The Viewing Booth
Ra'anan Alexandrowicz / Israel / 2019 / Czech Premiere / 72 min.
synopsis
This film has a limit of 300 views.
Lying at the heart of the film is Virginia Woolf's rhetorical question whether we really perceive the images of war in the same manner. These considerations provoked the director of the film to carry out an unusual audiovisual experiment. He presented several volunteers with 40 videos published freely on the Internet, which depict various aspects of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Closed in the viewing booth, they can play any of the clips, stop them at will, replay them, and comment on them. Their act of viewing, however, is recorded. And the director's dialogue with one particular participant eventually becomes an essential part of the film.
“It’s a film about a breakdown of communication, but that also becomes dialogue, although it’s a problematic dialogue.” R. Alexandrowicz
Q&A with the director of The Viewing Booth Ra'ananem Alexandrowiczem:biography
Ra'anan Alexandrowicz (1969) is an Israeli filmmaker. He graduated from the Sam Spiegel Film and Television School in Jerusalem and, despite his original intent to make fictional films, he eventually got into documentary filmmaking. His films regularly appear at major festivals such as the Berlinale, Cannes, and TIFF. His documentary The Law in These Parts (2011), on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, won an award at the Sundance Film Festival.more about film
director: | Ra'anan Alexandrowicz |
cast: | Maia Levy |
producer: | Liran Atzmor, Ra'anan Alexandrowicz |
photography: | Zachary Reese |
editing: | Neta Dvorkis |
contact
Ra'anan AlexandrowiczPhiladelphia / United States
+12674961971
r.alexandrowicz@gmail.com
dok.revue.
Film at festival
premiere type: | Czech Premiere |
festival edition: | 2020 |
section: | Echoes of Ji.hlava, Testimonies |
language: | Arabic, Hebrew, English |
subtitles: | Czech, English |
colour: | Colour |
Info
director: | Ra'anan Alexandrowicz |
original title: | The Viewing Booth |
country: | Israel |
year: | 2019 |
running time: | 72 min. |