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Palestine 36
Palestine 36

Palestine 36

20252h 0m★ 7.9ドラマ履歴戦争

あらすじ

No synopsis available.

作品考察・見どころ

本作は、1936年のパレスチナという歴史の転換点を舞台に、個人の尊厳と国家の運命が交錯する瞬間を鮮烈に描いています。映像が映し出すのは単なる記録ではなく、普遍的な悲劇と、その中で芽生える人間性の輝きです。緊迫感溢れる演出が、観る者の魂を激しく揺さぶります。 ヒアム・アッバスの静謐な力強さと、ロバート・アラマヨの繊細な葛藤が、言葉を超えた感動を呼び起こします。歴史の荒波に翻弄されながらも信念を貫こうとする人々の姿は、我々に深い洞察と勇気を与えてくれます。この深遠な人間ドラマを、ぜひその目で目撃してください。

興行成績

興行収入: $103,864 (0億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

口コミ

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予告・トレイラー

キャスト

كريم داود عناية
كريم داود عناية
Yusuf
Hiam Abbass
Hiam Abbass
Hanan
ロバート・アラマヨ
ロバート・アラマヨ
Captain Wingate
Yasmine Al Massri
Yasmine Al Massri
Khouloud
ビリー・ハウル
ビリー・ハウル
Thomas Hopkins
Dhafer L'Abidine
Dhafer L'Abidine
Amir
Ward Helou
Ward Helou
Kareem
Yafa Bakri
Yafa Bakri
Rabab
Wardi Eilabouni
Wardi Eilabouni
Afra
Saleh Bakri
Saleh Bakri
Khalid

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: アンマリー・ジャシル

脚本: アンマリー・ジャシル

音楽: Ben Frost

制作: Ossama Bawardi / Mohannad Malas / Mohammad Khair Al Zaibak

撮影監督: Hélène Louvart / Sarah Blum

制作会社: Philistine Films / Autonomous / Corniche Media / Snowglobe / MK Productions / BFI / BBC Film / DFI

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

With the British Empire trying to reconcile it’s own Palestinian agenda with those of the indigenous cotton farmers and a burgeoning, homeless, Jewish population arriving with expectations of their own homeland, this film follows events through the eyes of “Yusuf” (Karim Daoud Anaya) as he finds himself drawn into the conflict. He comes from a rural village but works part-time for a local publisher whose wife (Yasmine Al Massri) is a clandestine writer of articles on freedom for the Palestinians. These commentaries become more pertinent as the frequent theft of traditional lands for allocation to the new emigrant settlers leads to rebellion against colonial rule. As that becomes more violent and bloody, the governor (Jeremy Irons) allows the rather odious “Capt. Wingate” (Robert Aramayo) a pretty free, and brutal, hand - despite the protestations of his more conciliatory secretary “Thomas” (Billy Howle) - who just happens to be a source of information for both her newspaper and for an insurgency that is becoming both bolder and better equipped. It is interesting that almost one hundred years later, the same peoples are fighting for control of the same lands, and that in the intervening years mankind’s abilities to co-exist, faith-to-faith, hasn’t really become any easier. This film doesn’t really go into much detail, and from any historical perspective it’s a fairly shallow analysis of a complex scenario that tries to illustrate many of the frustrations faced by a community treated appallingly on one side, but that doesn’t make any attempt to represent the Zionist position at all, beyond the obvious assertions of illegal land-grabbing. It doesn’t try to explore or explain the extent to which many of these new arrivals were essentially “lured” here with false promises by people giving away things that weren’t their’s to give in the first place. It does, however, offer up something of the political naïveté of European administrations that were more concerned about their own position (and, of course, oil) than about sorting this dispute out fairly. Not for the first time, an half-baked policy of partition was decided upon. The acting is all fine, nothing more really, but the photography and the narrative itself showcase not just the location but also of the desire of a collection of hitherto unaffiliated tribal people to work together to attain their own statehood in the face of a vastly superior military machine and a political infrastructure with other fish to fry. It’s incomplete and probably a bit simplistic, but as an explanatory introduction it delivers engagingly and thought-provokingly, too.

Puffypoofy
Puffypoofy
★ 1

By Oren Kessler, author of the book 'Palestine 1936'> I have a number of quarrels with this film but I’ve limited myself to three of its most egregious failings: > > The utter distortion of how Jews acquired land (whatever land they owned was paid for – not “transferred” over by perfidious Brits) > > The complete absence of a guy named Hajj Amin al-Husseini (maybe you’ve heard of him) > > The silencing of the nearly 400,000 Jews who lived in Mandate Palestine in 1936. I don’t mean metaphorically. I mean there are exactly two words spoken by a Jewish character in as many hours of film. > > It’s the last of these that’s the most glaring omission. Eight minutes in, at a ceremony inaugurating the Palestine Broadcasting Corporation, Palestine High Commissioner Arthur Wauchope – played by Oscar-winner Jeremy Irons – nudges an unnamed figure in a costume beard to the microphone to intone “Kol Yerushalayim” (“The Voice of Jerusalem”), before an unnamed Arab dignitary utters the equivalent “Iza’at al-Quds.” > > One later scene shows Jewish immigrants in the distance, wordless but conspicuously light-featured, diligently toiling behind a kibbutz wall. And that’s it. It’s a glaring, flagrant omission. > > This is, after all, a film about an Arab revolt against Jews in which the latter are all but airbrushed because the filmmaker appears to wish they weren’t there in the first place. But wishing doesn’t make it so. > > Here’s the film’s promotion poster for the Arab world. Next to Irons, you may recognize Liam Cunningham (Davos Seaworth in Game of Thrones) and Robert Aramayo (a young Eddard Stark in the same series). What you won’t see it a single Jewish character, because they’ve been wished out of the film. > > There are things to praise about the film. Archival footage is skillfully restored, colorized and integrated. There are a few funny moments, like an Arab child introducing a British visitor to his family donkey as “Balfour – Lord Balfour.” Several of the Arab actors – many of them citizens of Israel – deliver compelling performances. > > But as a work of history, it’s malpractice. > > We shouldn’t expect any different from Qatar or Turkey, two of the primary state backers (along with Iran) of Hamas. But I do think we can and should demand better from the BFI and BBC. Or, for that matter, from the Oscars.

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