The Deserter's Wife

The Deserter's Wife (French: La femme du déserteur) is a 1991 French-Israeli co-production dramatic independent underground art film directed by Michal Bat-Adam.[1]

The Deserter's Wife
Theatrical release poster
La Femme du déserteur
Directed byMichal Bat-Adam
Produced by
  • Jacques Kirsner
  • Marek Rozenbaum
Written byMichal Bat-Adam
Starring
  • Fanny Ardant
  • Sharon Alexander
  • Daniele Napolitano
  • Gidi Gov
  • Aviva Ger
  • Samuel Vilozny
  • Ruth Geller
  • Safira Zachai
  • Hillel Ne'eman
  • Noam Sheriff
  • Yigal Sade
  • Gilles Benvadid
  • Moshé Mizrahi
  • Nicole Kasel
  • Alona Kimhi
  • Gabi Eldor
  • Dalia Shimko
  • Ami Weinberg
  • Shiri Golan
  • Gilya Stern
  • Hubert Ackerman
  • Lasha Shimshoni
  • Ruby Porat Shoval
  • Raffi Goshen
  • Bahat Kalachi
  • Amnon Doyv
  • Meir Dayan
  • Orna Silman
  • Danny Segev
  • Na'ama Ze'el
  • Matti Harari
  • Ran Bone
  • Gali Bone
  • Nafissa Chimal
  • Shmuel Shaked
  • Neta Rosenthal
Music byAlex Cagan
CinematographyFabio Conversi
Edited byRivka Yogev
Production
company
  • Mimar Film Production
  • Mod Films
  • Transfax Film Productions
  • Canal+
  • Solyfic
  • Investimage 3
  • Procirep
Distributed by
  • Mimar Film Production
  • Midbar Films
Release date
  • 20 December 1991 (20 December 1991) (France)
Running time
81 Minutes
Country
Language

Synopsis

Nina (Fanny Ardant), a French concert pianist, meets Ilan (Sharon Alexander), an Israeli computer specialist who is on vacation, in Paris. They fall in love, marry, and, move to Israel with their son, Gili (Daniele Napolitano). Not much later, Ilan is drafted into the Israeli military for compulsory military service, as the situation in the Middle East is worsening: Saddam Hussein has attacked Kuwait with his Iraqi forces and the Second Gulf War is imminent. After Nina is accepted into the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, she receives a call from the military and learns that her husband was wounded during a battle. She hurries to him and finds out, to her horror, that Ilan was not injured by enemy troops but by Israeli soldiers when he tried to leave his post illegally. While Ilan is wounded in a hospital and is unable to speak due to a state of shock, the accusations that he is a deserter, she finds out, are true. Despite this revelation, Nina continues to take care of him, breaks off an affair with another man, and tries to understand his motives. Their environment's reaction, however, extends not only to Ilan but also to Nina. When Nina's concert debut with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra is about to take place, symbolically, on the day of the United Nations' ultimatum to Saddam Hussein, the social pressure grows immeasurably. Nina leaves Ilan and returns to France with Gili.[2][3]

Background

Actress Fanny Ardant and cinematographer Fabio Conversi got to know each other while filming Margarethe von Trotta's Love and Fear during 1988. In 1990 their daughter Baladine was born. Ardant and Conversi eventually parted. However, they worked together again and again, as with La Femme du déserteur, as well as in 2008, on the comedy Hello Goodbye, which Conversi produced, while Ardant played alongside Gérard Depardieu. La Femme du déserteur premiered on 20 December 1991 in France. Critic Lisa Alspector opined that "[t]his 1991 melodrama creates only generic sympathy for the disgraced, misunderstood husband, and none at all for the smarmy, selfish wife, whose motives are ambiguous throughout."[4] In Israel, Al HaMishmar critic Yael Israel underscored that "had this film never been made, it would have needed to be invented,"[5] while Yedioth Ahronoth critic Yehuda Stav wrote that the film is "humble and sympathetic, its material taken from daily Israeli experiences,"[6] and, Davar critic Uri Shin praised the film's uncompromising refusal to placate the audience.[7][8]

gollark: Vaguely based in reality. Not that much sometimes.
gollark: What?
gollark: ?
gollark: markets good central planning bad.
gollark: Praise the algorithm, yes.

References

  1. Sason, Yasmin; Parkhomovsky, Marat (20 December 2010). מיכל בת־אדם. Israeli Cinema Testimonial Database (in Hebrew). Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  2. Hadas, Eran (28 May 1993). אני עומדת על הרגליים שלי, אבל הן רועדות [I Am Standing on My Feet, However, They Tremble (Part I)] (PDF). Yedioth Ahronoth (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  3. Hadas, Eran (28 May 1993). אני עומדת על הרגליים שלי, אבל הן רועדות [I Am Standing on My Feet, However, They Tremble (Part II)] (PDF). Yedioth Ahronoth (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  4. Alspector, Lisa. "The Deserter's Wife". Chicago Reader. Wrapports. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  5. Israel, Yael (30 May 1993). גבר הרוס לחלוטין מהמלחמה [A Man, Completely Destroyed Through War] (PDF). Al HaMishmar (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  6. Stav, Yehuda (14 June 1993). לא נוגעת [She Does Not Touch] (PDF). Yedioth Ahronoth (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  7. Shin, Uri (31 May 1993). מושך אליו אש מכל הכיוונים [He Catches Fire From All Directions (Part I)] (PDF). Davar (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  8. Shin, Uri (31 May 1993). מושך אליו אש מכל הכיוונים [He Catches Fire From All Directions (Part II)] (PDF). Davar (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.