PARADISE NOW
'''Paradise Now''' () is a 2005 film directed by Hany Abu-Assad about two Palestinian men preparing for a suicide attack in Israel. It won a Golden Globe for best foreign language film and was nominated for an Academy Award in the same category.
"The film is an artistic point of view of that political issue," Abu-Assad said. "The politicians want to see it as black and white, good and evil, and art wants to see it as a human thing."Glaister, Dan. "It was a joke I was even nominated", ''The Guardian'', January 20, 2006.
| Contents |
| Plot |
| Production |
| Distribution and marketing |
| Statements by the filmmakers |
| Controversies |
| Oscars |
| Responses |
| Awards |
| Academy Award |
| Golden Globe |
| Other awards won |
| Notes |
| External links |
Plot
''Paradise Now'' follows Palestinian childhood friends Said and Khaled who live in Nablus and have been recruited for suicide attacks in Tel Aviv. It focuses on what would be their last days together.
Their handlers tell them that the next day will be the attack. The pair records videos glorifying God and their cause, and they bid their unknowing families and loved ones goodbye. The resistance group tells Said and Khaled that they should act normally to avoid arousing suspicion while they stay with their families the night before the attack. The next day to prepare for their mission Said and Khaled shave off their hair and beards and don suits in order to look like Israelis, the group of people they are going to attack. Their cover story for why they have transformed themselves is that they are going to a wedding.
An explosive belt is attached to each man; the handlers are the only ones with the keys needed to remove the belts without detonating them. The men are instructed to detonate the bombs at the same place, a military check point in Israel, with a time interval of 15 minutes so that the second bomb will kill police arriving after the first blast.
They cross the Israeli border, but have to flee from guards. Khaled returns to their handlers, but Said runs away. The handlers remove Khaled's explosive belt and issue a search for Said. Khaled believes he is the best person to find Said since he knows him well, and he is given until the end of that day to find him.
After Said escapes from the guards, he re-enters Israeli territory alone. At one point, he considers detonating the bomb on a commercial bus, but he decides not to when he sees a child on board. Eventually, Said reveals his reason for taking part in the suicide bombing. While in a car with Suha, a woman he has fallen in love with — who plays the role of the doubter or the men's conscience — he explains that his father was an ''ameel'' (a "collaborator," or Palestinian working for the Israelis).
Khaled eventually finds Said, who is still wearing the belt and about to detonate it while lying on his father's grave. They return to the handlers, and Said convinces them that the attack need not be canceled, because he is ready for it. Influenced by Suha, who discovered their plan, Khaled cancels his suicide attack. He travels with Said to Tel Aviv to convince him to cancel his attack too. Said manages to shake Khaled by pretending to agree.
The film ends with a long shot of Said sitting on a bus full of Israeli civilians and soldiers, not setting off the bomb, then finally cuts to white.
Production
Hany Abu-Assad and co-writer Bero Beyer started working on the script in 1999, but it took them five years to get the story before cameras. The original script was about one man searching for his friend, who is a suicide bomber, but it evolved into a story of two friends, Said and Khaled.
The filmmakers faced great difficulties making the film on location. A land mine exploded 300 meters away from the set.[1] Whilst filming in Nablus, Israeli helicopter gunships launched a missile attack on a car near the film's set one day, prompting six crew members to abandon the production for good.[2] Paradise Now's location manager was kidnapped by a Palestinian faction during the shoot and was not released until Palestinian President Yasser Arafat's office intervened.[3] In an interview with the ''Telegraph'', Hany Abu-Assad said, "if I could go back in time, I wouldn't do it again. It's not worth endangering your life for a movie."[4]
Distribution and marketing
★ Tagline: ''From the most unexpected place, comes a bold new call for peace.''
The Israel Film Fund is underwriting the film’s distribution in Israel.
Statements by the filmmakers
In Hany Abu-Assad's Golden Globe acceptance speech he made a plea for a Palestinian state, saying he hoped the Golden Globe as “a recognition that the Palestinians deserve their liberty and equality unconditionally."[5]
In an interview with a Jewish American Tikkun magazine , Hany Abu-Assad was asked "When you look ahead now, what gives you hope?", "The conscience of the Jewish people" he answered. "The Jews have been the conscience of humanity, always, wherever they go. Not all Jews, but part of them. Ethics. Morality. They invented it! I think Hitler wanted to kill the conscience of the Jews, the conscience of humanity. But this conscience is still alive...Maybe a bit weak...But still alive. Thank God."[6]
Co-producer Amir Harel is a Jewish Israeli, who told reporters that "First and foremost the movie is a good work of art", adding that "If the movie raises awareness or presents a different side of reality, this is an important thing."[7]
Controversies
Oscars
''Paradise Now'' was the first Palestinian film to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. An earlier Palestianian film, ''Divine Intervention'' (2002), had controversially failed to gain admission to the competition, allegedly because films nominated for this award must be put forward by the government of their country, and Palestine is not a fully sovereign state. However, since entities such as Puerto Rico, Hong Kong and Taiwan have been submitting entries for years although they are not sovereign states with full United Nations representation, accusations of a double standard were made.[8]
''Paradise Now'' was submitted to the Academy and to the Golden Globes as a film from 'Palestine'. It was referred to as such at the Golden Globes. However, Israeli officials, including Consul General Ehud Danoch and Consul for Media and Public Affairs Gilad Millo, tried to extract a guarantee from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences that ''Paradise Now'' would not be presented in the ceremony as representing the state of Palestine, despite the fact it was introduced as such in the Academy Awards' official website.[9] The Academy Awards began to refer to the film's country instead as "the Palestinian Authority". This decision angered director-writer Hany Abu-Assad, who said it represented a slap in the face for the Palestinian people and their national identity. The Academy subsequently referred to it as a submission from the "Palestinian Territories".[10] In a further complication, Israeli writer Irit Linor points out that "according to internationally accepted conventions, the nationality of a film is usually determined by the country that invested in it - and that while the film was categorized by the Academy as representing Palestine, it was produced with European funds, by an Israeli-Arab director."[11]
On March 1, 2006, it was reported that a group representing Israeli victims of suicide bombings had asked the Oscar organizers to disqualify the film. These protesters, some of them family members of people murdered or severely injured persons by suicide bombers claimed showing the film is immoral and encourages hurting and killing civilians in terror acts.[12]
Responses
Paradise Now has an 88% rating on the review compendium website Rotten Tomatoes.[13]
Stephen Holden, in his October 28, 2005 article in the New York Times, applauded the suspense and plot twists in the movie, and the risks involved humanizing suicide bombers, saying "[it is easier to see a] suicide bomber as a 21st-century Manchurian Candidate - a soulless, robotic shell of a person programmed to wreak destruction - than it is to picture a flesh-and-blood human being doing the damage."[14]
Irit Linor, one of Israel's top novelists and screenwriters wrote in a February 7, 2006 article in Ynet News that ''Paradise Now'' is "an exciting, quality Nazi film." She claims that the sophisticated techniques and symbolism are used to present caricatures, recycle antisemitic myths and even introduce christological associations in the film.[15]
Awards
Academy Award
★ On January 31, 2006, the film was nominated in the Best Foreign Language Film category.
Golden Globe
★ ''Paradise Now'' won "Best Foreign Language Film" for the 63rd Golden Globe Awards, the first time a Palestinian film was nominated for such an award.
Other awards won
★ 2005 Berlin International Film Festival:
★
★ Amnesty International Film Prize
★
★ AGICOA 2005 Blue Angel Award
★
★ Reader Jury of the "Berliner Morgenpost"
★ 2005 European Film Awards:
★
★ Best Screenplay
★ 2005 Independent Spirit Awards:
★
★ Best Foreign Film
★ 2005 National Board of Review Awards (USA) :
★
★ Best Foreign Language Film
★ 2005 Netherlands Film Festival:
★
★ Best Feature Film (Beste Lange Speelfilm)
★
★ Best Editing (Beste Montage)
★ 2005 Durban International Film Festival (South Africa)
★
★ Best Director[16]
★ 2005 Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards
★
★ Best Foreign Language Film
★ 2005 Vancouver Film Critics Circle Awards
★
★ Best Foreign Film
Notes
1. filmjournal.com
2. ae.philly.com
3. filmjournal.com
4. telegraph.co.uk
5. courant.com
6. tikkun.org
7. seattletimes.nwsource.com
8. mafhoum.com
9. zaman.com
10. washingtonpost.com
11. jpost.com
12. mercurynews.com
13. rottentomatoes.com
14. nytimes.com
15. ynetnews.com
16. cca.ukzn.ac.za
External links
★ Official website
★
★ "The making of Paradise Now", ''BBC News''
★ Toronto International Film Festival 2005
★ Paradise Now wins Golden Globe
★ Anti-semitism Now ''Ynet News''
★ "Israel shuns Paradise Now" ''Al jazeera''
★ "Suicide Bombers Are People, Too" ''Newsweek''
★ "'It was a joke I was even nominated" ''The Guardian''
★ "Suicide bomber story contender for foreign Oscar" ''USA Today''
★ Israel lobbies against "Palestine" tag at Oscars ''Reuters''
★ "Will "Paradise Now" Be the Biggest Arabic-Language Film Ever? ''Indiewire''
★ "Middle East tensions hang over Palestinian nominee for an Oscar"''San Francisco Chronicle''
★ "Bereaved parents call on Oscars to drop suicide bomb movie" ''The Telegraph''
★ "Artistically correct -- the imperfect imbalance" ''New Anatolian''
★ "Pride and anguish at first Palestinian Oscar party"''Washington Post''
★ "So what if the Jews run Hollywood?" ''Ha'aretz''
★ "78th Academy Awards: Palestinian film loses Oscar but wins honour" ''Morocco Times''
★ "I risked my life to make this movie" ''The Telegraph''
★ "Bomb Culture" ''BFI Sight & Sound''
★ Paradise Now ''openDemocracy''
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