Divine Intervention
Retail: $14.98
Our Price:
$11.84
Save: $3.14
In Stock - Ships in 24 Hours
-
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen Rating:
NR-
Language:
Heb Studio:
Koch Lorber FilmsUPC:
741952307594Year of Release:
2002Item Number:
KCH003075Release Date:
07/12/2005Genre:
Black Comedy –
Comedy Drama –
Foreign Films
Format:
DVD
MOVIE DESCRIPTION:
Director Elia Suleiman uses a mixture of romantic comedy and quirky humor to shed light on the problems of Palestinians in Yadon Ilaheyya (Divine Intervention). E.S. (Suleiman and his girlfriend Manal Khader), because they live in separate cities, must meet near an Israeli checkpoint. The film is little more than a series of usually comic but occasionally poignant scenes in which Suleiman and others must confront any number of Israeli nemeses. Suleiman's second film, Divine Interventions, was screened in competition at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
DVD FEATURES:
- Number of Discs: 1
- Audio: Dolby Digital Stereo
- Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 (Theatre Wide Screen)
- Screen: Enhanced Wide Screen Letterbox for 16x9 TV
- Subtitle: Eng
- Features:
- US and French theatrical trailers
- Director's interview
AWARDS
Cannes Film Festival
- Won Jury Prize - 2002 (Elia Suleiman)
Screen International
- Won Best Non-European Film - 2002
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
Cast:
Elia Suleiman - E.S.
Manal Khader
Nayef Fahoum Daher
George Ibrahim - Santa Claus
George Khleifi
Avi KleinbergerDirector:
Elia SuleimanProducer:
Humbert BalsanScreenwriter:
Elia SuleimanCinematographer:
Marc André BatigneEditor:
Véronique LangeArt Director:
Samir Srouji, Denis Renault, Miguel MarkinCo-producer:
Elia SuleimanSound/Sound Designer:
Eric Tisserand
REVIEW:
- Elia Suleiman's Divine Intervention is a mordantly amusing black comedy about life among the Arab citizens of Israel. The film makes excellent use of Suleiman's uniquely attenuated style of slapstick humor. It begins auspiciously, in Nazareth, where Santa Claus (George Ibrahim) is pursued by a gang of Palestinian kids. Chased up a hill, wheezing and dropping presents from his sack, Santa turns to face his attackers, revealing a butcher knife sticking out of his chest. With this darkly comic opening, Suleiman subverts a conventional cinematic narrative trope (his chase sequence is hilariously accomplished), and fulfills a personal revenge fantasy while delineating the vast chasm between the historical significance of Nazareth, the contemporary manifestation of its religious significance, and its current reality. Eschewing any sort of linear narrative, Suleiman goes on to illustrate his neighbors' tragicomic disregard for each other, in what can clearly be seen as metaphor for the current state of Arab-Israeli relations. His film also ventures into fantasy as the director himself appears, inadvertently blowing up an Israeli tank with a peach pit, using a helium balloon affixed with the image of Yasser Arafat to send an Israeli checkpoint into panic, and having precisely choreographed checkpoint trysts with a woman (Manal Khader) who turns out to be some kind of commando-slaying ninja assassin. Divine Intervention could be seen as a continuation of Suleiman's previous feature, Chronicle of a Disappearance, but the tone here is darker, inflected with mourning that is both personal (the death of the filmmaker's father) and political (the worsening of Mideast "tensions"). Divine Intervention makes few concessions to audience expectations, and some may be put off by the film's lugubrious pace, while others may be offended by Suleiman's symbolic violence. But the film remains an invaluably trenchant and timely look at the region it depicts. ~ Josh Ralske, Rovi
Divine Intervention - Available now from DVDPlanet.com, join our mailing list and receive special offers and promotions.






Find us on Facebook
Become an Affiliate