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Shot
Through
By Jeff Reichert
Avenge But One of My Two Eyes
Dir. Avi Mograbi, Israel, No distribution
The grubby, shaky-cam technique
used in hot-topic features bearing the documentary
tag these days betrays the ignorance of their
makers—these folks may have important stories
to tell, but that in no way frees them to indulge
in substandard filmmaking. Shooting “in the real”
presents obvious complications in capturing subjects
adequately, but it’s only truly bad filmmakers
who end up composing their works from lousy images.
Verité styling didn’t make the films of D.A. Pennebaker
or the Maysles any less fun to watch. And as much
as we’ve seen a decline in legitimate shooting
skills as the technology’s become more accessible,
the dearth of intellectual editing may be even
more troubling. This kind of critique may sound
to some as elitist, but what’s not populist about
asking that filmmakers treat their subjects and
their audiences with a little respect? I suppose
that since neither camp is really complaining,
I’m the asshole, but I’ll still get excited any
time I get to spend time with a documentary filmmaker
who’s as good a filmmaker as he/she is a documentarian.
Avi Mograbi’s Avenge But One of My Two Eyes,
for all its fascinating juxtapositions of Jewish
lore and contemporary Israeli political realities,
surprises and pleases most in that its function
as a documentary essay is fully balanced by its
aspirations toward serious art.
Disarmingly simple in conception, Avengeconsists
of footage that can be broken down into one of
three types: scenes of young Israeli solders interacting
(most often rudely) with Palestinians; educational
settings in which younger Israelis listen to tour
guides and teachers lecture on Samson or the massacre
at Masada; and shots of a lengthy phone conversation
between the filmmaker and a Palestinian friend
living under curfew. The movement between these
different modes is sudden, so much so that at
first it’s hard to ascertain exactly where Mograbi’s
heading, but as he slowly builds his film around
these disconnected sequences (the only place,
as far as I can tell, we return to is Mograbi’s
home), his thesis—that the mythologies of persecution
with which the Israeli state continues to indoctrinate
their young pay unpleasant dividends when those
same youths later enter into their mandatory military
service and come into contact with “the enemy”—inexorably
emerges cutting cleanly through a wide swath of
historical information recognized in the West
but probably not often linked to present day failures
of diplomacy. It’s a tribute to Mograbi that he’s
patient enough a filmmaker to force us wait for
the explanation of what we’re seeing, and I imagine
in many ways what we’re privy to here are the
workings of his own thought processes in attempting
to document this immensely charged situation.
Mograbi’s largely handheld camera brings to mind
a less lethargic Béla Tarr, while his ability
to maintain momentum throughout his isolated vignettes
recalls Alan Clarke movies like Contact
or Christine. There’s beauty in his ability
to frame the historic landscapes of The Holy Land
or in offhand captures like soldiers’ hands trying
to block the camera’s view, and while the lovely
shooting often leaves a sense of melancholy, peeking
out amidst the machinations of the unpleasant
cycle Mograbi’s tracing is a darkly comic absurdity.
This more wry sensibility emerges most fully in
two sequences in which Israeli soldiers refuse
to meet their Palestinian interlocutors face to
face, opting instead to speak via loudspeaker
from a humvee or guard tower. Though the stakes
are often deadly serious (in one sequence a family
is deterred from taking one of their women to
a hospital), the way Mograbi frames the interactions,
with clearly defined, large (and ridiculous) spaces
separating the soldiers and peasants feels rent
from Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Watching
and hearing Mograbi speak through the course of
the piece allows us this vantage point—if the
phone sequences fail technically (often the friend’s
responses are nearly inaudible, and not seemingly
due to conscious choice) and aesthetically (the
bits of conversation often just run too long or
interrupt when they shouldn’t), catching a glimpse
of grim smile clues us in to the figure we’re
dealing with and personalizes the film’s perspective.
But that perspective can shift quickly—a later
run-in with another military jeep begins with
a similar absurdist bent, but when Mograbi moves
to speak with the soldiers driving, his camera
bounces back on itself, and all we can see is
an ominous shadow sitting smugly behind tinted,
bulletproof glass.
The overall thrust of Avenge But One of My
Two Eyes suggests that too much focus in the
West is placed on the troubled history of the
Israeli-Arab relations 1948-present. What we have
instead is a conflict with pre-Biblical roots
that still hold an unseemly sway over present-day
populations. I’m not enough the historian of that
region to assess the validity of his argument,
but Mograbi’s presentation is certainly compelling.
Watching a group of teens on a Birthright tour
(a program in which people under 26 of Jewish
descent can travel to Israel for little to no
personal cost) vote on what they would have done
if surrounded by the Romans at Masada presents
a terrifying sense of scope to a problem more
commonly related to fairly recent historical grudges.
(It’s not surprising that the politicos of a nation
barely a few hundred years old should wade so
blindly in these waters.) When two sides consider
themselves the persecuted, and have for thousands
of years, what kind of easy détente is really
possible? And though his film spends more time
with Israelis, and casts a critical eye their
way, the shadow of Palestinian counter-extremism
always looms large. But in the midst of this panoramic
view Mograbi never fails to remind of simple,
human consequences. As day turns to night and
the curfew inches ever closer, his conversation
with Shredi Jabarin grows bleaker. As Jabarin
notes (paraphrasing slightly), “When the Palestinians
decide that it is better to be dead than continue
to live in these conditions, things will get very
bad.” Mograbi’s constructed a surprisingly tensile
web of historical and present-day evidence to
support that assertion, and he points directly
to how these two nations push themselves ever
closer to that breaking point. Dancing children
and marching penguins may be fine for some, but
with so much real-world conflict invisible to
the masses, watching works like those only reminds
me just how vital filmmakers like Avi Mograbi
are. Documentary today should be constantly immersed
in questions of this magnitude and always ready
to tackle them with his astounding level of eloquence—anything
less is a waste. |