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Lemon Tree (film)

Lemon Tree (Hebrew: עץ לימון, romanized'Etz Limon; Arabic: شجرة ليمون, romanized'Shajaret Leimoun) is a 2008 Isreali-Palestinian drama film directed by Eran Riklis and co-directed by his cousin Ira Riklis. It stars Hiam Abbass, Ali Suliman, Danny Leshman, Rona Lipaz-Michael, Tarik Kopty, Amos Lavi, Lana Zreik and Amnon Wolf.[2] The film describes the legal efforts of a Palestinian widow to stop the Israeli Defense Minister, her next door neighbor, from destroying the lemon trees in her family farm. At the same time, she develops a human bond with the minister's wife.[3]

Lemon Tree
Theatrical release poster
Directed byEran Riklis
Written byEran Riklis
Suha Arraf
Produced byEran Riklis
StarringHiam Abbass
Ali Suliman
Rona Lipaz-Michael
Doron Tavory
CinematographyRainer Klusmann
Edited byTova Asher
Music byHabib Shehadeh Hanna
Distributed byIFC Films
Release date
  • March 27, 2008 (2008-03-27)
Running time
106 minutes
CountriesIsrael, Germany, France
LanguagesArabic, Hebrew
Box office$6,628,437[1]

It was released in Israel on 27 March 2008,[4] and it received a tepid response from Israeli audiences.[5][6] It was released internationally through IFC Films on 17 April 2009.[2] From there, the film has achieved critical success and it has received nominations for several awards such as Best Actress and Best Screenwriter at the 21st European Film Awards.[5][6][7]

Plot edit

The Israeli Defense Minister Israel Navon (Doron Tavory) moves to a house on the border between Israel and the West Bank, with the building sitting on the Israeli side just next to the dividing line. The Israeli Secret Service views the neighboring lemon grove of Salma Zidane (Hiam Abbass), a Palestinian widow whose family has cared for the area for generations, as a threat to the minister and his wife. The security forces soon set up a guard post and a fence around the grove. They then obtain an order to uproot the lemon trees.[3][8]

Salma feels isolated given that her son has moved to Washington, D.C., and her daughters are now married. The local village elder Abu Kamal (Makram Khoury) advises her to give in, but Salma decides to work with the young lawyer Ziad Daud (Ali Suliman) and a tenderness grows between the two lonely people. They take their case all the way to the Supreme Court. Mira Navon (Rona Lipaz-Michael), the minister's wife, sympathizes with Salma. The court case receives notable media attention, and Mira gives a news interview that her husband regrets. Mira believes that the Israeli military overreacted, and she also shares Salma's sense of personal loneliness. Although they never speak, a complex human bond develops between the two women.[3][8]

The Supreme Court rules that there is no need for the military to uproot Salma's lemon orchard but they may prune to the stumps up to half of her trees. This they do, and erect a high concrete wall to protect the minister's house. Mira decides to leave her husband, while Salma no longer sees Ziad.

It is based on a true story where trees have been finally uprooted in the interest of Shaul Mofaz, Israeli Defense Minister in 2002 to 2006.

Cast edit

  • Hiam Abbass as Salma Zidane
  • Ali Suliman as Ziad Daud
  • Rona Lipaz-Michael as Mira Navon
  • Doron Tavory as Israel Navon

Production edit

Production details edit

Director Eran Riklis covered personal relationships between Arabs and Middle Eastern Jews in his previous films The Syrian Bride and Cup Final.[9] The former film, which also starred Hiam Abbass, achieved widespread success in Israel as well as with international audiences after its 2004 release. This boosted Riklis's expectations for the future.[6][10]

The plot of Lemon Tree was based on a real life incident. Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz moved to the border within Israel and the occupied territories and security forces began cutting down the lemon trees beside his house, arguing that it could be used by terrorists as a hiding place.[11] The Palestinian family who owned the trees sued the minister and took the case all the way to the Israeli Supreme Court. They lost, and their trees had to be cut down.[6] Riklis watched a news blurb about the case online.[5] He then developed the story further in a fictional setting.[6] Riklis explicitly designed the protagonist's part for actress Hiam Abbass.[11]

The characters in the film speak Arabic and Hebrew.[12] Riklis' personal company, Eran Riklis Production, filmed the movie.[4] It was shot in the cities of Kalkilya and Ramallah and the Jalazone refugee camp as well on location at and around the Supreme Court of Israel building in Sha'arey Mishpat Street, Jerusalem.[13] Salon film critic Andrew O'Hehir has commented, "Riklis forges into areas other Israeli filmmakers won't venture."[14]

Subject material edit

Riklis designed the film to be essentially apolitical, focusing on character development rather than exploring the issues of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.[6] He has said that he created a 'fairy tale quality' to the film in which the audience can sympathize with all of the people featured in it. He stated that "I wanted to populate this film with a lot of faces and give each character their own moment of grace, even when, on the surface, it's one of the 'bad guys,' so to speak.. ... This film does address the ugly side of occupation perhaps, yet no blood is spilled."[5] A fictional representation of the Israeli West Bank barrier punctuates the film throughout.[8]

Andrew O'Hehir argued that Riklis "depicts all versions of Middle Eastern authority with a cheerful, agnostic cynicism", portraying the Palestinian government as "corrupt and obsessed with status and protocol" and the Israeli government as "hypocritical and mindlessly bureaucratic."[14] V. A. Musetto of the New York Post argued that the movie expresses Riklis' opposition to Israeli policies of confiscation of Palestinian land.[12] Critic Hugh Hart of the San Francisco Chronicle thought that the movie displayed a natural sympathy towards its protagonist.[5] Mark Jenkins of NPR commented that some of the ironic moments in the film depicted Palestinian resistance to Israelis as "more concerned with preserving machismo than with producing results".[8]

The New York Times wrote

Although "Lemon Tree" doesn't overtly take sides in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, it portrays the Israelis, who wield more military power, as abusive and arrogant in the way that any country with superior weapons and armies inevitably appears. The security guards on Navon's property behave like strutting goons—only too eager to turn their guns on the first thing that moves—or clowns, like the watchtower guard nicknamed Quickie, who dozes off while on duty.[3]

Riklis tried not to make the film explicitly feminist, with the female characters portrayed more sympathetically than the male ones. However, he has said that it can be interpreted that way by viewers.[11] NPR's Mark Jenkins has stated that the film's bittersweet ending depicted the difficult status of women in Palestine as well as Palestinian-Israeli relations.[8] Chris Cabin of the AMC Network criticized the film as being too "fem-centric" and as having a uniformly negative treatment of its male characters.[15]

Reception edit

The film was released within Israel on 27 March 2008,[4] and it was released internationally through IFC Films on 17 April 2009.[2] The film has been very well received internationally.[5][6] Rotten Tomatoes gave the film an approval rating of 91%, based on 69 reviews with an average rating of 7/10. The website's critical consensus states that the film is "A positive and personal Israeli film that offers an understated and thought-provoking vision of the West Bank troubles."[16] It also earned an average critical score of 73, a generally favorable response, on Metacritic.[2]

The New York Times named it a 'Critics Pick' of 2009.[3] Andrew O'Hehir of Salon praised the film and called its production a sign "of hope in the impenetrable impasse of the contemporary Middle East".[14] Benjamin Secher of The Daily Telegraph labeled it "absorbing, sensitive, beautifully-shot" and drew favorable comparisons with Erin Brockovich.[17] Mark Jenkins of National Public Radio stated that it featured "subtle performances by its striking stars" and served as a parable about border issues.[8] AMC's Chris Cabin criticized the movie, arguing that its director "seems not to have the faintest idea of how to properly approach the subject", because the film is, in Cabin's view, "unabashedly pro-Palestine".[15]

Box office edit

According to Box Office Mojo, the film has brought in a total of $6,628,437 worldwide. In the United States, it brought in $569,672 in its seventeen-week run. It premiered on 17 April 2009.[1]

The film performed poorly with Israeli audiences despite the positive reaction in other areas. Riklis has said that Israelis have the "false impression" that the film is pro-Palestinian and polemical.[5] The Palestinian reaction has been very positive, according to Riklis.[11] He expected a far more positive reception in Israel given the success of his previous film, The Syrian Bride, in 2004.[10] The film did receive praise from Hannah Brown of The Jerusalem Post, who stated that "it's hard to ask for more" and "you will leave the theater craving a glass of the lemonade Salma prepares so lovingly in several scenes".[18] Haaretz also praised the movie before its release.[10]

Awards edit

  • At the Berlin Film Festival, Riklis won a 'Panorama Audience Award'.[19]
  • In the Asia Pacific Screen Awards, Abbass won for 'Best Performance by an Actress' and Riklis won, along with collaborator Suha Arraf, for 'Best Screenplay'.
  • Arraf and Riklis were nominated for 'Best Screenwriter' at the European Film Awards, and Abbass was nominated for 'Best Actress'.
  • In the Israeli Film Academy, Abbass won for 'Best Actress'. The film's Miguel Markin was nominated for 'Best Art Direction', Rona Doron for 'Best Costume Design', Tova Asher for 'Best Editing', Habib Shadah for 'Best Music', Gil Toren and As Milo for 'Best Sound', and Riklis for 'Best Director'.[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Lemon Tree". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d "Lemon Tree Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 4 May 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d e Holden, Stephen (17 April 2009). "Movie Review - Lemon Tree". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  4. ^ a b c "Etz Limon (2008)". IMDb. Retrieved 4 May 2009.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Hart, Hugh (3 May 2009). "Lemon Tree a hit outside director's homeland". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Viera, Lauren (1 May 2009). "Lemon Tree more sweet than sour". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  7. ^ a b "Etz Limon - Awards". IMDb. Retrieved 5 December 2009.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Jenkins, Mark (16 April 2009). "Lemon Tree: Bitter And Sweet On Israel's Border". NPR. Retrieved 5 December 2009.
  9. ^ Tugend, Tom (21 April 2009). "Lemon' Tells Bittersweet Tale of Coexistence". The Jewish Journal. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  10. ^ a b c . Haaretz. Reuters. 9 February 2008. Archived from the original on 9 February 2008. Retrieved 5 December 2009.
  11. ^ a b c d Soares, Andre (1 May 2009). "Lemon Tree: Q&A with Eran Riklis". Alternative Film Guide. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  12. ^ a b Musetto, V. A. (17 April 2009). "Juicy Politics in Fruitful Flick". New York Post. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  13. ^ "Filming locations for Etz Limon". IMDb. Retrieved 4 May 2009.
  14. ^ a b c O'Heir, Andrew (15 April 2009). "Roundup: Movies not to miss". Salon. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  15. ^ a b Cabin, Chris. . AMC Network. Archived from the original on 20 April 2009. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  16. ^ "Etz Limon (Lemon Tree) (2009)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 4 May 2009.
  17. ^ Secher, Benjamin (14 May 2009). "Lemon Tree, DVD review". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 5 December 2009.
  18. ^ Hannah Brown (27 March 2008). "Movie Review: Heavy metaphor, sweet acting". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 4 October 2009.
  19. ^ Jones, Michael (16 February 2008). "Berlin: 'Lemon Tree' wins Panorama Audience Award". Variety. Retrieved 5 December 2009.

External links edit

  • in Patrol Magazine
  • Lemon Tree review 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine in Wide Screen journal
  • Interview with Eran Riklis 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine

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For other uses see Lemon Tree Lemon Tree Hebrew עץ לימון romanized Etz Limon Arabic شجرة ليمون romanized Shajaret Leimoun is a 2008 Isreali Palestinian drama film directed by Eran Riklis and co directed by his cousin Ira Riklis It stars Hiam Abbass Ali Suliman Danny Leshman Rona Lipaz Michael Tarik Kopty Amos Lavi Lana Zreik and Amnon Wolf 2 The film describes the legal efforts of a Palestinian widow to stop the Israeli Defense Minister her next door neighbor from destroying the lemon trees in her family farm At the same time she develops a human bond with the minister s wife 3 Lemon TreeTheatrical release posterDirected byEran RiklisWritten byEran RiklisSuha ArrafProduced byEran RiklisStarringHiam AbbassAli SulimanRona Lipaz MichaelDoron TavoryCinematographyRainer KlusmannEdited byTova AsherMusic byHabib Shehadeh HannaDistributed byIFC FilmsRelease dateMarch 27 2008 2008 03 27 Running time106 minutesCountriesIsrael Germany FranceLanguagesArabic HebrewBox office 6 628 437 1 It was released in Israel on 27 March 2008 4 and it received a tepid response from Israeli audiences 5 6 It was released internationally through IFC Films on 17 April 2009 2 From there the film has achieved critical success and it has received nominations for several awards such as Best Actress and Best Screenwriter at the 21st European Film Awards 5 6 7 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Production details 3 2 Subject material 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Awards 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksPlot editThe Israeli Defense Minister Israel Navon Doron Tavory moves to a house on the border between Israel and the West Bank with the building sitting on the Israeli side just next to the dividing line The Israeli Secret Service views the neighboring lemon grove of Salma Zidane Hiam Abbass a Palestinian widow whose family has cared for the area for generations as a threat to the minister and his wife The security forces soon set up a guard post and a fence around the grove They then obtain an order to uproot the lemon trees 3 8 Salma feels isolated given that her son has moved to Washington D C and her daughters are now married The local village elder Abu Kamal Makram Khoury advises her to give in but Salma decides to work with the young lawyer Ziad Daud Ali Suliman and a tenderness grows between the two lonely people They take their case all the way to the Supreme Court Mira Navon Rona Lipaz Michael the minister s wife sympathizes with Salma The court case receives notable media attention and Mira gives a news interview that her husband regrets Mira believes that the Israeli military overreacted and she also shares Salma s sense of personal loneliness Although they never speak a complex human bond develops between the two women 3 8 The Supreme Court rules that there is no need for the military to uproot Salma s lemon orchard but they may prune to the stumps up to half of her trees This they do and erect a high concrete wall to protect the minister s house Mira decides to leave her husband while Salma no longer sees Ziad It is based on a true story where trees have been finally uprooted in the interest of Shaul Mofaz Israeli Defense Minister in 2002 to 2006 Cast editHiam Abbass as Salma Zidane Ali Suliman as Ziad Daud Rona Lipaz Michael as Mira Navon Doron Tavory as Israel NavonProduction editProduction details edit Director Eran Riklis covered personal relationships between Arabs and Middle Eastern Jews in his previous films The Syrian Bride and Cup Final 9 The former film which also starred Hiam Abbass achieved widespread success in Israel as well as with international audiences after its 2004 release This boosted Riklis s expectations for the future 6 10 The plot of Lemon Tree was based on a real life incident Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz moved to the border within Israel and the occupied territories and security forces began cutting down the lemon trees beside his house arguing that it could be used by terrorists as a hiding place 11 The Palestinian family who owned the trees sued the minister and took the case all the way to the Israeli Supreme Court They lost and their trees had to be cut down 6 Riklis watched a news blurb about the case online 5 He then developed the story further in a fictional setting 6 Riklis explicitly designed the protagonist s part for actress Hiam Abbass 11 The characters in the film speak Arabic and Hebrew 12 Riklis personal company Eran Riklis Production filmed the movie 4 It was shot in the cities of Kalkilya and Ramallah and the Jalazone refugee camp as well on location at and around the Supreme Court of Israel building in Sha arey Mishpat Street Jerusalem 13 Salon film critic Andrew O Hehir has commented Riklis forges into areas other Israeli filmmakers won t venture 14 Subject material edit Riklis designed the film to be essentially apolitical focusing on character development rather than exploring the issues of the Israeli Palestinian conflict 6 He has said that he created a fairy tale quality to the film in which the audience can sympathize with all of the people featured in it He stated that I wanted to populate this film with a lot of faces and give each character their own moment of grace even when on the surface it s one of the bad guys so to speak This film does address the ugly side of occupation perhaps yet no blood is spilled 5 A fictional representation of the Israeli West Bank barrier punctuates the film throughout 8 Andrew O Hehir argued that Riklis depicts all versions of Middle Eastern authority with a cheerful agnostic cynicism portraying the Palestinian government as corrupt and obsessed with status and protocol and the Israeli government as hypocritical and mindlessly bureaucratic 14 V A Musetto of the New York Post argued that the movie expresses Riklis opposition to Israeli policies of confiscation of Palestinian land 12 Critic Hugh Hart of the San Francisco Chronicle thought that the movie displayed a natural sympathy towards its protagonist 5 Mark Jenkins of NPR commented that some of the ironic moments in the film depicted Palestinian resistance to Israelis as more concerned with preserving machismo than with producing results 8 The New York Times wrote Although Lemon Tree doesn t overtly take sides in the Israeli Palestinian conflict it portrays the Israelis who wield more military power as abusive and arrogant in the way that any country with superior weapons and armies inevitably appears The security guards on Navon s property behave like strutting goons only too eager to turn their guns on the first thing that moves or clowns like the watchtower guard nicknamed Quickie who dozes off while on duty 3 Riklis tried not to make the film explicitly feminist with the female characters portrayed more sympathetically than the male ones However he has said that it can be interpreted that way by viewers 11 NPR s Mark Jenkins has stated that the film s bittersweet ending depicted the difficult status of women in Palestine as well as Palestinian Israeli relations 8 Chris Cabin of the AMC Network criticized the film as being too fem centric and as having a uniformly negative treatment of its male characters 15 Reception editThe film was released within Israel on 27 March 2008 4 and it was released internationally through IFC Films on 17 April 2009 2 The film has been very well received internationally 5 6 Rotten Tomatoes gave the film an approval rating of 91 based on 69 reviews with an average rating of 7 10 The website s critical consensus states that the film is A positive and personal Israeli film that offers an understated and thought provoking vision of the West Bank troubles 16 It also earned an average critical score of 73 a generally favorable response on Metacritic 2 The New York Times named it a Critics Pick of 2009 3 Andrew O Hehir of Salon praised the film and called its production a sign of hope in the impenetrable impasse of the contemporary Middle East 14 Benjamin Secher of The Daily Telegraph labeled it absorbing sensitive beautifully shot and drew favorable comparisons with Erin Brockovich 17 Mark Jenkins of National Public Radio stated that it featured subtle performances by its striking stars and served as a parable about border issues 8 AMC s Chris Cabin criticized the movie arguing that its director seems not to have the faintest idea of how to properly approach the subject because the film is in Cabin s view unabashedly pro Palestine 15 Box office edit According to Box Office Mojo the film has brought in a total of 6 628 437 worldwide In the United States it brought in 569 672 in its seventeen week run It premiered on 17 April 2009 1 The film performed poorly with Israeli audiences despite the positive reaction in other areas Riklis has said that Israelis have the false impression that the film is pro Palestinian and polemical 5 The Palestinian reaction has been very positive according to Riklis 11 He expected a far more positive reception in Israel given the success of his previous film The Syrian Bride in 2004 10 The film did receive praise from Hannah Brown of The Jerusalem Post who stated that it s hard to ask for more and you will leave the theater craving a glass of the lemonade Salma prepares so lovingly in several scenes 18 Haaretz also praised the movie before its release 10 Awards edit At the Berlin Film Festival Riklis won a Panorama Audience Award 19 In the Asia Pacific Screen Awards Abbass won for Best Performance by an Actress and Riklis won along with collaborator Suha Arraf for Best Screenplay Arraf and Riklis were nominated for Best Screenwriter at the European Film Awards and Abbass was nominated for Best Actress In the Israeli Film Academy Abbass won for Best Actress The film s Miguel Markin was nominated for Best Art Direction Rona Doron for Best Costume Design Tova Asher for Best Editing Habib Shadah for Best Music Gil Toren and As Milo for Best Sound and Riklis for Best Director 7 See also editIsraeli West Bank barrier The Cherry Orchard Israeli films of the 2000s Shaul Mofaz Cup Final film 1991 The Syrian Bride 2004 References edit a b Lemon Tree Box Office Mojo Retrieved 4 October 2009 a b c d Lemon Tree Reviews Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved 4 May 2009 a b c d e Holden Stephen 17 April 2009 Movie Review Lemon Tree The New York Times Retrieved 4 October 2009 a b c Etz Limon 2008 IMDb Retrieved 4 May 2009 a b c d e f g Hart Hugh 3 May 2009 Lemon Tree a hit outside director s homeland San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 4 October 2009 a b c d e f g Viera Lauren 1 May 2009 Lemon Tree more sweet than sour Chicago Tribune Retrieved 4 October 2009 a b Etz Limon Awards IMDb Retrieved 5 December 2009 a b c d e f Jenkins Mark 16 April 2009 Lemon Tree Bitter And Sweet On Israel s Border NPR Retrieved 5 December 2009 Tugend Tom 21 April 2009 Lemon Tells Bittersweet Tale of Coexistence The Jewish Journal Retrieved 4 October 2009 a b c New film Lemon Tree offers fresh look at Mideast conflict Haaretz Reuters 9 February 2008 Archived from the original on 9 February 2008 Retrieved 5 December 2009 a b c d Soares Andre 1 May 2009 Lemon Tree Q amp A with Eran Riklis Alternative Film Guide Retrieved 4 October 2009 a b Musetto V A 17 April 2009 Juicy Politics in Fruitful Flick New York Post Retrieved 4 October 2009 Filming locations for Etz Limon IMDb Retrieved 4 May 2009 a b c O Heir Andrew 15 April 2009 Roundup Movies not to miss Salon Retrieved 4 October 2009 a b Cabin Chris Lemon Tree AMC Network Archived from the original on 20 April 2009 Retrieved 4 October 2009 Etz Limon Lemon Tree 2009 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved 4 May 2009 Secher Benjamin 14 May 2009 Lemon Tree DVD review The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 5 December 2009 Hannah Brown 27 March 2008 Movie Review Heavy metaphor sweet acting The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 4 October 2009 Jones Michael 16 February 2008 Berlin Lemon Tree wins Panorama Audience Award Variety Retrieved 5 December 2009 External links editEtz Limon at IMDbLemon Tree review in Patrol Magazine Lemon Tree review Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine in Wide Screen journal Interview with Eran Riklis Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lemon Tree film amp oldid 1184389278, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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