In Between

2016
7.3| 1h43m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 25 November 2016 Released
Producted By: En Compagnie des Lamas
Country: Israel
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

The film captures the daily duality of three young Palestinian women in Tel Aviv, caught between hometown tradition and big city abandon, and the price they must pay for a lifestyle that seems obvious to many: the freedom to work, party, fuck, and choose.

Genre

Drama

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Director

Maysaloun Hamoud

Production Companies

En Compagnie des Lamas

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In Between Audience Reviews

Cubussoli Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!
BelSports This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
Hadrina The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
Casey Duggan It’s sentimental, ridiculously long and only occasionally funny
dloft59 This Israeli production about Palestinian roommates in Tel Aviv presents a rich and moving array of the quandaries faced by young women on the uneven ground between traditional values and self-determination in a modern, urban landscape.Leila, a young lawyer, and Salma, who begins the story as a sous chef and then takes a job as a bartender but also moonlights as a rave DJ, are modern young party girls who drink, smoke cigarettes, and do occasional pot and coke when their male friends are offering. Into their apartment moves Noor, an ostensibly traditional Muslim girl who never appears in public without a hijab, and is affianced to an activist who works in an NGO devoted to helping Muslims get by. He's not happy that she's studying computer science at university, and hopes she'll stay at home to raise their children eventually.All three women collide with their culture's - and especially families' - traditional expectations. Salma's parents introduce her to various unappealing bachelors; Leila meets and dates a filmmaker who has studied and worked in New York but turns out to have some sticking points about her choices. Noor hits the hardest wall, but the way her initially unsympathetic roommates come together for her is beautiful and very satisfying.Although this story centers on young women, and most of the men are forgettable at best or unpleasant (save for a queen-y gay friend of Leila's and, surprisingly, Noor's father, in a pivotal scene late in the movie), I wouldn't call it a "chick movie." It's well written and acted, and I found it not a great stretch to recognize that some men and families oppress young women in the U.S. in ways that are not so different, even today."In Between" is a lovely and solid piece of work.
kolnoaMograbi ...that's what jumped into my head as the ending credits rolled. Bar Behar / Lo Po Lo Sham packs a wallop: It's a powerful feminist film that shows us a little-known world: that of twenty-something Palestinians – from both the Palestinian Authority and inside Israel – who move to Tel Aviv to escape the confines of their conservative, patriarchal society.Despite their differing backgrounds – one Christian, one secular Muslim, and one traditional Muslim – the three roommates stand by each other through their respective patriarchy-based crises with exquisite nurturing and tenderness. Must see.
Keshav Sharma I saw this film in PIFF - Pune International Film Festival, Maysaloun Hamoud's directional debut is not only inspiring but intelligent. It is a much needed commentary on today's society and I hope more people watch it. In Between (Bar Bahar) was among my favourite films in the festival. This is a film about three Palestinian women sharing a flat together in a metropolitan city in Israel. It revolves and focuses around various themes that are central to the religious and communal feelings of Israel. Layla and Salma are modern liberals who belong to a younger generation. (They drink, they party, they smoke, sometimes weed). They believe in a non-patriarch egalitarian society, where men and women should be treated respectfully. They also believe in a society that is not so conservative about religion. Now enters Nour, a computer science student who is a practising Muslim- she wears a hi-jab, performs her daily prayers. She is about to be married to an Islamist radical who runs a NGO supporting Muslims in need. Nour replaces her cousin sister as Layla's' and Salma's' new flatmate. Their interactions and 'clashes' are very interesting to watch as their different viewpoints collide with one another which creates amusing reactions. The chemistry between these characters is flawless, you cannot help but watch them grow and evolve. This movie had me grabbed by the guts, I was glued to the screen for the entire duration of the film. Each one of these women face a moment or a situation where they are challenged by the society despite being independent in their true nature. Layla is a criminal defence lawyer, she seems to enjoy what she does and she seems pretty good it. She has a witty interactive relationship with her fellow colleagues. However, she is challenged by her boyfriend (a filmmaker coincidental?) who becomes judgemental of her moral ethics. Salma belongs to a Christian family, who works as a cook in restaurant (Which she quits when she was insulted by a coworker) Now she works as a bartender who occasionally takes the role of a DJ. In one of her social interactions, she meets a lesbian, who she falls in love with. She takes her to meet her parents and when they find out about her bisexual nature. They decide to take away her independence from her and keep her at home. She sneaks away and leaves for Berlin, Germany. Nour is subjected to an unhealthy relationship with her fiancé. He wants her to move out of the flat into a choice of his location. However, she refuses his choice as the place was two hours away from her college. Her refusal leads him to violate her sexual, destroying her entirely. Layla and Salma help her through this, they support her, but she is no longer the same person we knew. All of these women have evolved and change. They had two options, either they accept the society they live in or they could choose to fight it back. In the end, I would summarise that the film is about a society that is yet to accept its new generation of people, ideals, morals and values. I think society needs to evolve and change because wearing torn shoes with newspapers won't change anything. Sewing the torn holes and bending the weaker bonds would. Even better is to throw away the old shoe.
Nikola Maric (maricn-600-513834) Got into a cinema not expecting much, but I was rewarded with refreshing story I think many can correlate in some way, disregarding the context of where the story is taking part.It shows us three girls and their current life stories, focuses on contrast between traditional and religious on one side, and liberal on other. We follow them through Tel Aviv's nightlife where they enjoy being free, escaping their daily lives, but we also see them in front of their religious and conservative families, partners and friends. It realistically portraits a life of urban 20-somethings and their life choices and plans. It had moments where the whole cinema was laughing, and the ones when you could hear laugh from some, like-minded to the lifestyle portrayed in the scenes. But, I think everyone got disturbed by some scenes and were made to question how selfish can we be about our life choices and how much should we impose them on others.Girls bring out the weight of their situations to the viewers throughout the film. Soundtrack is fitting greatly, giving life to scenes, but remaining an independent weaver.Film is not exaggerating in any way, and it tastefully makes us conclude we all need to share more empathy and understanding.