On Screen

Jellyfish

  • Favourite  
  • Recommend: 0   Recommend

BY Jason Anderson   August 06, 2008 15:08

Editorial Rating:
Starring Sarah Adler, Nikol Leidman. Written by Shira Geffen. Directed by Shira Geffen and Etgar Keret. (PG) 77 min. Opens Aug 8.

The line between fantasy and reality gets very thin in this strange yet sweet Israeli charmer, which won the Caméra d’Or at Cannes last year for best first film. Directors Etgar Keret and Shira Geffen — the latter is credited with the script, though her co-director husband is also one of Israel’s most celebrated young fiction writers — are unafraid to add a little bit of magic realism to Jellyfish’s deftly arranged array of intersecting stories, all set in contemporary Tel Aviv. But even though events sometimes threaten to become too whimsical or contrived, the movie’s essential modesty and melancholy give it a genuine air of grace.

Geffen and Keret are also wise not to put too much weight on the structural device the film borrows from Magnolia, Crash and umpteen over-earnest indie dramas. As a result, the characters — an emotionally fraught crew that includes honeymooners stuck in a crummy hotel, a Filipino care worker and a mysterious young girl who emerges from the ocean — feel more like plausible people than devices themselves. A well-deployed series of visual and literary motifs creates a greater sense of coherence than such efforts usually achieve. And while Jellyfish can seem like the movie equivalent of a slim set of short stories — like Keret’s splendid 2004 collection The Bus Driver Who Wanted to Be God and Other Stories — its cumulative effect is surprisingly substantial.

Email us at: LETTERS@EYEWEEKLY.COM or send your questions to EYEWEEKLY.COM
625 Church St, 6th Floor, Toronto M4Y 2G1

User Comments



Be the first to comment
Film Finder
|
GO

Related Stories

City of Ember
Maybe it’s fitting that a global-warming allegory be as concerned about its own environment as it is about the real-world one it mirrors, but the makers of City of Ember seem downright distracted by the on-screen world they’ve created.

The Express
It’s hard not to be moved by the story of Ernie Davis. It’s equally difficult to accept The Express as a fitting tribute.

All Together Now
Old rich hippies and strangely attired circus folk join forces in...

MORE INSIDE




Copyright 1991 - 2007 EYE WEEKLY Newspapers Limited. All Rights Reserved. Distribution transmission,
Republication of any materials is strictly prohibited without the prior written consent of EYE WEEKLY.
EYE WEEKLY is a division of Toronto Star Newspapers Limited.
Register User