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Movie Reviews of Encounter PointMovie Review: stellar Summary: 5 Stars
it's a mind blowingly optimistic example of the almost secret peace movement between palestinians and israelis.
Movie Review: Excellent teaching tool! Summary: 4 Stars
I purchased this video after hearing an interview on the NPR program, "Speaking of Faith." I purchased the video because I was interested in learning more about the stories of these two amazing people, Ali Abu Awad and Robi Damelin. Ali Abu Awwad is a Palestinian man whose older brother was killed without provocation by an Israeli soldier. Robi Damelin is an Israeli mother whose soldier-son was killed by a Palestinian sniper. Despite their profound grief and anger over these needless killings, these two people have come together to fight the violence with non-violence, to try and bring peace to a place that seems bound to despair, and to try and turn painful past experiences into motivation for future hope. After watching, I realized this movie is a wonderful teaching tool for students of the Middle East, whether it is a history class or a religion class. I used it in a college-level introductory theology class. This movie makes you think and I bet, regardless of your preconceptions surrounding this topic, your mind will be changed after watching the courageous struggle these people endure in order to bring peace to this region.
Movie Review: A Very Real Reel Summary: 4 Stars
The scenes with the young Palestinian men were riveting as they argued with each other over exchanging their honor for reconciliation. It reminded me of our human need to say our suffering and death are worthy no matter what the circumstance. These guys wanted to be noble and admired in the face of losing or they would rather die. Our nation is the same. Remember Kissenger's lame proclamation after he negotiated an end to our losses in the Viet Nam war: 'We have peace with honor.' Gulp. We need to leave everyone room to save face and be noble or we do not have peace that will last. This was a very realistic and compelling documentary. Highly recommended.
Movie Review: reality trumps hope Summary: 3 Stars
The success of Encounter Point at Tribeca and other venues is probably due to its attempt not to take sides in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Instead, it follows both Israeli and Palestinian members of an unfortunate "club"---parents who have lost sons and daughters in the hostilities between the warring groups. They have formed a group that is attempting reconciliation among its own members first and then reaching out to bring about understanding on a national scale.
I wanted to write this review objectively, but language insists on a point of view even when summarizing. Israelis would criticize my use of "conflict" as too mild a word to describe what they term "acts of terrorism." When a Palestinian is shot by an Israeli soldier, I am pro-Israeli if I see it as a casualty of war and pro-Palestinian if I call it murder as Palestinians in the film do). And while I do not describe the group's aims as "forgiveness," "settlement," "compromise," and "appeasement," I do adop the film's use of the term "reconciliation," thereby suggesting equivalency between the two positions, a position I do not not wish to claim.
The fact is that as any documentary, Encounter Point also takes a position and is unmistakable in its sympathies. Despite that, viewers who disagree with the attitude will still find much to interest them in the film. If the point of view was responsible for its booking, the film's actual interviews are what make it worth seeing. To their credit, if they chose deliberately, and to the credit of their artistic temperament if they chose instinctively, the filmmakers provide unforgettable moments of clarity. A Palestinian member of the group takes the filmmakers to meet his mother in Arab Jerusalem. She urges him to tell the story of his arrest as a young man. He tells of being in a room with two young men who were building bombs. When the bombs exploded prematurely, he too was arrested and imprisoned for a decade. Interrupts the mother, "He wasn't even in the room. He was outside, getting a haircut." The son gently but firmly corrects her, admitting he was in the room but insisting he was minding his own business. What a seminal moment, with mother's love and memory combining to offer a palatable version of events.
A similar moment of clarity emerges during an interview on Israeli television. The group's representative urges Israelis to question the efficacy of a policy toward Palestinians that has created 50 years of hate. The moderator responds by asking the representative to consider the possibility that the hate has no basis, that Palestinians want them dead without a specific provocation. And the representative raises his shoulder in the classic Jewish response that non-verbally says, "Who knows." Unfortunately, that shrug of doubt undercuts the optimism that animates the movement toward peace.
Ultimately, the strength of this film does not lie in its hopeful presentation of the group's aims but in its accurate rendition of the group members with all their human sadness, determination, and naiveté. Their stories, Israeli and Palestinian, are heart rending.
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