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Lebanon (2009 film)

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Genre
  
Drama, War

Duration
  

Country
  
6.9/10
IMDb


Director
  
Screenplay
  
Writer
  
Samuel Maoz

Language
  
HebrewArabic

Lebanon (2009 film) movie poster

Release date
  
8 September 2009 (2009-09-08) (VIFF)24 September 2009 (2009-09-24) (Israel)

Initial release
  
September 24, 2009 (Canada)

Music director
  
Nicolas Becker, Benoit Delbecq

Cast
  
(Herzel), (Yigal),
Yoav Donat
(Shmulik), (Asi),
Zohar Shtrauss
(Gamil)

Similar movies
  
Waltz with Bashir (2008), Oshri Cohen and Itay Tiran appear in Lebanon and Beaufort, Cup Final (1991), Yossi & Jagger (2002), Ajami (2009)

Lebanon 2009 movie review


Lebanon (Hebrew: לבנון‎‎; Lebanon: The Soldier's Journey in the UK) is a 2009 Israeli war film directed by Samuel Maoz. It won the Leone d'Oro at the 66th Venice International Film Festival, becoming the first Israeli-produced film to have won that honour. In Israel itself the film has caused some controversy. The film was nominated for ten Ophir Awards, including Best Film. The film also won the 14th Annual Satyajit Ray Award.

Contents

Lebanon (2009 film) movie scenes

Maoz based the film on his experience as a young Israeli conscript during the 1982 Lebanon War. The British newspaper The Guardian has described it as an anti-war film.

Lebanon (2009 film) movie scenes

Lebanon trailer us 2009


Plot

Lebanon (2009 film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters8006465p800

The film depicts warfare as witnessed exclusively from the inside of a tank. The crew's window to the outside world is a gunsight. As a way of adding realism to the effect, every change in the horizontal and vertical viewing directions is accompanied by the hydraulic whine of the traversing gun turret. The film is set during the 1982 Lebanon War. There are four Israeli soldiers inside: the driver in the tank's hull, the loader, the gunner and the commander in the turret. For part of the time there is also the body of a dead Israeli soldier (kept there until it is airlifted away), a Syrian POW, a visiting higher officer, and a visiting Phalangist (Lebanese Maronite Catholic allied with Israel) who threatens the POW with torture and a gruesome death.

Lebanon (2009 film) Movie Review Lebanon 2009 Sami Naik

The soldiers are ordered to clear an area of Lebanese personnel. They are instructed to include the use of phosphorus grenades that are forbidden by international treaty.

Lebanon (2009 film) Lebanon 2009 Movie Poster Movie Posters Pinterest Lebanon

The gunner has never fired the cannon in a combat situation and is hesitant at first. As a result, a fellow Israeli soldier is killed along with an innocent man in a subsequent incident involving equally poor judgment. The soldiers have to cope with the deteriorating state of the tank, heat, smoke, filth, stench, cramped quarters, equipment failure, navigational problems, conflicting information and recurring quarrels.

Cast

Lebanon (2009 film) Lebanon 2009 Movie Poster Kellerman Design

  • Oshri Cohen as Hertzel
  • Zohar Shtrauss as Jamil
  • Michael Moshonov as Yigal
  • Itay Tiran as Assi
  • Yoav Donat as Shmulik
  • Reymonde Amsalem as Lebanese Mother
  • Dudu Tassa as the Syrian prisoner
  • Ashraf Barhom as 1st Phalangist
  • Reception

    Lebanon (2009 film) Lebanon Trailer US 2009 YouTube

    The film received universal acclaim from film critics. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 90% out of 97 professional critics gave the film a positive review, with a rating average of 7.7/10 and the site consensus being: "A powerful and personal account of war on the front line, writer-director Samuel Maoz takes the viewer inside an Israeli tank to deliver an exhausting, original film."

    Lebanon (2009 film) Lebanon Lebanon The Soldiers Journey Movie Trailer

    After winning the Golden Lion at the 66th Venice International Film Festival, Maoz said: "I dedicate this award to the thousands of people all over the world who, like me, come back from war safe and sound. Apparently they are fine, they work, get married, have children. But inside the memory will remain stabbed in their soul."

    Lebanon (2009 film) Lebanon Internet Movie Firearms Database Guns in Movies TV and

    Maoz, when speaking to The Observer stated that he opposes the Israel-related protest call at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival: "The point of a film like mine is to open a dialogue, to get people talking to each other about important issues. This is something you can't do if films are boycotted. It makes no sense to boycott art. Maybe I wouldn't have won if Jane Fonda was on the jury, but she wasn't." (Note that the open letter at the center of the protest against the spotlighting of Tel Aviv did not call for a boycott of the festival or any of its films.)

    The Guardian described it as a "controversial choice", noting that some commentators in Israel have "raised concerns that the film will deter young men from volunteering for the army." The Golden Lion is the highest award given to an Israeli film to date. Maoz says many Israeli figures were against Lebanon even being featured at the Venice International Film Festival. The Venice jury was chaired by Ang Lee, who had won the Golden Lion award in Venice in 2005 with Brokeback Mountain and in 2007 with Lust, Caution. Lebanon competed against 24 other entries. The win in Venice caused a boost in the film's popularity at the Toronto International Film Festival.

    The New York Times described Lebanon as "an astonishing piece of cinema". Variety magazine said Lebanon is "the boldest and best" of recent Israeli films based upon the Lebanon wars.

    References

    Lebanon (2009 film) Wikipedia
    Lebanon (2009 film) IMDbLebanon (2009 film) Rotten TomatoesLebanon (2009 film) Roger EbertLebanon (2009 film) MetacriticLebanon (2009 film) themoviedb.org