
5 minute read
Film
from MT 03/30/22
CULTURE
A self-reflective critique of Israel
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By George Elkind
Following a body of work
that’s never shied from the political, Israeli filmmaker adav apid’s latest, Ahed’s Knee, offers up his most unvarnished criti ues yet of his native government. y working in autofiction, centering his work on a filmmaker as eager to address the weight and injustice of Israeli occupation as he, apid’s criti ues are stated as plainly as possible while still keeping this work within a space of fiction. ut he does so just barely, toying with distance and closeness to expand his lens into spaces of more personal, self uestioning work that lends a needed intimacy to the film’s often abstracted statements on geopolitics. What’s born from this is an examination of the tensions between artistic ego and humility, conscience and ambition, personal vanity and empathetic concern, and what’s suggested by the film’s finish is that all of them are necessary for the production of good work — with each trait presenting itself as much in dialogue as the aesthetic stylings of the film itself. y employing a rough authorial stand in via the figure of an acerbic filmmaker and video artist played by choreographer vshalom ollak , apid spotlights a character whose political convictions are undergirded as much by his own self regard as they are of genuine political and humanitarian concern. The film opens with a music video like performance for a work ’s shooting, inspired by the work of a real life alestinian activist hed Tamimi, who serves as both a vital artistic counterpoint to ’s own work and a narrative frame that manages to haunt the film. Despite the force of that e cerpt’s brief grip on the film’s opening minutes, Ahed’s Knee is mostly about Israeli artists and officials in the absence of alestinian voices. y addressing Tamimi as a point of contrast, apid critically presents the conflict with the myopic but well intentioned perspective of his main Israeli characters as a guide. Operating with a sense of significantly reduced stakes, these characters approach the Israeli occupation as an inconvenient aesthetic, political, and ethical uandary in which those like them with structural advantages over the occupied alestinian people can adamantly pretend to
Avshalom Pollak and Nur Fibak in Ahed’s Knee.
KINO LORBER
resolve.
Moving intermittently between ’s home of Tel viv and the more remote, open desert setting of rava, Ahed’s Knee finds its lead preparing to present work at a small library but with some paperwork presented by Israel’s cultural ministry that he has to sign first. In presenting him with a list of permitted topics which pointedly omit alestinian and more broadly non ewish concerns , this list of allowed subject matter constitutes a barely masked, pernicious form of bureaucratic censorship which rails relentlessly against.
Monologuing either into his phone or to a sympathetic but constrained deputy minister in ahalom an ever torn ur ibak , ’s emotional bandwidth shifts mostly between fury and frustration just responses to state political repression. or those mericans concerned about actual censorship a rarity the contours of this might merit a closer look, as would cases where related measures curbing speech critical of Israel arise here. ’s grasp on the film and nearly all its frames — marinates his modest action in a deep sense of outrage, making the film a blistering release valve for critical political sentiment. etween his smoldering outbursts, though, cuts loose in freer ways whether jamming to music piped through his bo y headphones or leaving diaristic voice messages for his cancer stricken mother never seen on screen , there’s a level of mystery to ’s inner life which apid seems happy to preserve. With most of the film focuses on his movements through dunes, arid landscapes, and, at one point, a desert oasis, the feel of Ahed’s Knee as a vision uest dangles over its proceedings, even as the sorts of climactic revelations that might imply prove largely deferred. Instead, apid leaves us with an e amination of the life of the mind, a struggle against both internal and outwardly imposed forms of repression.
To this end even as cinematographer hai oldman’s desert vistas largely position amid a landscape made up of neighboring, bright but largely muted hues, his whiplash camerawork strains against this same environment. With single shots darting to closeups of physical or environmental detail most noticeably ’s e tremities during a standout dance se uence amid the open desert , apid e presses an appetite for the erratic and uncontrolled. choing the film’s thematic preoccupations, these formal gestures make Ahed’s Knee’s monologue driven action feel internal in a way that’s welcome, cutting through its air of musing abstraction with a more heated emotional core.
This balance is delicate, and in many ways comprises the film’s subject
Ahed’s Knee
Rated: Not rated Run time: 109 minutes
Ahed’s Knee is about nothing so much as the challenges and psychic re uirements of making charged political art. In focusing on this in terms of attitude and mindset more than the actions involved, apid e amines ’s position and by e tension his own uite critically. While ’s concerns with injustice seem palpably sincere, he also speaks from the position of privileged distance that those upset by lopsided geopolitics so often do something apid’s film could be accused of as well. While Tamimi’s presence on the film’s periphery provides a brief flicker of the more concrete stakes of the conflict as the film notes, she was jailed as a teenager for striking and not injuring an Israeli soldier , what suffers in state repression manages as easily to retain significance as it does to pale in comparison with her own struggles. They’re hitting us in the wallet,” says at one point regarding state imposed curbs on his work, making us buy the cheapest brands.” Compared to incarceration, such gripes seem laughable even as they plainly matter, given political speech’s role as a cornerstone of effective activism.
Even while highlighting these disparities and uestioning the various limits of his own power in producing salutary political work, apid highlights the damage done to all citi ens in suppressing e pression that supports the marginalized, or that criticizes governments in power. In fighting this, enjamin etanyahu’s government robbed all in the region and some beyond of a fundamental right, whether militarily or through more uiet bureaucratic means.
While speaking out about this might sound at least thematically simple or politically obvious, it’s apid’s self awareness about his work that elevates Ahed’s Knee as a welcome artistic, as well as political, text. In being selfrefle ive and so personally self uestioning the film obtains a rich sense of ambiguity that would rarely be found in a screed.
