D.I. [DVD]
フォーマット | 色 |
コントリビュータ | マナル・ハーデル, ナーエフ・ダヘル, エリア・スレイマン |
稼働時間 | 1 時間 34 分 |
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商品の説明
レビュー
製作: アンベール・バルザン ラインプロデューサー・出演: アヴィ・クラインバーガー コープロデューサー・監督・脚本・出演: エリア・スレイマン 撮影: マルク=アンドレ・バティーニュ 美術: ミゲル・マルカン/ドゥニ・ルノー サウンド: エリック・ティスラン/サリム・アザジ/ウィリアム・シュミット 編集: ヴェロニク・ランジュ 出演: マナル・ハーデル/ナーエフ・ダヘル/ナジーラ・スレイマン/ジョージ・イブラヒム/リアド・マサルウェ/ジャマル・ダヘル/アメル・ダヘル/ルーバ・ワルワール/ジョージ・クレイフィ/アレックス・ローレンス/メナシェ・ノーイ/ミシェル・ピコリ
-- 内容(「CDジャーナル」データベースより)
登録情報
- メーカーにより製造中止になりました : いいえ
- 梱包サイズ : 18.03 x 13.76 x 1.48 cm; 83.16 g
- EAN : 4523215005692
- 監督 : エリア・スレイマン
- メディア形式 : 色
- 時間 : 1 時間 34 分
- 発売日 : 2003/10/25
- 出演 : エリア・スレイマン, マナル・ハーデル, ナーエフ・ダヘル
- 字幕: : 日本語
- 販売元 : 紀伊國屋書店
- 生産者 : エリア・スレイマン
- ASIN : B0000C02BB
- ディスク枚数 : 1
- Amazon 売れ筋ランキング: - 198,272位DVD (DVDの売れ筋ランキングを見る)
- - 3,864位外国のラブロマンス映画
- - 20,136位外国のドラマ映画
- カスタマーレビュー:
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トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
2003年11月13日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
私にとっては、近年見た映画の中でもっとも素晴らしい作品の一つです。ジャック・タチあるいはオタール・イオセリアニのユーモアに近い(もちろんゲラゲラ笑うギャグではありません)、不真面目なスタンスが全編に流れており、八方塞がりのパレスチナの人々にとって、ユダヤ人たちの狂信的な真面目さを笑い飛ばすことこそが、そういった状況を乗り越えることなのだ、と感じさせてくれました。
2019年9月12日に日本でレビュー済み
パレスチナのエリア・スレイマン監督主演。非常にシビアな国を舞台にした知的でユーモアもあるよい映画。
他の国からのトップレビュー

Keen Reader
5つ星のうち5.0
Brilliant and Mesmerising
2014年9月8日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
I had no idea what to expect from this film, but having now seen it twice, I can say it's brilliant and mesmerising, with a soundtrack that's still playing in my ears. It's an intelligent film, it makes you work. You've got to keep up. It's also a disturbing depiction of life in Palestine, with check-points to navigate and the pressure-cooker build up of tension of people who are not free. We start with a series of vignettes of neighbourly squabbles getting further out of control, then we meet the lead character (the director himself) on his way to meet his lover at the check-point. He's in his car, eating an apricot. As he passes an Israeli tank he throws out the stone, and the tank explodes. The funniest sequences are this character's fantasies, weary as he is of life under occupation. For the Israeli target practice-turned-boy band session alone, you HAVE to watch this film!

A. Futo
5つ星のうち5.0
The magic of movies
2011年5月22日にカナダでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
This movie shows at its heart the tragedy of the Palestinian people. Yet when mixed with its humanism and sly humour, it gives us hope that one day Palestinians will have their own state and control of their destiny.
5 Stars!
5 Stars!

William Shriver
5つ星のうち5.0
Hate Thy Neighbor
2007年1月17日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
This is one of those movies that manages to be both immediately accessible as well as rewarding in new ways when seen multiple times. Despite its Palestinian locations and the setting of two-thirds of the movie around Israeli checkpoints, its crowning paradox is that it is, in the words of writer-director Elia Suleiman, "not socio-politically specific." Its comedic sense provokes the laughter of recognition and empathy: the sense of feeling boxed in with those whom we cannot stand will be familiar to all but the most saintly viewers. The film holds a mirror up to us, and when we laugh, it is because we look pretty damn silly.
Some moments: a man drives through Nazareth, waving at pedestrians and motorists, cursing each one more elaborately than the last through a clenched smile; a teenager in a soccer jersey accidentally bounces a ball onto a roof--as if just waiting for such an event, the homeowner emerges with a knife and stabs the ball flat before returning it to the boy; some Israeli police are approached by a tourist for directions to the Old City, and when they are unable to help her, a blindfolded Palestinian in their custody is told to direct her--with the blindfold still on, of course; a perspective of a hospital corridor gives an intricately-choreographed view of everyone from medical staff to cardiac patients smoking cigarettes and pacing, some of them with drip bags in tow; a man whose father has just died chops onions and weeps.
The opening 30 minutes all take place in static shots that are placed no more than about twenty meters from each other. Each shot comments on the one before it--as we look out over the terraced cityscape, there is a sense that no matter how elevated one's perspective, there is always an unseen someone watching you with the same bemused malice with which you view your neighbor. There are the kind of coup de l'oeil effects that one associates with Jacques Tati: a low angle view of several men with sticks and a gun appears to show a brutal murder, but the payoff reveals their actions to be quite innocuous.
This is also a good movie for the subtitle-phobic, inasmuch as it contains very little dialogue. It also does not have an original score, relying very sparingly on pre-existing music. Yet, its brilliance extends to the sound mix, where everything from birdsong to car alarms acts, in turns, as counterpoint or as emphasis to the action.
DIVINE INTERVENTION is not only for lovers of Keaton, Lewis and Tati, but also for devotees of Lumiere, Renoir, Bresson, Ozu, Donen and Hou Hsiao Hsien. It is a generous film that keeps giving with each repeated viewing.
Some moments: a man drives through Nazareth, waving at pedestrians and motorists, cursing each one more elaborately than the last through a clenched smile; a teenager in a soccer jersey accidentally bounces a ball onto a roof--as if just waiting for such an event, the homeowner emerges with a knife and stabs the ball flat before returning it to the boy; some Israeli police are approached by a tourist for directions to the Old City, and when they are unable to help her, a blindfolded Palestinian in their custody is told to direct her--with the blindfold still on, of course; a perspective of a hospital corridor gives an intricately-choreographed view of everyone from medical staff to cardiac patients smoking cigarettes and pacing, some of them with drip bags in tow; a man whose father has just died chops onions and weeps.
The opening 30 minutes all take place in static shots that are placed no more than about twenty meters from each other. Each shot comments on the one before it--as we look out over the terraced cityscape, there is a sense that no matter how elevated one's perspective, there is always an unseen someone watching you with the same bemused malice with which you view your neighbor. There are the kind of coup de l'oeil effects that one associates with Jacques Tati: a low angle view of several men with sticks and a gun appears to show a brutal murder, but the payoff reveals their actions to be quite innocuous.
This is also a good movie for the subtitle-phobic, inasmuch as it contains very little dialogue. It also does not have an original score, relying very sparingly on pre-existing music. Yet, its brilliance extends to the sound mix, where everything from birdsong to car alarms acts, in turns, as counterpoint or as emphasis to the action.
DIVINE INTERVENTION is not only for lovers of Keaton, Lewis and Tati, but also for devotees of Lumiere, Renoir, Bresson, Ozu, Donen and Hou Hsiao Hsien. It is a generous film that keeps giving with each repeated viewing.

Laraine Goddard
5つ星のうち5.0
A Film to Watch...Again
2010年1月12日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
The other reviews have more or less told about the content of this film.
What I got from it was the sheer exhilaration of the parts of the film that touched upon the Palestinian Peoples' refusal to be dominated. Yes,the sheer boredom of the occupation is a prevalent theme. Yet out of this arises a sense that life goes on. And intermingled with this, the Universal themes of love and death.
Curiously, I didn't find the film overly 'political'. Having spent Christmas in Ramallah and Jerusalem, the reality of life is far more extreme for the Palestinians than portrayed in the film. And I think this is the film's real strength.
It's amazingly funny at the outset. and the absolute dead pan acting of all the characters is fantastic. It also has some truly poignant moments and an underlying sadness.
The 'super heroine' sequence is a treat.
Watch it!
Laraine Goddard
What I got from it was the sheer exhilaration of the parts of the film that touched upon the Palestinian Peoples' refusal to be dominated. Yes,the sheer boredom of the occupation is a prevalent theme. Yet out of this arises a sense that life goes on. And intermingled with this, the Universal themes of love and death.
Curiously, I didn't find the film overly 'political'. Having spent Christmas in Ramallah and Jerusalem, the reality of life is far more extreme for the Palestinians than portrayed in the film. And I think this is the film's real strength.
It's amazingly funny at the outset. and the absolute dead pan acting of all the characters is fantastic. It also has some truly poignant moments and an underlying sadness.
The 'super heroine' sequence is a treat.
Watch it!
Laraine Goddard

Desertwriter
5つ星のうち5.0
OCCUPATION thru the lens of SURREALITY!
2005年6月22日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
A comic tragic love story set in the midst of long term occupation of Palestine...with the beautiful dead-pan of protagonist/director Elia Suleiman. A film that integrates into one's neurons and gut, makes one laugh out loud and sigh with
despair...nearly all at the same time! I've watched this film so many times, never tiring of its "under your skin" connection even at the most absurd moments. I began watching it with a Western analytical approach but soon learned that this story MUST be appreciated slowly from the heart and soul..it then seeps into all the pours and cells to a clarity that only a "parable" could deliver. A superb soundtrack!
despair...nearly all at the same time! I've watched this film so many times, never tiring of its "under your skin" connection even at the most absurd moments. I began watching it with a Western analytical approach but soon learned that this story MUST be appreciated slowly from the heart and soul..it then seeps into all the pours and cells to a clarity that only a "parable" could deliver. A superb soundtrack!