This foreign film is a sweet, lower-than-low-key story of an Egyptian police band that arrives in the wrong Israeli town.
The Band's Visit (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:110
Fresh:108
Rotten:2
Average Rating:7.9/10
Consensus: The Band's Visit is both a clever, subtle slice-of-life comedy, and poignant cross-cultural exploration.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for sexual content, thematic material and brief strong language.
Runtime: 89 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
Theatrical Release:Feb 8, 2008 Limited
Box Office: $3,002,385
Synopsis: Israeli filmmaker Eran Kolirin's debut feature, THE BAND'S VISIT, is a subtle, heartfelt, and humane work that goes a long way toward dissolving the incredibly complex cultural divide that... Israeli filmmaker Eran Kolirin's debut feature, THE BAND'S VISIT, is a subtle, heartfelt, and humane work that goes a long way toward dissolving the incredibly complex cultural divide that continues to plague the Middle East. When the Alexandria Ceremonial Police Orchestra flies from Egypt to Israel to perform at the opening of an Arab culture center, they are left stranded at the airport. Their leader, Tewfiq (Sasson Gabai), orders the handsome violinist, Khaled (Saleh Bakri), to solve their predicament, but it turns out that he's gotten the wrong information. By that time, it's too late. All eight members are left standing alone in a quiet desert town far from their intended destination with no way to get where they need to go. Tired, hungry, and confused, they find shelter at a restaurant run by the pretty but brash Dina (Ronit Elkabetz). It's clear that Dina is bored with her lonely life, so she talks Tewfiq into letting the band stay over for the night: he and Khaled will stay with her, and the others will be put up at the home of Itzik (Rubi Moscovich). Over the course of the night, Tewfiq and Dina bond, Khaled helps a hapless local discover his inner Romeo, and the other band members find themselves caught up in a domestic situation that is less than perfect. Kolirin perfectly navigates his film's slice-of-life tone, blending comedy and drama and poignancy without ever succumbing to one completely. In the wrong hands, this material could turn into a quirk-fest that parodies everyday life. Yet under Kolirin's assured command, it becomes something that feels like life itself. THE BAND'S VISIT is funny, lonely, inspiring, sad, and beautiful all at once. [More]
Starring: Sasson Gabai, Ronit Elkabetz, Saleh Bakri, Khalifa Natour
Starring: Sasson Gabai, Ronit Elkabetz, Saleh Bakri, Khalifa Natour
Director: Eran Kolirin
Director: Eran Kolirin
Screenwriter: Eran Kolirin
Producer: Eilon Ratzkovsky, Ehud Bleiberg, Yossi Uzrad, Koby Gal-Raday, Guy Jacoel
Composer: Habib Shehadeh Hanna
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Release:
Jul 29, 2008
Reviews for The Band's Visit
We see bittersweet and beautiful emotions running throughout the film. These are spread from the small victories in human connection to the shared passion that the language of music conjures up.
The Band’s Visit is a charming little drama that skirts sentimentality and manages to be a feel-good film without necessarily feeling very good.
If you stick with it, the story of the Alexandria Ceremonial Police Orchestra's visit to the dusty nowheresville of Beit Hatikva (when they're actually looking for Petah Tikva) has an irresistible tragic and romantic undertow.
A gentle, unpretentious comedy that posits a why-can't-we-just-get-along approach to the Arab-Israeli conflict.
With luck, filmgoers who discover this gem about an Egyptian police band stranded in a small Israeli town will make it the must-see movie of the season.
The Band's Visit blends gentle comedy and softly aching pathos into a low-key, deeply affecting wonder, a sort of alternate-universe version of Aki Kaurismäki's raucous 1989 hoot Leningrad Cowboys Go America.
The film succeeds because of the nuanced performances of its superb cast, and because of Kolirin's witty visual compositions.
It is a small message, but a sincere one, about the solitude that separates us, and how the expression of this solitude can bring the unlikeliest of people together.
The Band's Visit is a charming and tender meditation on loneliness and the essential need for human connection.
Those who like their comedy, romance, and tragedy in quiet doses should enjoy this textured story.
None of this is earth-shaking, but The Band's Visit isn't meant to be. Like a balloon, it's short-lived and modest, but it brightens your spirits while it's around.
Sharply observed and agreeably acted, The Band's Visit doesn't soar to giddy heights, but it moves along and holds one's attention.
Perhaps the band members have seen the movies she so loves, and in her eyes, imagine themselves as next generational approximations of Omar Sharif.
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