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Plot: A band composed of members of the Egyptian police force heads to Israel to play at the inaugural ceremony of an Arab arts center, only to find themselves lost in the wrong town.
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This was a transcendent film I am lucky to have seen. It was simply and beautifully done, with lots of subtle humor mixed with hopes, dreams, regrets, discrimination and repression. The excellent filming techniques were apparent, but never contrived. The music perfectly supported the story. The lyrics were pure poetry from and to the soul. The characters were perfect, selecting just the right number for developing. The acting was superb, even down to those without lines. The film had so much to say. Although the film was slow moving (on purpose), the things that impressed me flew at me so fast, it will take me several more viewings to absorb it all. Yes, for me, it was a perfect film to bookend with A Beautiful Mind. What was it about? GRAB THIS WHEN IT'S OUT ON VIDEO AND EXPERIENCE IT FOR YOURSELF!!!
I thouht it was cool movie. Really laid back dialog but with substance. The characters didn't try hard to be funny it just came naturally.
Small-town Israelis help and interact with the members of a lost Egyptian police band. Quiet, sensitive and charming film.
What a charming little film this is. Why is it that foreign comedies seem to be so deftly able to manage intelligence, insight, drama and politics so thoughtfully and naturally? The Band's Visit takes a topic that could have been ripe for violence, but turns it into a tale spun of friendship and our common humanity.
The film is set in a middle of nowhere Israeli desert town. An Arab police orchestra from Egypt has traveled here by mistake, looking for a town with an almost identical name where they are to play at the opening of an Arab cultural centre. When they arrive in the small town, he's greeted with the news that there is no Arab culture here; "no Israeli culture either, no culture at all!"
As the group stands in their bright blue suits with their instruments at their feet, they negotiate a deal to get something to eat at the local diner, owned by Dina. After chatting with the bands leader, Tawfiq, she offers to set them up for the night - some at the diner, some with the two men who seem to do nothing but sit outside the diner, and some with her.
It's obvious that she is attracted to the older Tawfiq. She invites him to come with her. He takes along Khaled, the young band member who lollygags and womanizes.
That night the band goes with their hosts, and spend the night doing various things. One group, lead by the band's second in command, who has written a concerto but never finished it, eats dinner with an Israeli family. There are tensions that are mostly calmed through a common denominator - song. One member waits for a call on the payphone from the embassy, a phone also stalked by a young man waiting for a call from his girlfriend - How he shoes his annoyance when the phone is in use is quite funny. Khaled goes with a young shy Israeli on a double date as the fifth wheel. He shows him how to charm his date, as the three sit on a bench. It one of the films most charming scenes.
Elsewhere, Tawfiq and Dina go out and simply chat. She asks him about his life, which he only slowly and reluctantly details.
Things don't go the way we might expect in a more traditional story, but what we're left with is far more satisfying. The film is shot in muted tones, often with shots set up simply for their photographic value. Take for example the numerous shots of the Orchestra lined up in their sky blue suits, or a moment when Tawfiq, Dina, and Khaled return to her apartment for the night where upon entering all three stop and look forward for a few seconds. These shots have no value other than aesthetic reflection, but they work perfectly. That director Kolirin makes this work is a credit to his daring.
The Band's Visit is a incredibly charming film, and a pure delight to watch. Comedy goes from slapstick to subtlety without notice, and to drama and sadness just as easily and back again. Sure we don't get what the usual audience would want out of the final story, but it matters not at all. The pay off in this film is so thoughtful, and so touchingly done, what seemed preferable before seems cheap now. This is a great movie.
All hail the arrival of writer/director Eran Kolirin! A bright new film-making talent in the mold of Jim Jarmusch. Outside of that influence, there really is nothing quite like the tone or craft of this film out there. It's simple story of ordinary lives and ethnic relations in a small town in Israel bridges a strange gap between great sadness and hillarious dead-pan humor."The Band's Visit" manages to address the tensions between Arabs and Israelis in a restrained non-confrontational manner that is so tender and unique - a very welcome change in attitude from the current angry and continuosly heated poltical climate that oozes from the media. At the center of Kolirin's refreshing debut is a fully beating humanist heart. Already one of the best films I've seen so far in 2008.
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