A Tale of Love and Darkness (film)
A Tale of Love and Darkness (film)
A Tale of Love and Darkness | |
---|---|
Directed by | Natalie Portman |
Produced by | Ram Bergman David Mandil |
Screenplay by | Natalie Portman |
Based on | A Tale of Love and Darkness by Amos Oz |
Starring | Natalie Portman Amir Tessler Gilad Kahana |
Music by | Nicholas Britell |
Cinematography | Sławomir Idziak |
Edited by | Andrew Mondshein |
Production company | Ram Bergman Productions MoviePlus Productions Mountaintop Productions Voltage Pictures |
Distributed by | United King Films (Israel) Focus World (United States) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | Israel |
Language | Hebrew Arabic English Russian |
Box office | $572,212 in US[1] ₪1,766,357 in Israel[2] |
A Tale of Love and Darkness is a 2015 Israeli drama film written and directed by Natalie Portman. Based on the autobiographical novel of the same name by Israeli author Amos Oz, it takes place in Jerusalem in the last years of Mandatory Palestine and the first years of independent Israel, and stars Amir Tessler as Oz, and Gilad Kahana and Portman as his parents. It is Portman's directorial feature debut. It was screened at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival[3][4] and in the Special Presentations section of the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival.[5]
A Tale of Love and Darkness | |
---|---|
Directed by | Natalie Portman |
Produced by | Ram Bergman David Mandil |
Screenplay by | Natalie Portman |
Based on | A Tale of Love and Darkness by Amos Oz |
Starring | Natalie Portman Amir Tessler Gilad Kahana |
Music by | Nicholas Britell |
Cinematography | Sławomir Idziak |
Edited by | Andrew Mondshein |
Production company | Ram Bergman Productions MoviePlus Productions Mountaintop Productions Voltage Pictures |
Distributed by | United King Films (Israel) Focus World (United States) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | Israel |
Language | Hebrew Arabic English Russian |
Box office | $572,212 in US[1] ₪1,766,357 in Israel[2] |
Plot
Amos reflects back on his early childhood in then British Mandate of Palestine (now Israel) with his mother Fania (Natalie Portman) and father Arieh (Gilad Kahana). His parents are Eastern European Jews living in Jerusalem, which his mother finds difficult as her sisters and family live in Tel Aviv and communication between them is difficult. Amos, an only child, is particularly close with his mother, who frequently tells him stories based on her childhood that often have unhappy or violent endings.
Amos' parents regularly lend him out to a childless couple they are friends with. On one occasion this couple take him to visit a friend of theirs, a Palestinian Arab. They warn Amos to be quiet and not make much fuss lest he offend their hosts, but while playing with a swing he accidentally injures a child.
On November 29, 1947, Amos' family and others from the neighbourhood gather around a radio in the street to hear the passing of United Nations General Assembly Resolution 181, which adopted a plan to partition Mandatory Palestine into independent Arab and Jewish states. Amos' parents are overwhelmed with joy. Soon afterwards, civil war erupts in Palestine. Amos' father enlists to fight in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, while Amos and other children are recruited to the war effort. One of his mother's friends is killed while hanging up laundry during the war.
Fania falls into a depression and becomes unable to sleep or eat. Amos and Arieh try their best to hide her depression from their friends and family. After a change in pills Fania abruptly becomes her old more lively self and tries to act normally for her husband and child. A short time later she relapses once more and goes to visit her sisters in Tel Aviv, where she kills herself by overdose.
Amos goes to live on a kibbutz. Reuniting with his father as a teenager, he shows him his new life but admits that despite his attempts at being a strong and healthy farmer he is still a pale and weak intellectual.
An elderly Amos sits down to write his memoirs, beginning with the word "mother".
Cast
Natalie Portman as Fania Klausner né Mussman
Gilad Kahana as Arieh Klausner
Amir Tessler as Amos Klausner (child)
Makram Khoury as Halawani
Yonatan Shiray as Amos Klausner/Oz (teenager)
Shira Haas as Fania Mussman (young)
Tomer Kapon as The Pioneer
Neta Riskin
Production
Director and cast at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival.
It is the first film in which Portman speaks Hebrew. In order to play the role of Amos Oz's mother, an immigrant from Eastern Europe, Portman took considerable efforts to remove all traces of an American accent from her Hebrew.[7]
Portman recruited designer Alber Elbaz to design the costumes she wore in the film.[8]
On March 2016 Focus World acquired the rights to distribute a theatrical release of the film in the United States.[9]
Reception
The film has received mixed to positive reviews, with 67% out of 58 film critics on the online review website Rotten Tomatoes giving it a positive rating. The website's critical consensus reads, "A Tale of Love and Darkness suggests greater things for debuting writer-director Natalie Portman — even if its reach slightly exceeds her creative grasp."[10]