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Film

Why fellow Israelis hated my hit film

Eran Riklis has had global success with his film The Lemon Tree, but it has proved less than popular at home

October 23, 2008 10:55
Palestinian actress Hiam Abbass, whose character in The Lemon Tree fights the Israeli Defence Ministry to save her orchard from destruction

By

Nick Johnstone,

Nick Johnstone

5 min read

Earlier this year in Israel, a great deal of hype accompanied the cinema release of The Lemon Tree, the latest film from writer/director Eran Riklis. After the success of The Syrian Bride (2004), a film about a Druze woman who has to leave Israel and her family in the Golan Heights, forever, in order to marry a man across the border in Syria, critics and audiences alike were eager to see what Riklis had to say next about the political status quo in Israel.

That eagerness waned when word spread that The Lemon Tree told the story of Salma, a Palestinian widow living on the Green Line between the West Bank and Israel, whose precious lemon trees come under threat when security forces working for her new neighbour, the Israeli Defence Minister, deem the orchard a security hazard.

Fortunes then reversed in February, when The Lemon Tree scooped the prestigious Panorama Audience Award at the Berlin International Film Festival. Once again Riklis found himself fronting the Israeli film of the moment.

"Berlin created a huge hype here," says 54-year-old director, speaking from his home in Tel Aviv. "We released the film pretty soon after that and it totally failed at cinemas. It was a disaster. It was very strange."