Alice (2012 Film)
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''Alice'' ( he, אליס) is a 2012
Israel Israel (; he, יִשְׂרָאֵל, ; ar, إِسْرَائِيل, ), officially the State of Israel ( he, מְדִינַת יִשְׂרָאֵל, label=none, translit=Medīnat Yīsrāʾēl; ), is a country in Western Asia. It is situated ...
i
drama film In film and television, drama is a category or genre of narrative fiction (or semi-fiction) intended to be more serious than humorous in tone. Drama of this kind is usually qualified with additional terms that specify its particular super-g ...
, written and directed by
Dana Goldberg Dana Goldberg (; born March 1, 1979) is an Israeli poet, filmmaker and playwright. Biography Goldberg was born in Herzliya. Her father was a pilot and her mother worked at a bank. As a child, she studied many different creative fields: photogr ...
, her debut feature film.


Plot synopsis

38 year-old Alice (Ilanit Ben-Yaakov) passes her days in sleep. Her night-shift work at a residential rehabilitation school gives her an easy excuse, covering up her emotional erosion and numbness. Her husband, Yigal (Haim Zanati), feels upset and lonely because of her withdrawal, and his anger mounts. Eli (Itay Naveh), her 9-year-old son, is desperate for her love. In the school live about 30 girls who suffered from emotional breakdowns. Alice avoids communication with them, and is careful to fulfill her basic duties: dispensing medication, overseeing meals, and managing sleep and shower schedules. After lights-out, in her tiny room in the staff area, she meets Yoel (Amos Shuv), her lover. On the narrow single-bed, her passion awakens for another life, the one that might have been. A challenge by one of the girls (Daria Shezaf), and the dependence of another (Neta Bar-Rafael), sweep her into a triangle of power that gets out of control.


Cast


Reception

Avner Shavit, in his review, wrote that considering that it is her debut feature, Goldberg presented the story "cleanly and precisely", and found her direction of the talented cast effective. He thought, however, that the script was lacking some indefinable quality, that would make this "beautiful and powerful drama" more memorable. Oron Shamir found it the most "thought provoking film" of the Jerusalem Film Festival, and commended Goldberg's treatment in her first feature of themes she dealt with in her earlier work - namely power dynamics and love between women. Nirit Enderman called it a powerful film, much needed in a cinematic landscape sorely lacking in women, and described it as "a film that does not spare its viewers. It confronts them with the harsh emotions of a protagonist who is in constant depression and disappoints herself and those around her. She is a mother who cannot give her young son the love he so longs for. She is a wife who cannot provide her partner with the attention he expects, and who cannot give her patients the emotional support they need." Her review, which includes an interview with Goldberg, asks why the work is so "heavy", to which Goldberg replies that Alice represents many women who, in spite of moments of grace, carry heavy burdens placed on them by society, in this case - a woman who never should have had children, but did so under pressure.


Awards


References


External links

* {{authority control Israeli drama films 2012 films 2010s Hebrew-language films 2012 directorial debut films 2012 drama films