There's an art to ambiguity -- there really is... Left to their own devices, viewers will fill in the blanks, but when the movie starts filling them in itself, you have to wonder about the mismatch.
Free Zone (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:46
Fresh:12
Rotten:34
Average Rating:5/10
Consensus: The symbolism in this cinematic metaphor on conflicts in the Middle East becomes so overbearing that it's hard to care about the characters or their plight.
Runtime: 90 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Sitting in a chauffeured car parked just outside of Jerusalem's Wailing Wall, Rebecca (Golden Globe winner and Academy Award nominee Natalie Portman) struggles to compose herself. It isn't clear... Sitting in a chauffeured car parked just outside of Jerusalem's Wailing Wall, Rebecca (Golden Globe winner and Academy Award nominee Natalie Portman) struggles to compose herself. It isn't clear who or what has just upset her, but the driver of the car she's sitting in (Hanna Laslo as Hanna) is losing patience. Hanna's running late for an appointment that she absolutely must keep and Rebecca is holding her up. A strong-willed, charismatic Israeli woman, Hanna is on her way to Jordan, to an ungoverned economic free zone of shady business transactions that is bordered by Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia. Looking for a quick "escape", Rebecca heedlessly convinces a reluctant Hanna to take her along for the ride. Their trip to the Free Zone allows Rebecca a moment to reflect on what led her - some months ago - to leave the United States for Israel, and on her breakdown in Hanna's cab earlier in the day. The road-trip also reveals the urgency behind Hanna's quest, which is being made on behalf of her husband, Moshe (Uri Klauzner). Recently wounded in a terrorist attack, Moshe needs Hanna to collect a debt owed to him by a business partner of his that operates an armored car dealership within the Free Zone. But when Hanna and Rebecca reach "the American's" office, they are confronted by Leila (Hiam Abbass), a Palestinian that works for "the American" and who tells Hanna that "the American" and Hanna's money are missing. Determined not to leave the Free Zone without her husband's debt paid, Hanna forces Leila to join her, and with Rebecca tagging along, the three woman begin a search of the Free Zone for "the American" and Moshe's money. Soon the relationship between the three women changes and what began as a kind of pragmatic mutual need between them, quickly turns into an emotional solidarity that will affect each of their lives forever. Internationally acclaimed Israeli filmmaker Amos Gitai (Yom Yom, Kadosh, Kippur, Kedma, Promised Land) is arguably the most accomplished filmmaker to ever come out of the Israeli film industry. Furthering his career-long exploration of Israeli culture – the Film Society of Lincoln Center recently held a major retrospective of his work – Free Zone moves to a unique terrain where Israelis and their Arab neighbors connect in a market free of political wrangling. Employing virtuosic long-takes and elegant simultaneous exposures, Gitai's beautiful new film is a quietly sweeping movie about intersected lives in transit. Shot in cooperation with the Jordanian Royal Film Commission, Free Zone is the first Israeli fiction feature ever shot in an Arab country. The film boasts first-rate performances by three great actresses of world cinema – Natalie Portman (Closer, Garden State), Hanna Laslo (Winner, Best Actress, 2005 Cannes Film Festival) and Hiam Abbass (Paradise Now). --© New Yorker Films [More]
Starring: Natalie Portman, Hana Lazlo, Hiam Abbass
Starring: Natalie Portman, Hana Lazlo, Hiam Abbass
Director: Amos Gitai
Director: Amos Gitai
Screenwriter: Amos Gitai, Marie-Jose Sanselme
Producer: Laurent Truchot
Studio: New Yorker Films
Reviews for Free Zone
While Portman does outshine everyone and everything on screen and though she certainly gets credit for making the résumé sacrifice in the spirit of embracing her heritage, Free Zone does nothing for her in return
Without much effort you can imagine the corkboard littered with index cards mapping out the political clashes this cast is asked to act out in their robotic interactions.
A rambling road movie with noble intentions and an excess of speechifying.
The elder actresses simmer as they warily interact, but the dialogue is more schematic than dramatic...
The milieu he chooses -- essentially one long, queerly prosaic car ride to nowhere -- robs the film of much of its dramatic force.
Portman and the audience are stranded in the middle, on the outside looking in, with nothing to do and patience increasingly wearing thin.
A minor movie on a major subject, a drama with an almost unbearable lightness.
The movie -- a metaphor for the tangled, impossible state of Israeli/Palestinian relations -- only intermittently clicks.
...never seems to gain much emotional traction throughout its meandering female road trip, despite some provocative subject matter.
Shot mostly in close-ups, it's a fascinating road movie with an absurdist allegorical finale.
Without fail, Gitai's determination to churn everything into metaphoric mud prevails.
Free Zone has a somewhat challenging narrative made more problematic by the difficulty involved in caring about the characters.
Too slight as a metaphor for the larger catastrophe of the Mideast, too preachy to work as an emotionally compelling drama.
Much of the dialogue is didactic and pedantic. And when not didactic and pedantic, it's plodding and dull.
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