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To Take a Wife

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Sequel
  
Shiva

Duration
  

Language
  
French Hebrew Arabic

6.8/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Initial DVD release
  
December 22, 2009 (USA)

Country
  
Israel France

To Take a Wife movie poster

Director
  
Ronit Elkabetz Shlomi Elkabetz

Release date
  
September 2004 (2004-09) (Venice Film Festival) 26 January 2005 (2005-01-26) (France)

Writer
  
Ronit Elkabetz, Shlomi Elkabetz

Directors
  
Ronit Elkabetz, Shlomi Elkabetz

Cast
  
Ronit Elkabetz
(Viviane),
Simon Abkarian
(Eliyahoo),
Gilbert Melki
(Albert),
Sulika Kadosh
(Mémé),
Dalia Beger
(Dona),
Kobi Regev
(Eviatar)

Similar movies
  
Mr. & Mrs. Smith
,
In the Mood for Love
,
Bread and Tulips
,
Bed and Board
,
Grill Point
,
Fatal Attraction

To Take a Wife (VeLakahta Lekha Isha; French: Prendre femme) is a 2004 drama film. It is the directorial debut of veteran actress Ronit Elkabetz, who also stars in the film. The French-Israeli production premiered at the 61st Venice International Film Festival in September 2004.

Contents

To Take a Wife movie scenes

The film is the first in a trilogy about the unhappy marriage of Viviane. It was followed by Shiva and Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem in 2014.

To Take a Wife To Take A Wife Israeli Film Database Israel Film Center

Plot

To Take a Wife To take a wife 2004 uniFrance Films

In Haifa in 1979 hairdresser Viviane Amsalem listens to her brothers as they argue her out of asking her husband for a divorce and convince her to go back to him. In front of her family, her husband, Eliahou, promises her that everything will be different. However in the morning he leaves her to fend for herself as she struggles with attending to her four children. Before she starts work she receive a call from Albert, a former lover, asking her to meet with him. Over the course of the day she attends to her hairdressing clients, her husband and her children, but as her petty grievances with her husband add up she ends the night exploding at him and beating him with her fists in front of her children and her neighbour, who enters the home and helps to separate her from her husband.

To Take a Wife To take a wife 2004 uniFrance Films

The following day Viviane agrees to see Albert in a cafe where he asks her to leave her husband and reveals that the last time he asked her that she was ready to go but he ended up fleeing with his family to Africa. After their meeting he drops her at a bus stop in the rain, but returns to give her a kiss.

To Take a Wife To Take A Wife Movie Forums

The following morning Viviane dreams that she is driving a car in the countryside. She is awoken by her husband who is angry because their eldest son refuses to go to synagogue with him. When Viviane asks him to leave their son alone they fight and the fight escalates to the point where Viviane, in anger, breaks the rules of Shabbat by lighting a match for her cigarette. Eliahou ultimately leaves for synagogue alone, leaving Viviane weeping. In synagogue while serving as Hazzan he stumbles in his singing as he is still upset from his fight with his wife.

Cast

To Take a Wife To take a wife 2004 uniFrance Films

  • Ronit Elkabetz as Viviane
  • Simon Abkarian as Eliahou
  • Gilbert Melki as Albert
  • Sulika Kadosh as Mémé
  • Dalia Beger as Dona
  • Kobi Regev as Eviatar
  • Omer Moshkovitz as Gabrielle
  • Yam Eitan as Lior
  • Valérie Zarrouk as Yvette
  • Carl Zrihen as Victor
  • Production

    To Take a Wife to take a wife trailer heb sub YouTube

    The film was loosely based on the marriage of co-directors Ronit and Shlomi Elkabetz's parents. Like the characters in the movie, their mother was a hairdresser and their father a religious postal worker. The film was always planned to be the first in a series based on Viviane Amsalem's struggle to free herself.

    Reception

    The film received generally positive reviews. Critic Jay Weissberg writing for Variety likened the script to the writing of playwright Edward Albee and praised co-director and star Ronit Elkabetz in particular for a "searing portrayal [that] takes the breathe [sic] away."

    Awards and nominations

    Israeli Film Academy

  • Ophir Award for Best Actress - Ronit Elkabetz (won)
  • Hamburg Film Festival

  • Critics Award - Ronit Elkabetz & Shlomi Elkabetz (won)
  • Mons International Festival of Love Films

  • Best Actor - Simon Abkarian (won)
  • Best Actress - Ronit Elkabetz (won)
  • Thessaloniki Film Festival

  • Best Actor - Simon Abkarian (won)
  • Golden Alexandar Award - Ronit Elkabetz & Shlomi Elkabetz (nominated)
  • Venice Film Festival

  • Audience Award (Critics' Week) - Ronit Elkabetz & Shlomi Elkabetz (won)
  • Isvema Award - Ronit Elkabetz & Shlomi Elkabetz (won)
  • References

    To Take a Wife Wikipedia
    To Take a Wife IMDb To Take a Wife themoviedb.org