusef. Sometimes it takes the courage and reasonableness of a youngster to highlight the irrational rules that have taken over the world. The film has a grounded, realistic feel, and delivers a sobering message.
This is the life writer-director Farah Nabulsi shows us in her 23 minute gem of a short film. She focuses on Yusef (an excellent Saleh Bakri), a man struggling to make ends meet for his wife and young daughter. Today is his wedding anniversary and he agrees to take daughter Yasmine (Miriam Kanj) along on a shopping trip. She witnesses her dad battle severe back pain, as well as the frustrations in dealing with the armed guards at the checkpoint - even as he endures the humiliation of being caged in front of her.
Yusef is a good man and strives to protect his daughter and shield her from the tension and danger - often through humor or a warm embrace. Something as simple as replacing a fridge on the fritz is part of the daily struggle for folks like Yusef. Sometimes it takes the courage and reasonableness of a youngster to highlight the irrational rules that have taken over the world. The film has a grounded, realistic feel, and delivers a sobering message.
Most of the series that talks about the Palestinian-Israeli conflict are biased to Israel, but this film shows a part of the humiliation and suffering Palestinian face every day at Israeli checkpoints. Looking forward more like this in the future.
The Present is a Palestinian short film that takes a very simple scenario of a man living in the West Bank who sets out with his daughter to buy his wife an anniversary gift, against the many checkpoints and surveillances that come with being a Palestinian.
The success of this movie is that it doesn't try to showcase the horrors of the occupation, rather a more relatable scenario that can be empathized with universally, using that to share what it's like to be on the receiving end of the occupation. It's a movie that I feel everyone should watch, and is one I would wholeheartedly recommend.
The success of this movie is that it doesn't try to showcase the horrors of the occupation, rather a more relatable scenario that can be empathized with universally, using that to share what it's like to be on the receiving end of the occupation. It's a movie that I feel everyone should watch, and is one I would wholeheartedly recommend.
I don't know about the original Arabic title, but the English translation of this Academy Award nominated short, "The Present," has a neat double meaning, as it refers to both the wedding anniversary gift of a refrigerator and to the current state of affairs of the apartheid system of occupation and border control of the West Bank. None of the ethnic, historical, political or religious underpinnings are explored here, thankfully; it's just a simple tale of a man and his daughter going twice through a checkpoint to go shopping and return home and the indignities and pain suffered there from.
Indeed, the supposed Israeli guards aren't depicted flatteringly at all, but it is rather the opposite of what one sees in most movies that reach the West and are located somewhere in the Middle East, where Arabic and Palestinian characters are often played by Israeli actors instead of, as here, reportedly, the other way around. And, I look forward to seeing "White Eye," the Israeli nominee for the same award.
Indeed, the supposed Israeli guards aren't depicted flatteringly at all, but it is rather the opposite of what one sees in most movies that reach the West and are located somewhere in the Middle East, where Arabic and Palestinian characters are often played by Israeli actors instead of, as here, reportedly, the other way around. And, I look forward to seeing "White Eye," the Israeli nominee for the same award.
I watched this film via a film festival and got to hear from the director that the opening scene of humans walking through an Israeli checkpoint were live and real. My God! Seeing these forbidden scenes that mainstream media won't show alone is a reason to watch this film. The beautiful superb acting and simple story being the point home beautifully. We need more from Palestinian film makers bearing witness to the plight of the plight of Palestinians in this humane way.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe first scene was filmed at the Checkpoint 300 in Bethlehem. The checkpoint is where thousands of Palestinian workers queue from as early as 3 a.m. to cross into Israel for work.
- BlooperThe actors who play Israeli soldiers are Palestinian, and have a noticeably heavy Arabic Palestinian accent.
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Siti ufficiali
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- The Present
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Bethlehem, Palestine(on location)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 24min
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1
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