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Divine Intervention (2003)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:8
Fresh:6
Rotten:2
Average Rating:6.5/10
Consensus: Suleiman utilizes absurdist humor to craft a provocative, original film.
Runtime: 1 hr 32 mins
Genre: Comedies
Synopsis: DIVINE INTERVENTION writer-director Elia Suleiman has been compared to Woody Allen and Charlie Chaplin, presumably because he has Allen's intelligent, self-deprecating humor and Chaplin's gift for... DIVINE INTERVENTION writer-director Elia Suleiman has been compared to Woody Allen and Charlie Chaplin, presumably because he has Allen's intelligent, self-deprecating humor and Chaplin's gift for silent comedy. DIVINE INTERVENTION is not a silent film, but an intensely quiet comedy about daily life in the West Bank and Israel. Suleiman provides a series of not-altogether-related vignettes of people choked with boredom and drained of compassion, such as an angry mob of adolescents stabbing Santa Claus, or the neighbor who throws garbage onto the property next door (and complains when its thrown back), or checkpoint soldiers who sing and dance, and look menacing doing so. Though there is no distinct protagonist in this atypical satire, the filmmaker plays himself returning to Nazareth to help his ailing, hospitalized father (Nayef Fahoum Daher). Between visits to the hospital, where patients chain smoke in the halls outside their rooms, Suleiman falls for a West Bank woman (Manal Khader). Restrictions force them to carry out their relationship with only some hand-holding in the parking lot of the Israeli checkpoint between their two cities. DIVINE INTERVENTION favors extended, slow-paced scenes that seem suspended in time until they are punctuated with supercharged Arabian dance music like Madonna producer Mirwais Ahmadazi's "Definitive Beat" or Natacha Atlas's unbelievable cover version of Screamin' Jay Hawkins's "I Put A Spell On You." Though the characters often seem too distracted by anxiety and anguish to really connect with one another, Suleiman's sense of humor giddily overrides all the darker messages here, as in the climactic sequence--reminiscent of Monty Python--in which armed men in choreographed unison shoot at a target outlined in the figure of a veiled woman and she refuses to capitulate. [More]
Starring: Elia Suleiman, Emma Boltanski, Amer Daher, Jamel Daher
Starring: Elia Suleiman, Emma Boltanski, Amer Daher, Jamel Daher, Naeif Daher, George Ibrahim, Salman Nattor, Nazira Suleiman
Director: Elia Suleiman
Director: Elia Suleiman
Screenwriter: Elia Suleiman
Producer: Humbert Balsan, Avi Kleinberger, Joachim Ortmanns, Babette Schroder, Elia Suleiman
Studio: Avatar Films
Reviews for Divine Intervention
Suleiman's film is uniquely engaging, a visual feast—though how emotionally or intellectually satisfying it is will depend on how each viewer responds to the images.
This film has the rare opportunity to change people's minds about the world. I can think of no higher praise for art.
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