Artvoice: Buffalo's #1 Newsweekly
Home
AV Daily
Events Calendar
Back Issues
View Classifieds
Place Classified
Best of Buffalo 2008
Still Life Gallery
Video Production
Exile on Allen St.
Contact Us
Advertise

Unsettled

UNSETTLED

The Palestinian Gaza Strip has scarcely been out of the news over the last several years, especially since the radical organization Hamas ousted the Fatah-dominated Palestinian government from this territory last summer.



Watch the trailer for "Unsettled"

Adam Hootnick’s Unsettled follows and records crucial events from 2005 when Israel withdrew both its armed forces and thousands of Jewish settlers, some of whom had been there for decades, from Gaza, making possible both formal Palestinian control and last summer’s internecine strife.

Hootnick, a former MTV News producer, and resident of Israel in 1997-98, felt drawn back to Israel in order to capture in a documentary movie both the preparation for the Israeli pullback and its execution.

Unsettled

This decision by the rightist government under Prime Minister Ariel Sharon split his Likud party and enraged many Israelis. Hootnick’s impressionistic, montage-infused documentary isn’t intended to be political, but it refers in passing to the political and military calculation the nationalistic Sharon had made: 8,500 Jews lived in antagonistic isolation amid 1.3 million Palestinians. And protecting them were thousands of Israeli soldiers, some of whom, inevitably, were injured and, less frequently, killed.

“How come a full brigade of soldiers is guarding one settlement?” is the rhetorical question posed by a 21-year-old draftee named Yuval, referring to the military presence at only one Jewish village.

Hootnick’s movie focuses on Yuval and five other young Jews of various backgrounds and political tendencies, three of them Gaza residents, who are impacted by the settlers’ eviction. The heart of the movie is the difficult, sometimes anguishing mission of tens of thousands of soldiers to persuade their countrymen and women to leave peacefully.

Unsettled has an involving, sometimes engrossing and almost tragic human interest appeal (made possible, in part, by Hootnick’s remarkable coverage from the very center of the confrontation between soldiers and settlers) but the movie is, perhaps unavoidably, skewed. No Palestinian appears. And looming just over the historical horizon is the monster problem no Israeli government has had the will or desire to address: the quarter-million Jewish settlers in the contested West Bank.

george sax


Current Movie TimesFilm Now PlayingArtvoice Film Reviews


Reader Comments


No comments yet!

Leave a Comment:













Artvoice Events Calendar
Sorry, this content requires Flash 9

Go to today

Calendar:

Find:


Regular Artvoice Features:

Cover Stories
Columns
Film Reviews & Movie Trailers
Music Reviews
Wining and Dining
The Arts
Book Reviews

Recent Artvoice Blog headlines:

AV DAILY (by Artvoice Editorial):
FOILed Again: (Partial) Satisfaction
Common Council Action Plan
The Raucous Caucus: Politics Vs. Substance
Williams Interviewed for Memphis Job
Letters From Paladino
Taking the “Public” Out of Public Hearing

AV MUSIC (by Donny Kutzbach):
Have a brew and party like it’s 1994!
Friday night is killing me
You’re Missing - Danny Federici: 1950-2008
Yer my guitar hero

Recent reader comments:

Jamie wrote: Helen, I don't know why you say Phil Rumore "chose to ignore" any...
Susan Wolf wrote: I can not wait till the crop comes to fruition..I have a garden o...
Helen of Troy wrote: Buffalo and Phil Rumore get what they deserve. These stories abo...
peter koch wrote: For the record, Bruce Fisher is not a staffer at AV. He is a free...
Bflodiddy wrote: To read what's really happening in Buffalo Schools check this out...
Search Artvoice.com:

Save it & Share it:

Print page Print page
Email page Email page
Tag with del.icio.us Tag with del.icio.us
Digg it Digg it
Seed Newsvine Seed Newsvine
Submit to reddit Submit to reddit
Subscribe to feed Subscribe to feed
Permalink Permalink













<http://artvoice.com/issues/v7n17/film_reviews/unsettled> © 1990-2008 Artvoice. All rights reserved.