Goodbye, New York

Goodbye, New York is a 1985 Israeli-American comedy-drama produced, directed and written by Amos Kollek, who also co-stars in his directorial debut.

Goodbye, New York
Theatrical poster
Directed byAmos Kollek
Produced byAmos Kollek
Written byAmos Kollek
StarringJulie Hagerty
Amos Kollek
Shmuel Shilo
Aviva Ger
Dudu Topaz
Music byMichael Abene
CinematographyAmnon Salomon
Edited byAlan Heim
Production
company
Kole-Hill Productionsd
Distributed byCastle Hill Productions (US)
Release date
  • May 17, 1985 (1985-05-17) (US)
  • December 19, 1985 (1985-12-19) (Australia)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryIsrael
US
LanguageEnglish

Plot

A ditzy New Yorker (Julie Hagerty) is devastated to learn that her husband has been unfaithful and impulsively decides to go to Paris to escape. When she consumes too many sedatives and oversleeps on the plane, missing her connection, she winds up in Tel Aviv, penniless and with no luggage or friends. After connecting with a cabdriver and part-time soldier (Amos Kollek), she finds herself stranded on a kibbutz near the Golan Heights where she must learn to cope with a series of misadventures and a very unfamiliar lifestyle.

Cast

Critical reception

Janet Maslin of The New York Times said the film possesses "an easygoing charm that, among Israeli films, is rare", presenting "witty impressions of Israeli life" and the clash of cultures.[1] Candace Russell of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel likened Kollek's "absurdist worldview and droll understatement" to that of Woody Allen.[2] While People thought the film "likable" and "genial", the reviewers noted its "uneven" script and direction, and a "sometimes contrived or just plain silly" plot.[3] London's Time Out was more unequivocal, dismissing the "thin and clichéd material", its "predictable plot and dismal propaganda about the values of kibbutz culture."[4]

gollark: Imagine orienting objects.
gollark: You can't talk to anyone who's died to tyrannical dictators. Technically.
gollark: A generally intelligent AI:- could make itself more intelligent much more easily than a human- will probably have a very different set of capabilities to humans even if they "average out" to "equal intelligence" and thus might be really dangerous depending on what they are- is unlikely to share much of our human value system unless explicitly built that way
gollark: That's possibly reasonable but problematic to do.
gollark: Nobody would want AGI if it was just a nice paperweight.

References

  1. Janet Maslin (17 May 1985), "Screen: Julie Hagerty in Goodbye, New York, The New York Times (retrieved 14 November 2012).
  2. Candace Russell (29 September 1985), "Israel's Woody Allen", South Florida Sun-Sentinel (retrieved 14 November 2012).
  3. Peter Travers, Irma Velasco and Ralph Novak (24 June 1985), "Picks and Pans Review: Goodbye, New York", People (retrieved 14 November 2012).
  4. GA (no date), "Goodbye, New York", Time Out (retrieved 14 November 2012).
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