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The filmmaker turning a critical eye on Israel

Israeli film director Nadav Lapid has won awards for his movies which, he tells James Mottram, scrutinise the place he calls home

October 15, 2021 16:53
1215
5 min read

There’s an argument to be made that Nadav Lapid is one of the most exciting Israeli filmmakers to emerge in the last few years. His 2014 movie Haganenet was remade in America as The Kindergarten Teacher, starring Maggie Gyllenhaal. Then, his 2019 film Synonyms won the Berlin Film Festival’s coveted Golden Bear. This year, his follow-up Ahed’s Knee — which plays this week at the London Film Festival — took a share of the Jury prize along with Thai director Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s Memoria, with Tilda Swinton.

“I remember the night I got the Golden Bear, we were already in the kind of beginning of pre-production of Ahed’s Knee,” he reflects, when we meet over Zoom during Cannes. “And I suddenly had a moment of doubt: this is not the movie that the Golden Bear winner is supposed to do. At least [make] a bigger European co-production with some American star to decorate it! And I thought, ‘Maybe it’s not a good film to do’, and then ten minutes later, I thought, ‘Maybe it’s not a good film to do, but this is also a very good reason to do it.’”

Significantly, the film was penned after the death of his mother, who had been his editor on all his previous movies, and the production was dominated by what he calls an “urgency”. Writing the script in two weeks, he was shooting in less than a year. When he filmed, he shot it over 18 days and edited it in two months. “I didn’t know at the beginning if it’s a short movie, medium-length movie, because there’s something apparently very condensed in it. It’s one afternoon, one evening, 17 scenes. Usually in feature films… in Synonyms there were 65 [scenes] and it’s not a lot. I didn’t know what this is, but I had to do it.”

This punchy approach gives Ahed’s Knee its vitality. Trade paper Variety called it “filmmaking as hostage-taking” for its angry, aggressive mode of auto-fiction. In the film, a successful director Y (Avshalom Pollak) arrives in the arid Arvada region, and the desert town of Sapir, to screen one of his movies. Already, his mind is on his next project: a video installation about Ahed Tamimi, a Palestinian protestor who was jailed in 2018 for slapping a solider. An Israeli politician suggested she be shot in the knee to ensure she never walked again.