Friday, April 3, 2009

Live and Become (ISRAELI) DVD

(Va, Vis et Deviens)
DVD Review by Kam Williams

Headline: Ethiopian Immigrant Adjusts to Israel in Coming-of-Age Tale on DVD

9 year-old Schlomo (Sirak Sabahat) ended up in Israel in 1985 as part of Operation Moses, a humanitarian airlift of about 8,000 Ethiopian Jews fleeing religious persecution. The only thing wrong with this picture is that he didn’t deserve to exercise any right of return like his fellow refugees, given that he was actually a Christian whose starving mother had him take the place of a deceased child.
Nonetheless, upon his arrival in Tel Aviv, he is presumed to be a Jewish orphan by the couple who adopt him, Yoram (Roschdy Zem) and Yael Harrari (Yael Abecassis). While hiding the fact that he is neither Jewish nor orphaned, Schlomo does his best to adapt to the culture and customs of his new homeland.
However, he soon finds that even if he were Jewish, most white Israelis seem to have a problem with his skin color, and don’t real consider him one of the Chosen People. This proves particularly challenging when he hits puberty and takes an interest in girls, especially Sarah (Roni Hadar), whose racist father doesn’t want his daughter dating a black kid.
So, fish-out-of-water scenarios abound in this coming-of-age saga which covers 15 of Schlomo’s formative years. Over that time span we see the lost lad grow into a man while grappling with assorted identity issues. To its credit, the film fleshes out his character, treating him not as a freak or a curiosity but as an ever-evolving human experiencing a full range of emotions.
Consequently, both his enduring relationship with Sarah and his barely-tolerated presence in Israel combine to create a complicated and compelling character study. As much a peek into a tortured psyche as an exploration of an abundance of universal themes, from intolerance to abandonment to the need to belong.
Brother from another temple.

Excellent (4 stars)
Unrated
In Amharic, Hebrew and French with subtitles.
Running time: 140 minutes
Studio: Menemsha Films

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