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Film

Interview: Samuel Moaz

What boycott? The ex-IDF man whose film won Venice

September 17, 2009 10:36
A tense moment in Lebanon, the  harrowing film about an Israeli tank crew during the 1982 war

By

Stephen Applebaum,

Stephen Applebaum

4 min read

Last year, a film about Israel’s 1982 Lebanon war, directed by a former IDF soldier who fought in the conflict, was screened at the Cannes Film Festival. The critics’ praise was lavish, but not sufficient for the judges to award Ari Folman’s Waltz with Bashir the festival’s top honour, the Palme d’Or.

Last weekend, another film about Israel’s 1982 Lebanon war, also directed by a former IDF soldier who fought in the conflict, was screened at the Venice Film Festival. This time however, the judges decided to reward the Israeli offering, giving Samuel Maoz’s Lebanon their top prize, the Golden Lion.

The irony is that Lebanon’s victory came just as a campaign to boycott Israel’s films hit the headlines. Cinematic luminaries such as Ken Loach and Jane Fonda, who are unhappy at Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians, are protesting against an event celebrating movie production in Tel Aviv at this week’s Toronto Film Festival.

Maoz, whose film is being screened at the Toronto festival, responded by noting that if Fonda had been on the jury at Venice, Lebanon might not have won its prize. “The point of a film like mine is to open a dialogue, to get people talking to each other about important issues,” he added. “This is something you can’t do if films are boycotted. It makes no sense to boycott art.”