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Television review: Valley of Tears

This drama about the Yopm Kippur war is like a Woody Allen film transposed to the Golan Heights

November 21, 2021 07:34
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2 min read

With cinema and television placing ever more import on representation, you’d think the one genre an ethnic group would be happy not being overly featured in is war.

Yet still, whenever a Jew does pop up, it makes an impact. Not that there are many examples; the guy who gets stabbed in the heart in Saving Private Ryan, the Star of David gravestone in the same film, the translator in Band of Brothers. If not for Spielberg’s efforts highlighting that we didn’t play only one part in WWII, that’d pretty much be it apart from the underrated Biloxi Blues, where the two Jewish protagonists never get beyond the training camp.

So, in the ten-part Israeli drama Valley of Tears, when faced with an entire army of Jews, the result is surreal. It’s like a Woody Allen film transposed to the Golan Heights, everyone arguing, kvetching, then suddenly switching to shooting machine guns in fatigues. Somehow this juxtaposition grounds the action more, the shift from dissension to a common cause, survival, being an almost defining characteristic of our people.

Abruptly pushing straight into the story, how very Israeli, events kick off just before the start of 1973’s Yom Kippur War. We’re introduced to all aspects of the tribe; you’ve got geeky Jews, manly man masculine Jews, tough women soldier Jews, loving Jewish mum Jews, Mizrahi Jews, poor Jews, privileged Jews, Ashkenazi Jews, hippy Jews, beardy observant Jews, secular Jews. Each one is a possible avatar for answering the question always asked when watching this kind of thing, ‘How would I cope?’

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