Uma pequena banda egípcia viaja até Israel para tocar na inauguração de um centro cultural árabe. Mas após entrarem no ônibus errado, os músicos são levados para uma pequena vila, onde preci... Ler tudoUma pequena banda egípcia viaja até Israel para tocar na inauguração de um centro cultural árabe. Mas após entrarem no ônibus errado, os músicos são levados para uma pequena vila, onde precisarão passar a noite com os habitantes locais.Uma pequena banda egípcia viaja até Israel para tocar na inauguração de um centro cultural árabe. Mas após entrarem no ônibus errado, os músicos são levados para uma pequena vila, onde precisarão passar a noite com os habitantes locais.
- Prêmios
- 46 vitórias e 16 indicações no total
- Lieutenant-colonel Tawfiq Zacharya
- (as Sasson Gabai)
- Iman
- (as Tarak Kopty)
Avaliações em destaque
This is not just a small-talk tale about the fruitful meeting between two cultures and two powers. It's also about loneliness and how people cope with it. There's the loneliness from being old, the loneliness from being sexually outspoken, the loneliness from being retarded when it comes to passion. It's both a very sad and hopeful movie.
Perhaps the main theme is music and the consolation which is possible from it.
One must understand that Israel and Egypt had been long time enemies (until the peace agreement in 1979) and that Israeli Jews and Arabs have very different views on so many matters. Within this context the humanity of the film really shines. People of such different backgrounds are basically the same; Same hopes and aspirations, same fears and frustrations etc. The same things make all of us tick.
This film is also about strangers and others. And how we can help one another. The scene with Haled and the Israeli boy and girl in the skating rink is, my opinion, classic.
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Enjoyable and bit quirky to see the kinds of situations people get into, that are much like we may experience anywhere else in the world.
Others have laid out the plot well and nothing more needs to be said about how the story develops.
I found two scene in this movie the kind that one must remember, rather like the many one may recall from Bogart in Casablanca.
The exchange at the phone and the scenes at the skating rink are precious and very well acted.
This is a movie I recommend seeing and then putting into memory to come back and see again and again just for the pure pleasure of a well developed comedy.
Forget all that, it's some other movie. This one is free and clear of anything set, routine, obvious, predictable. "The Band's Visit" is about people - mostly awkward, all real, well- and ill-behaved in turn - and not about agenda, ideology, politics. It's an unsentimental "people movie" (remember when Hollywood used to churn those out?), enormously likable, a treasurehouse of humanism.
"Visit" is also a film you have to work with. It's not dumped on the audience in its fullness by its writer and (first-time) director, Eran Kolirin. Action is slow or nonexistent, dialogue is halting, silences are rampant. And yet it all works so well: even if you have never heard Egyptian music, when the band finally plays (as the end-credits roll), you're guaranteed to groove on it.
Kolirin is a writer and director of great economy. The characters of and relationships between the eight band members - in their powder blue, Sgt. Pepper-wannabe, uniforms are revealed through a word here, an expression there, and pretty soon, you really know them... except that later you realize you didn't.
The head of the band, Tewfig, is an officious, prissy, downcast, silent figure, and yet as the camera stays on him a great deal of the time, slowly you are getting used to him, and when he finally puts together a couple of full sentences, you may feel acceptance and even appreciation.
It is at this point, far into the movie, that you understand why Dina is pursuing him. Dina is the attractive - if blowsy - owner of a small cafe in the Israeli desert town where the band is stranded. There is much, much more to "Visit," but just watching the Tewfig-Dina story, and reveling in the performances of the two actors, is well worth the price of admission.
The band leader is Sasson Gabal, and I must admit being incredulous finding out after seeing the movie that he is a famous Israeli actor. Not only does he appear authentically Egyptian, but when starts singing an Arabic song - oy! Dina is Ronit Elkabetz, an actor so fine that you'd never suspect her of being one; what you see on the screen is the character, totally believable.
"Visit" is a rare film, one that keeps running in your mind long after the band strikes up.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe movie was selected to be Israel's Official Submission to the Best Foreign Language Film Category of The 80th Annual Academy Awards (2008), but it was disqualified by AMPAS because more than 50% of the film's dialogue was found to be in English, as opposed to Arabic and Hebrew. After an unsuccessful appeal, Israel sent Beaufort (2007) instead.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen speaking in Arabic, Tawfiq pronounces some words with the Egyptian Arabic pronunciation, and some words with the Palestinian Arabic pronunciation. Being an Egyptian, he should talk in Egyptian Arabic dialect all the time.
- Citações
Lieutenant-colonel Tawfiq Zacharya: This is like asking why a man needs a soul.
- ConexõesFeatured in Sharon Amrani: Remember His Name (2010)
Principais escolhas
- How long is The Band's Visit?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- The Band's Visit
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 3.054.457
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 67.492
- 10 de fev. de 2008
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 14.587.587
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 27 min(87 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1