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Updated Friday, February 27, 2009 9:39 am TWN, By Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times Waltz With Bashir 與巴席爾跳華爾滋"Bashir" was written and directed by Ari Folman, one of Israel's top documentary filmmakers and one of the writers on the Israeli TV show that became HBO's "In Treatment." He has told interviewers he always envisioned this as an animated film, even though the process ended up taking five years, because "animation functions on the border between reality and the subconscious," and that's exactly where he wanted to be. True to that dictum, the film starts with an intentionally disturbing "welcome to my nightmare" sequence. It's a pack of rabid dogs, 26 in all, their teeth bared, their eyes burning yellow with fury, rushing through the streets of Tel Aviv to get to the apartment of Folman's friend Boaz. "They've come," Boaz says simply, "to kill." What we are seeing, what Boaz is describing to Folman, is a dream he has been having for 2 1/2 years, a dream that relates directly to Boaz's army service during Israel's controversial invasion of Lebanon in 1982, more than 20 years earlier. Even though he, too, took part in that invasion, Folman realizes that he has absolutely no memories of what he experienced. That's especially troubling to him because the Israeli army's time in Lebanon included standing by while Christian Falangist militia went on a killing rampage at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps, murdering thousands of Palestinian civilians to revenge the death of their assassinated leader, Bashir Gemayel. The filmmaker wakes his friend Orin, a psychiatrist, who tells him, "Memory takes us where we need to go." Folman decides that where he needs to go is on an investigation of his past, on a physical journey to talk to friends and army veterans about the invasion experience in the hopes that he will find out what he did. |
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