Sh'Chur

Sh'Chur is a 1994 Israeli drama film starring Gila Almagor, Ronit Elkabetz and Hanna Azoulay-Hasfari. It was written by Hanna Azoulay Hasfari and directed by her partner Shmuel Hasfari. Sh'Chur received critical acclaim and was the 1994 official Israeli submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It was also awarded the Ophir Award for best film by the Israeli Film and Television Academy. After its release, the film garnered various discussions in the Israeli press over its representation of the Moroccan community in Israel.[1]

Sh'Chur
Promotional poster
Directed byShmuel Hasfari
Produced byUri Sabag
Written byHanna Azoulay-Hasfari
StarringGila Almagor
Ronit Elkabetz
Music byOri Vidislavski
CinematographyDavid Gurfinkel
Edited byZion Avrahamian
Production
company
Mecklberg Media Group
Movies Entertainment
Release date
  • 1994 (1994)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryIsrael
LanguageHebrew

Plot

After their father dies, Rachel and her sister make the journey for his funeral. Along the way Rachel's mind is flooded with memories of the mysticism of her childhood in Israel, where magic rituals were the solution to everyday problems.[2]

Cast

  • Gila Almagor as Mother
  • Ronit Elkabetz as Pnina
  • Hana Azoulay-Hasfari as Rachel
  • Orly Ben-Garti as Young Rachel
  • Yaacov Cohen as Shlomo
  • Albert Iluz as Moshe
  • Amos Lavi as Father

Awards and nominations

Israeli Film Academy

Berlin International Film Festival

gollark: Your computer is running several thousand tasks "at once" right now. Multiple cores aren't even needed, it just context-switches really fast.
gollark: It might do that, or you might just get one stream of consciousness/parallel task split across both.
gollark: That might be doable. The corpus callopsum thing between the two hemispheres is apparently not a very high-bandwidth link.
gollark: Then you'll probably just have problems with the brain not having control logic for the new ones. Also, is there *room*?
gollark: You might run into control problems. I don't think there are spare nerves for the extra arms.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.