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WALTZ WITH BASHIR |
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Image
courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics |
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Written and directed by
Israeli filmmaker, Ari Folman, Waltz
with Bashir is an animated documentary, based on FolmanÕs
personal experiences as a young soldier fighting in the first Israeli-Lebanon
War of the early 1980s. The
story begins with present-day Ari sitting in a bar, talking to his old Army friend
Boaz about BoazÕs recurring nightmare in which he constantly chased by a menacing
pack of dogs. The men then
connect BoazÕs dream to a massacre that happened during the war. At that point, Ari
realizes that he himself has no conscious memories about that period in his
life. Both perplexed and
intrigued by this sudden realization, Ari decides to start tracking down
other former Israeli solders, hoping they will be able to help Ari remember
what he has forgotten. Over the
course of the film, the memory of each interviewed soldier become a catalyst,
triggering the next manÕs recollections, until Ari eventually discovers that
he has collected enough pieces of the puzzle to unlock the part of the war that
he himself had repressed. So, how can Waltz with Bashir be both animated and
a documentary at the same time? Unlike
A Scanner Darkly, which
used rotoscope animation to paint over real video,
all the interviews in Waltz were
originally shot in a sound studio and cut into a 90 minute film. From there, the film was drawn as a
series of story boards, which were then used to create an animated story
using a combination of Flash, classic, and 3D animation. Without question, Waltz with Bashir is an anti-war
film. The combination of muted
tones, monochromatic colors, and stark chiaroscuro of the animated visual
design paint a moody backdrop for the filmÕs disturbing subject matter. At first, it may seem a little odd to
choose animation for a documentary, especially when the director doesnÕt use
it to glamorize the grizzly images of war like the latest video game; but, there
is definitely a method to FolmanÕs uncharacteristic
choice of visual design. At first the surreal
nature of the animation only seems to downplay the atrocity of the filmÕs subject
matter by creating a comfort zone for the audience. But that is exactly what Folman
wants it to do, right up to the point where he inserts an unexpected clip of real
stock footage (not animated) from the actual massacre. This sudden juxtaposition of fantasy
vs. reality that ends as abruptly as it starts makes more of an anti-war
statement than any soldier testimony ever could. Since the film was made
by an Israeli filmmaker and everyone interviewed in the film is also a former
Israeli soldier, itÕs only natural for the filmÕs spoken language to be
Hebrew (with English subtitles).
However, there are two instances in the film where English is spoken: 1)
in a porno being watched by an Israeli soldier wherein an Arab man is having
sex with an American woman (a commentary on American pop culture), and 2)
when U.S. soldiers tell the Lebanese militia to Òstop the massacreÓ at the
end (a commentary on the current situation in the Middle East). Could the subtext of
these two scenes be read as anti-American messages? Maybe. Maybe
not. Like any film, it all
depends on whoÕs doing the interpreting. Every audience member is going to view it with a different
perspective than the person sitting next to them. If so, is the message warranted? Again, thatÕs a matter of individual perception. Personally, IÕm not going to judge it
on that level, because I can argue it either way. IÕm just saying itÕs there if you want to see it. For me personally, the
biggest problem I had with FolmanÕs film wasnÕt a
question of subtext. Nor, was it
the historical accuracy of the event itself. I also wasnÕt that bothered by the narcissistic angle of
the filmÕs protagonist, or the fact that two of the soldiers interviewed were
played by actors. What drove me
nuts more than anything else in Waltz
with Bashir was the flawed logic pattern of FolmanÕs
psychology. At the beginning of the
film, one interviewee tells Ari about a psychology experiment that was
conducted wherein false memories were created in subjects when others helped
them fill in the ÒmissingÓ memories.
Yet, the entire narrative structure of the film is composed of nothing
but former soldiers filling in the Òmissing gapsÓ of one anotherÕs memories,
ironically invalidating every testimony given in the film by the soldiers. Granted, Folman was probably trying to invalidate these fragmented
individual accounts in order to justify the ÒtruthÓ of his stock
footage. But, what he fails to
remember is that he also invalidated the perspective of the war journalistÕs
camera by using it to demonstrate the mental state of disassociation wherein
the photographer only captures partial memories on film because the cameramanÕs
lens physically separates him from the ÒrealityÓ of what he is viewing. No matter how
groundbreaking or aesthetically pleasing I found the film to be, the contradictory
messages of its psychology invalidated any effect they might have otherwise had. Ultimately, itÕs these very
contradictions that keep Folman from finding any
real answers to the questions he seeks, making Waltz with Bashir seem more like an impressionistic vision of
fragmented memories than a serious journalistic inquiry into the Sabra and Shatila Massacre of
the 1982 Israeli-Lebanon war. © Left From Hollywood 1/23/2009 |
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Running
Time: |
1 hour 27 minutes |
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Release
Date: |
December 25, 2008 (NY/LA), January 23, 2009 (limited) |
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MPAA
Rating: |
R (some disturbing images of atrocities, strong violence,
brief nudity, one scene of graphic sexual content) |
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Distributor: |
Sony Pictures Classics |
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Language: |
Hebrew (English subtitles) |