A wholly original and emotionally devastating animated documentary confessional.
Waltz With Bashir
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Reviews Counted:28
Fresh:27
Rotten:1
Average Rating:8.4/10
Consensus: A wholly innovative, original, and vital history lesson, with pioneering animation, Waltz With Bashir delivers its message about the Middle East in a mesmerizing fashion.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for some disturbing images of atrocities, strong violence, brief nudity and a scene of graphic sexual content.
Genre: Education/General Interest
Theatrical Release:Dec 25, 2008 Limited
Box Office: $2,126,007
Synopsis: In reflecting upon his time spent in the Israeli army, filmmaker Ari Folman has produced WALTZ WITH BASHIR, a profoundly moving antiwar meditation that is equal parts personal memoir, history... In reflecting upon his time spent in the Israeli army, filmmaker Ari Folman has produced WALTZ WITH BASHIR, a profoundly moving antiwar meditation that is equal parts personal memoir, history lesson, and animated fever dream. In 1982, Folman was a soldier during Israel's first invasion of Lebanon. This was a painful moment in history, when the newly elected president of Lebanon, Bashir Gemayel, was killed in an explosion. Furious, his party, the Christian Phalangists, retaliated by storming into the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps and massacring thousands of innocent victims. Over 20 years later, Folman is disturbed to realize that he has no memory of this incident even though he was there at the time. In order to remember, he tracks down several of his friends and soldiers who were there with him to find out what really happened. WALTZ WITH BASHIR is as difficult to categorize as it is to forget. It is a truly startling achievement, a film that can be classified as animation and documentary and history and fiction. It is all of those things at once, and it is also much more than that. Folman uses a combination of Flash animation, 3D, and classic animation to bring his film to visual life, but it is the beautifully haunting score by acclaimed German composer Max Richter that provides the film with its heart and soul. As WALTZ WITH BASHIR unfolds in dreamlike waves, Folman understands that guilt is a dangerous thing, and war is even worse. [More]
Director: Ari Folman
Director: Ari Folman
Screenwriter: Ari Folman
Producer: , Serge Lalou, Gerhard Meixner, Roman Paul
Composer: Max Richter
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Release:
Jun 23, 2009
DVD Features:
- Region [unknown]
- Keep Case
- Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.78
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 5.1 - Hebrew
- Dubbed, Subtitles - English
- Subtitles - SDH
Additional Release Material:
Behind the Scenes:
- 1. Building The Scenes - Animatics
Audio Commentary:
- 1. Director's Commentary
Interviews:
- 1. Q & A With Director Ari Folman
Making Of:
- 1. Surreal Soldiers: Making Waltz With Bashir
Reviews for Waltz With Bashir
Animation may be the ideal medium for replicating dreams, and in this unsettling feature by Ari Folman it also proves well suited to autobiography.
It is powerful because this work of art also provides such a cautionary tale about the psychic burdens young soldiers carry deep inside them decades after they've laid down their weapons.
If you expect documentaries to be dry doctoral dissertations with talking heads and archival film footage, prepare to be electrified.
The flatness and stiff, jerky movement of the drawing contribute to the dreamlike, increasing dread-filled atmosphere of the visuals, which burst finally into actual filmed images of devastating impact.
It's a fearless and unblinking march into the heart of one man's darkness and the pain and anguish of generations and nations.
The film looks ripped straight from Folman’s psyche and placed in a theater near you.
A powerful, poignant and provocative film, told in an unconventional and effective fashion.
Waltz With Bashir, a movie about memory, is as devious and subversive as it is brilliant and nightmarish.
An extraordinary achievement, Ari Folman's Waltz With Bashir is a detective story as well as an moral inquiry into the specific horrors of one war, and one man's buried memories of that war.
Bashir wasn't healing for me. On the contrary, it leaves much unresolved, but in the pacifist, passive horror recovered by its amnesiacs, I found it stunning -- in both meanings of the word -- and emotionally cathartic.
Folman is an Israeli documentarian who has not worked in animation. Now he uses it as the best way to reconstruct memories, fantasies, hallucinations, possibilities, past and present. This film would be nearly impossible to make any other way.
Complex, challenging and at times difficult to watch, Waltz With Bashir is nevertheless wholly unique, unquestionably powerful and, ultimately, a devastating indictment of war and its effects on its victims and its participants.
The film, devastating and distressing in equal measure, widens in meaning as it narrows in scope.
The best movie of 2008? The most revealing war film ever made? The greatest animated feature to come out of Israel? All these descriptions could apply to Waltz With Bashir.
Waltz With Bashir might be the year's most singular visionary experience available at the movies, and catapults [director Ari] Folman from the obscurity of Israeli TV onto the world stage.
Waltz With Bashir plays out as one of the most profoundly explosive animated documentaries I have ever seen, and is clearly one of the best pictures of the year.
Latest News for Waltz With Bashir
June 22, 2009:
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There's something for everyone this week on DVD, starting with an Oscar-nominated animated documentary (Waltz with Bashir), a Jerry Bruckheimer-produced chick flick (Confessions... More...
January 13, 2009:
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The Academy has narrowed its choices for this year's recipient of the Best Foreign Language Film Award, choosing its favorite nine releases from a field of 65. More...
January 08, 2009:
The Israeli Apocalypse Now blasts into movie theaters, in animation! And pulls it off to vividly surreal effect. Director Folman, a soldier and eyewitness to the 1982 Sabra and Shatila Palestinian massacres, painfully dredges up his own personal demons. ![]()
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January 08, 2009:
Broadcast Film Critics Name Critics' Choice Winners
The 14th Annual Critics' Choice Awards were given on January 8, 2009, to honor the finest achievements in 2008 filmmaking. A list of nominees follows below, with winners in bold: More...
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