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The Gatekeepers (film)

The Gatekeepers (Hebrew: שומרי הסף "Shomrei HaSaf") is a 2012 internationally co-produced documentary film by director Dror Moreh that tells the story of the Israeli internal security service, Shin Bet (known in Hebrew as 'Shabak'), from the perspective of six of its former heads.

The Gatekeepers
Promotional poster
Directed byDror Moreh
Produced byEstelle Fialon
Philippa Kowarsky
Dror Moreh
StarringAmi Ayalon
Avi Dichter
Yuval Diskin
Carmi Gillon
Yaakov Peri
Avraham Shalom
CinematographyAvner Shahaf
Edited byOron Adar
Music byAb Ovo
Jérôme Chassagnard
Régis Baillet
Distributed byCinephil (international)
Sony Pictures Classics (U.S.)
Release date
Running time
95 minutes
CountriesIsrael
France
Belgium
Germany
LanguageHebrew
Budget$1.5 million
(€1.3 million)[1]
Box office$2,415,727[2]

The film combines in-depth interviews, archival footage, and computer animation to recount the role that the group played in Israel's security from the Six-Day War to the present.[3] The film was nominated for Best Documentary Feature at the 85th Academy Awards.[4]

Background

Moreh has explained in interviews that he was inspired to make the film after watching Errol Morris’s Academy Award-winning documentary The Fog of War.[5] Having just completed a film about former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon,[6] he came to realize the decisive role that the Shin Bet had played behind the scenes for the past forty years. "The idea to do this movie came to me while I was working on my previous film, Sharon. From my discussions with the prime minister’s innermost circle of advisors, I learned how the critique of some of these Gatekeepers influenced Sharon’s decision to disengage from Gaza."[7] The problem, according to Moreh, was getting the "Gatekeepers", or former heads of the Shin Bet, to agree to appear on camera and discuss their work and opinions. Given the secretive nature of the organization, none of them had ever done this before, and many of the topics he hoped to discuss with them were either classified or highly sensitive.

Despite this initial difficulty, Moreh contacted one of the "Gatekeepers", Ami Ayalon, who had since been elected to the Knesset for the Labor Party and was serving as a Minister without Portfolio in the Security Cabinet. Much to his surprise, Ayalon not only agreed to participate, he also helped Moreh contact the other surviving former heads of the Shin Bet: Avraham Shalom, Yaakov Peri, Carmi Gillon, and Avi Dichter.[8] The sixth participant in the film, Yuval Diskin, was still serving as head of the Shin Bet at the time.

Though all the men agreed to participate, some were reluctant initially to discuss various incidents associated with their careers. Shalom, for instance, did not want to discuss his role in the hijacking of the 300 bus and summary execution of two of the terrorists, though the ensuing scandal ultimately led to his resignation. Over time, however, and with careful prodding, he agreed to discuss even that, and it now features as one of the film's seven segments. The Gatekeepers "gave me an unprecedented, intimate opportunity to enter the inner sanctum of the people who have steered Israel’s decision-making process for almost half a century," Moreh has said.[7]

Moreh told The Economist that after interviewing the Shin Bet heads, he decided that Netanyahu "poses a great threat to the existence of the state of Israel." He said that he seeks "to change the point of view of young Israelis. To tell them a story of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that has not been told before."[9]

He told The Times of Israel that making the film "changed me a lot [...]. It made me more desperate, more bleak. I saw from their eyes how our leaders really don’t want to solve this problem. They do not have the audacity, the temerity, the will, the courage that we need from a leader." He added, "I am not putting the blame only on the Israeli leaders. I think the Palestinian leaders suffer from the same horrible disease. I think that what [former Israeli foreign minister] Abba Eban said about how the Palestinians never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity applies to both sides."[10]

Structure

The film consists of seven segments:

  • No Strategy, Just Tactics – covering the emerging role of the Shin Bet from the Six-Day War and the occupation of the Palestinian territories
  • Forget About Morality – about the Bus 300 affair
  • One Man's Terrorist Is Another Man's Freedom Fighter – about the peace process following the Oslo Accords
  • Our Own Flesh and Blood – about Jewish terrorism, including the Jewish Underground and the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin
  • Victory Is to See You Suffer – about negotiations with the Palestinians during the Second Intifada
  • Collateral Damage – about the assassination of Yahya Ayyash and other prominent Hamas militants
  • The Old Man at the End of the Corridor – consisting of reflections on the activities of the Shin Bet and their ethical and strategic impact on the State of Israel

Though the film follows a loose chronological order, each of these segments also delves into topics such as the controversy surrounding collateral damage, the efficacy of torture, and the morality of targeted assassination.

The events described in the film are illustrated with archival footage and computer-generated imagery that brings historic photographs to life. An example of this is the computer-generated reenactment of the Bus 300 incident, based on photographs and eyewitness accounts. The film's computer animations were created by the French company Mac Guff.[11]

The filmmakers

 
The director discussing the film at a directors' panel at the Telluride Film Festival. Left to right: Michael Winterbottom, Dror Moreh, Ben Affleck, Annette Insdorf.

The director of The Gatekeepers, Dror Moreh, is an experienced cinematographer who served as director of photography on several feature films, including Urban Feel and Desperado Square, and on a number of documentaries, among them One Shot, Asesino, and Underdog: A War Movie. His credits as a director include The Rose (a 6-part documentary series), To Be Mayumana (a documentary about an Israeli dance group), Under Cover (a 4-part docudrama about undercover police officers), Sharon (a documentary about Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's implementation of the Gaza Disengagement Plan), Occupational Hazard (a documentary about an Israeli journalist in Iraq), and Caesarea (an animated short about the history of Caesarea).[7]

The producer, Philippa Kowarsky [de], is the founder of Cinephil, a film sales, co-productions, and distribution company, and has taught Media at Israel's Open University and at the Management College in Tel Aviv.[7]

The interviewees

The film consists of interviews with six former Shin Bet leaders. Avraham Shalom, who ran Shin Bet from 1980 to 1986, served on the team that brought Adolf Eichmann to justice and was forced to resign after ordering the summary execution of two terrorists.[12] He was succeeded by Yaakov Peri, who was in charge of Shin Bet at the time of the Intifada.[13] Carmi Gillon, head of Shin Bet from 1994 to 1996, warned that extremists would try to kill Prime Minister Rabin; the assassination of Rabin in 1995 shook the agency's reputation and led to Gillon's resignation.[14] Ami Ayalon, his successor, sought to increase security around Israel's leaders.[15] Avi Dichter, Shin Bet head from 2000 to 2005, was confronted with the Second Intifada.[16] He was succeeded by Yuval Diskin, who served until 2011.[17]

Release

Three years in production, the film was first released at the Jerusalem Film Festival in the presence of the Gatekeepers themselves. In North America, it was released on 31 August 2012 by Sony Picture Classics at the Telluride Film Festival in Colorado[18] in the presence of Errol Morris, and a week later (6 September 2012) at the Toronto International Film Festival. It was also screened at the New York Film Festival. Its first screening in Europe took place at the International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam. After a one-week release in December 2012 to make it eligible for the Academy Awards, a wider theatrical release in North America began on 1 February 2013.

When the film was released, CNN reported that the former Shin Bet heads had made "stunning revelations" and that "all six argue – to varying degrees – that the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land is bad for the state of Israel." CNN noted that Avraham Shalom "says Israel lost touch with how to coexist with the Palestinians as far back as the aftermath of the Six Day War of 1967" and that a "central theme of the documentary is the idea that Israel has incredible tactics, but lacks long-term strategy."[19] Moreh is turning "The Gatekeepers" into a five-part series for Israeli television and a book.[20]

Official Israeli response

Barak Ravid wrote in Haaretz in March 2013 that there had been much "internal debate between Israeli diplomats" over "the question of whether the film reinforces the anti-Israeli narrative in the West, or alternatively paints a more complex and positive picture of Israeli society and the internal arguments that take place within it." Mario Vargas Llosa praised the film as "evidence of the level-headedness and clarity of some elements in Israeli society."[21]

Rafi Gamzu of Israel's Foreign Ministry called the film "proof of the highest order of Israeli democracy."[21] Israel's deputy consul general in Toronto, Hadas Wittenberg Silberstein, described it as "a powerful film that brings viewers into confrontation with the political-security dilemmas Israel faces" and that, while "not completely unequivocal", is "tendentious in its portrayal of Palestinian suffering."[21]

Yigal Palmor, spokesman of the Israeli Foreign Ministry, complained "that the justification for the Shin Bet’s activity in the territories does not appear in the film." While this is justifiable in a film addressed to Israeli audiences, who do not have to have the situation explained to them, international audiences "need more explanation of the background to understand how the three Shin Bet heads who appear in the film went into politics and how they are an inseparable part of a whole policy, some of which they criticize from within while agreeing completely with other aspects of it. None of them is a rebel who broke the rules and quit, or a subversive who tried to carry out a revolution. They see themselves as part of the establishment and as they see it, the purpose of their criticism is to improve it, not to smash it."[21]

Yaakov Hadas-Handelsman, Israel's ambassador to Germany, has said that he "used the screening of the film here as an opportunity to emphasize the strength of Israeli democracy ... and the doubts that policymakers in Israel must face before they order the killing of terrorists ... There are not many democracies where one can view such a discussion at all, particularly considering Israel’s security situation."[21]

Michael Oren, Israel's ambassador in Washington, D.C., came out strongly against the film, deploring the way in which Avraham Shalom "kind of" likens "Israel to Nazi Germany." Oren said he had "been hearing about Jews leaving the screening asking why we should keep supporting Israel."[21]

CNN reported in January 2013 that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had "no plans" to see the film.[19]

Reception

On the aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 94% positive ratings from 111 critics, with an average rating of 8.3/10. The site's consensus reads: "Strikingly stark, brutally honest, and rivetingly assembled, The Gatekeepers offers essential perspective on a seemingly intractable war from some of the men who fought it."[22] The film holds a 91/100 on Metacritic based on 27 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim."[23] The New York Times critic A. O. Scott called the film the best documentary of 2012, deeming it "essential, eye-opening viewing if you think you understand the Middle East,"[24] while Times critic Manohla Dargis named it one of the top ten movies of the year.[25] Joe Morgenstern, film critic for the Wall Street Journal, also called The Gatekeepers one of the year's 10 best films. The film, noted Morgenstern, "brings together all the surviving directors of Shin Bet, Israel's internal security agency. What these tough and tough-minded men have to say about Israeli politicians, and the nation's current stance vis à vis its enemies, is stunning and edifying in equal measure."[26]

The Gatekeepers was also named one of the year's best films by David Edelstein of New York Magazine, Bob Mondello of NPR, David Denby of the New Yorker, Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times, Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly, Manohla Dargis of the New York Times, Peter Rainer of Christian Science Monitor, and Todd McCarthy of The Hollywood Reporter.[7]

The New York Times

Jodi Rudoren of the New York Times described the film as offering "a disturbing narrative" whose message is that "The occupation is immoral and, perhaps more important, ineffective. Israel should withdraw from the West Bank as it did from the Gaza Strip in 2005. And the prospect of a two-state solution to the Palestinian conflict diminishes daily, threatening the future of Israel as a Jewish democracy."[20]

Haaretz

Uri Klein, film critic of Haaretz, called The Gatekeepers "one of the most intelligent, mature and self-disciplined documentaries that have been made here recently."[20] But Aluf Benn, the editor of Haaretz, wrote in a column that the film is "convenient for the Shin Bet," painting its chiefs as victims of the political leadership and going light on their own bending of the law."[20]

The Jerusalem Post

In an op-ed for The Jerusalem Post, Roz Rothstein and Roberta Seid of the advocacy group StandWithUs accused the film's director of "intellectual dishonesty" and of ignoring "history and context," saying that while "the film tries to portray Israel’s antiterrorism policies as counterproductive and cruel, the interviews inadvertently tell a different story." They wrote that the film fails to acknowledge that Israel "instituted Palestinian municipal self-government and administration, introduced freedom of speech and association, and vastly modernized the Palestinian economy as well as Palestinian health, welfare and education, turning the West Bank and Gaza into the world’s fourth fastest growing economy in the 1970s and 1980s."[27]

In addition, charged Rothstein and Seid, the viewer of The Gatekeeper "never learns that Israel has repeatedly tried to do precisely what Moreh advocates" only to have its offers of land for peace rejected repeatedly. While Moreh wishes audiences to believe that Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank would bring peace, Israel's 2000 pullout from its Lebanese security zone and its 2005 removal of Gaza settlements led to increased "threats and terrorism from Iranian proxy Hezbollah in Lebanon and from Iranian client Hamas in Gaza." Moreh ignored the "hard realities" that "make the Shin Bet’s work so crucial and so heroic."[27]

Troy criticized the Shin Bet heads, for "parlay[ing] their perspective as intelligence heads into preaching and politics," and characterized Moreh's placement of Ayalon at the end of the movie as "film-making sleight-of-hand that makes his leftist views appear to be the sextet’s consensus position." Troy also noted what he called the "outrage gap": while a Jerusalem audience had "reacted viscerally to descriptions of the beating deaths of two Palestinian terrorists," it "seemed blasé about photos of suicide-bombing carnage." Troy argues, "Rabin’s assassin did not 'murder hope' – Hamas and Islamic Jihad did." Troy expressed pride that "these thoughtful, tough but human and sensitive heroes helped Israel navigate the agonizing questions the country faces in defending itself from toxic terrorists," but added that "I know of no Palestinian movies agonizing about similar dilemmas."[28]

Similarly, in an op-ed for The Jerusalem Post, history professor and Zionist activist Gil Troy wrote that "the film showcases Israel’s democratic vitality while seeking to undermine it." Characterizing the interviewees as "blaming Israel and robbing Palestinians of their responsibility, culpability and dignity," Troy viewed their outspokenness as a product of a "voyeuristic Facebook culture." Troy argued that "spooks should not speak," expressing doubt that "the past six CIA directors would dare so abuse their positions – and the American public’s trust."[28]

Honors and awards

The Gatekeepers was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Feature Documentary in 2013 and for the Israeli Film Academy Award for Best Documentary. It won the Golden Trailer Award for Best Foreign Documentary Trailer, won Special Mention at the Biarritz International Festival of Audiovisual Programming in 2013, won the Los Angeles Film Critics Association award for Best Documentary/Non-Fiction Film. It shared the Cinema for Peace Award for Most Valuable Documentary of the Year in 2013 with Searching for Sugar Man. It was named one of the year's top five documentaries by the National Board of Review, and won the award for Best Non-Fiction Film from the National Society of Film Critics Awards. It won second place in the Best Non-Fiction Film category at the New York Film Critics Circle Awards. It was nominated for the PGA Award for Outstanding Producer of Documentary Theatrical Motion Pictures and for Best Documentary at the Satellite Awards.[29][better source needed] It was also nominated for Best Documentary Feature Film at the 7th Asia Pacific Screen Awards.[30]

See also

References

  1. ^ פרחומובקי, מרט. ""שומרי הסף": דוקומנטרי חשוב ומטלטל". Walla. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  2. ^ "The Gatekeepers (2013)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  3. ^ "Gatekeepers, the Film". Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  4. ^ "Oscars 2013: Complete list of nominees". The Los Angeles Times. January 10, 2013. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  5. ^ "Interview with the director". YouTube. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  6. ^ Wool, Danny. "An Interview with Dror Moreh". Retrieved 14 December 2012.
  7. ^ a b c d e "The Gatekeepers | A Sony Pictures Classics Release". Sony Classics. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  8. ^ Horn, John (1 February 2013). "Dror Moreh's 'The Gatekeepers' sheds light on Israel's Shin Bet". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  9. ^ "The Q&A: Dror Moreh Power is in their hands". The Economist. 9 April 2013. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  10. ^ Ginsburg, Mitch. "How I persuaded six intelligence chiefs to pour out their hearts". Times of Israel. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  11. ^ "Mac Guff website". Retrieved 15 December 2012.
  12. ^ "AVRAHAM SHALOM / 1980-1986". The Gatekeeprs. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  13. ^ "YAAKOV PERI / 1988-1995". The Gatekeepers. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  14. ^ "CARMI GILLON / 1994-1996". The Gatekeepers. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  15. ^ "AMI AYALON / 1996-2000". The Gatekeepers. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  16. ^ "AVI DICHTER / 2000-2005". The Gatekeepers. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  17. ^ "YUVAL DISKIN / 2005-2011". The Gatekeepers. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  18. ^ "Telluride review". Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  19. ^ a b Burke, Samuel (28 January 2013). "Six Israeli security chiefs stun the world". CNN. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  20. ^ a b c d Rudoren, Jodi (25 January 2013). "'Most Israelis Are Not Listening' 'Gatekeepers,' Oscar Nominee, Has Muted Reaction in Israel". New York Times. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  21. ^ a b c d e f Ravid, Barak. "In a flurry of telegrams, Israeli diplomats respond to 'The Gatekeepers'". Haaretz. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  22. ^ The Gatekeepers at Rotten Tomatoes
  23. ^ "The Gatekeepers Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  24. ^ Scott, A. O. (December 14, 2012). "25 Favorites From A Year When 10 Aren't Enough". The New York Times. Retrieved December 14, 2012.
  25. ^ Dargis, Manohla (14 December 2012). "Against the Odds, Smart Films Thrive at the Box Office". New York Times. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
  26. ^ Morgenstern, Joe (December 27, 2012). "Welcome Fruits of a Late Harvest". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved December 27, 2012.
  27. ^ a b Rothstein, Roz. "The dishonesty of 'The Gatekeepers'". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  28. ^ a b Troy, Gil. "'The Gatekeepers': Speaking spooks' coup d'etat". Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  29. ^ "The Gatekeepers (2012) Awards". IMDb. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  30. ^ "Winners & Nominees 2013". asiapacificscreenacademy.com. Archived from the original on 2013-12-20. Retrieved 2013-12-19.

External links

  • Official website
  • The Gatekeepers at IMDb
  • Interview with Dror Moreh at the New York Film Festival
  • The Gatekeepers streaming via SBS On Demand (Australia)

gatekeepers, film, gatekeepers, hebrew, שומרי, הסף, shomrei, hasaf, 2012, internationally, produced, documentary, film, director, dror, moreh, that, tells, story, israeli, internal, security, service, shin, known, hebrew, shabak, from, perspective, former, hea. The Gatekeepers Hebrew שומרי הסף Shomrei HaSaf is a 2012 internationally co produced documentary film by director Dror Moreh that tells the story of the Israeli internal security service Shin Bet known in Hebrew as Shabak from the perspective of six of its former heads The GatekeepersPromotional posterDirected byDror MorehProduced byEstelle FialonPhilippa Kowarsky Dror MorehStarringAmi AyalonAvi DichterYuval DiskinCarmi GillonYaakov PeriAvraham ShalomCinematographyAvner ShahafEdited byOron AdarMusic byAb OvoJerome ChassagnardRegis BailletDistributed byCinephil international Sony Pictures Classics U S Release date10 July 2012 2012 07 10 Jerusalem Film Festival Running time95 minutesCountriesIsraelFranceBelgiumGermanyLanguageHebrewBudget 1 5 million 1 3 million 1 Box office 2 415 727 2 The film combines in depth interviews archival footage and computer animation to recount the role that the group played in Israel s security from the Six Day War to the present 3 The film was nominated for Best Documentary Feature at the 85th Academy Awards 4 Contents 1 Background 2 Structure 3 The filmmakers 4 The interviewees 5 Release 6 Official Israeli response 7 Reception 7 1 The New York Times 7 2 Haaretz 7 3 The Jerusalem Post 8 Honors and awards 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksBackground EditMoreh has explained in interviews that he was inspired to make the film after watching Errol Morris s Academy Award winning documentary The Fog of War 5 Having just completed a film about former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon 6 he came to realize the decisive role that the Shin Bet had played behind the scenes for the past forty years The idea to do this movie came to me while I was working on my previous film Sharon From my discussions with the prime minister s innermost circle of advisors I learned how the critique of some of these Gatekeepers influenced Sharon s decision to disengage from Gaza 7 The problem according to Moreh was getting the Gatekeepers or former heads of the Shin Bet to agree to appear on camera and discuss their work and opinions Given the secretive nature of the organization none of them had ever done this before and many of the topics he hoped to discuss with them were either classified or highly sensitive Despite this initial difficulty Moreh contacted one of the Gatekeepers Ami Ayalon who had since been elected to the Knesset for the Labor Party and was serving as a Minister without Portfolio in the Security Cabinet Much to his surprise Ayalon not only agreed to participate he also helped Moreh contact the other surviving former heads of the Shin Bet Avraham Shalom Yaakov Peri Carmi Gillon and Avi Dichter 8 The sixth participant in the film Yuval Diskin was still serving as head of the Shin Bet at the time Though all the men agreed to participate some were reluctant initially to discuss various incidents associated with their careers Shalom for instance did not want to discuss his role in the hijacking of the 300 bus and summary execution of two of the terrorists though the ensuing scandal ultimately led to his resignation Over time however and with careful prodding he agreed to discuss even that and it now features as one of the film s seven segments The Gatekeepers gave me an unprecedented intimate opportunity to enter the inner sanctum of the people who have steered Israel s decision making process for almost half a century Moreh has said 7 Moreh told The Economist that after interviewing the Shin Bet heads he decided that Netanyahu poses a great threat to the existence of the state of Israel He said that he seeks to change the point of view of young Israelis To tell them a story of the Israeli Palestinian conflict that has not been told before 9 He told The Times of Israel that making the film changed me a lot It made me more desperate more bleak I saw from their eyes how our leaders really don t want to solve this problem They do not have the audacity the temerity the will the courage that we need from a leader He added I am not putting the blame only on the Israeli leaders I think the Palestinian leaders suffer from the same horrible disease I think that what former Israeli foreign minister Abba Eban said about how the Palestinians never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity applies to both sides 10 Structure EditThe film consists of seven segments No Strategy Just Tactics covering the emerging role of the Shin Bet from the Six Day War and the occupation of the Palestinian territories Forget About Morality about the Bus 300 affair One Man s Terrorist Is Another Man s Freedom Fighter about the peace process following the Oslo Accords Our Own Flesh and Blood about Jewish terrorism including the Jewish Underground and the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin Victory Is to See You Suffer about negotiations with the Palestinians during the Second Intifada Collateral Damage about the assassination of Yahya Ayyash and other prominent Hamas militants The Old Man at the End of the Corridor consisting of reflections on the activities of the Shin Bet and their ethical and strategic impact on the State of IsraelThough the film follows a loose chronological order each of these segments also delves into topics such as the controversy surrounding collateral damage the efficacy of torture and the morality of targeted assassination The events described in the film are illustrated with archival footage and computer generated imagery that brings historic photographs to life An example of this is the computer generated reenactment of the Bus 300 incident based on photographs and eyewitness accounts The film s computer animations were created by the French company Mac Guff 11 The filmmakers Edit The director discussing the film at a directors panel at the Telluride Film Festival Left to right Michael Winterbottom Dror Moreh Ben Affleck Annette Insdorf The director of The Gatekeepers Dror Moreh is an experienced cinematographer who served as director of photography on several feature films including Urban Feel and Desperado Square and on a number of documentaries among them One Shot Asesino and Underdog A War Movie His credits as a director include The Rose a 6 part documentary series To Be Mayumana a documentary about an Israeli dance group Under Cover a 4 part docudrama about undercover police officers Sharon a documentary about Prime Minister Ariel Sharon s implementation of the Gaza Disengagement Plan Occupational Hazard a documentary about an Israeli journalist in Iraq and Caesarea an animated short about the history of Caesarea 7 The producer Philippa Kowarsky de is the founder of Cinephil a film sales co productions and distribution company and has taught Media at Israel s Open University and at the Management College in Tel Aviv 7 The interviewees EditThe film consists of interviews with six former Shin Bet leaders Avraham Shalom who ran Shin Bet from 1980 to 1986 served on the team that brought Adolf Eichmann to justice and was forced to resign after ordering the summary execution of two terrorists 12 He was succeeded by Yaakov Peri who was in charge of Shin Bet at the time of the Intifada 13 Carmi Gillon head of Shin Bet from 1994 to 1996 warned that extremists would try to kill Prime Minister Rabin the assassination of Rabin in 1995 shook the agency s reputation and led to Gillon s resignation 14 Ami Ayalon his successor sought to increase security around Israel s leaders 15 Avi Dichter Shin Bet head from 2000 to 2005 was confronted with the Second Intifada 16 He was succeeded by Yuval Diskin who served until 2011 17 Release EditThree years in production the film was first released at the Jerusalem Film Festival in the presence of the Gatekeepers themselves In North America it was released on 31 August 2012 by Sony Picture Classics at the Telluride Film Festival in Colorado 18 in the presence of Errol Morris and a week later 6 September 2012 at the Toronto International Film Festival It was also screened at the New York Film Festival Its first screening in Europe took place at the International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam After a one week release in December 2012 to make it eligible for the Academy Awards a wider theatrical release in North America began on 1 February 2013 When the film was released CNN reported that the former Shin Bet heads had made stunning revelations and that all six argue to varying degrees that the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land is bad for the state of Israel CNN noted that Avraham Shalom says Israel lost touch with how to coexist with the Palestinians as far back as the aftermath of the Six Day War of 1967 and that a central theme of the documentary is the idea that Israel has incredible tactics but lacks long term strategy 19 Moreh is turning The Gatekeepers into a five part series for Israeli television and a book 20 Official Israeli response EditBarak Ravid wrote in Haaretz in March 2013 that there had been much internal debate between Israeli diplomats over the question of whether the film reinforces the anti Israeli narrative in the West or alternatively paints a more complex and positive picture of Israeli society and the internal arguments that take place within it Mario Vargas Llosa praised the film as evidence of the level headedness and clarity of some elements in Israeli society 21 Rafi Gamzu of Israel s Foreign Ministry called the film proof of the highest order of Israeli democracy 21 Israel s deputy consul general in Toronto Hadas Wittenberg Silberstein described it as a powerful film that brings viewers into confrontation with the political security dilemmas Israel faces and that while not completely unequivocal is tendentious in its portrayal of Palestinian suffering 21 Yigal Palmor spokesman of the Israeli Foreign Ministry complained that the justification for the Shin Bet s activity in the territories does not appear in the film While this is justifiable in a film addressed to Israeli audiences who do not have to have the situation explained to them international audiences need more explanation of the background to understand how the three Shin Bet heads who appear in the film went into politics and how they are an inseparable part of a whole policy some of which they criticize from within while agreeing completely with other aspects of it None of them is a rebel who broke the rules and quit or a subversive who tried to carry out a revolution They see themselves as part of the establishment and as they see it the purpose of their criticism is to improve it not to smash it 21 Yaakov Hadas Handelsman Israel s ambassador to Germany has said that he used the screening of the film here as an opportunity to emphasize the strength of Israeli democracy and the doubts that policymakers in Israel must face before they order the killing of terrorists There are not many democracies where one can view such a discussion at all particularly considering Israel s security situation 21 Michael Oren Israel s ambassador in Washington D C came out strongly against the film deploring the way in which Avraham Shalom kind of likens Israel to Nazi Germany Oren said he had been hearing about Jews leaving the screening asking why we should keep supporting Israel 21 CNN reported in January 2013 that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had no plans to see the film 19 Reception EditOn the aggregator Rotten Tomatoes the film holds a 94 positive ratings from 111 critics with an average rating of 8 3 10 The site s consensus reads Strikingly stark brutally honest and rivetingly assembled The Gatekeepers offers essential perspective on a seemingly intractable war from some of the men who fought it 22 The film holds a 91 100 on Metacritic based on 27 reviews indicating universal acclaim 23 The New York Times critic A O Scott called the film the best documentary of 2012 deeming it essential eye opening viewing if you think you understand the Middle East 24 while Times critic Manohla Dargis named it one of the top ten movies of the year 25 Joe Morgenstern film critic for the Wall Street Journal also called The Gatekeepers one of the year s 10 best films The film noted Morgenstern brings together all the surviving directors of Shin Bet Israel s internal security agency What these tough and tough minded men have to say about Israeli politicians and the nation s current stance vis a vis its enemies is stunning and edifying in equal measure 26 The Gatekeepers was also named one of the year s best films by David Edelstein of New York Magazine Bob Mondello of NPR David Denby of the New Yorker Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly Manohla Dargis of the New York Times Peter Rainer of Christian Science Monitor and Todd McCarthy of The Hollywood Reporter 7 The New York Times Edit Jodi Rudoren of the New York Times described the film as offering a disturbing narrative whose message is that The occupation is immoral and perhaps more important ineffective Israel should withdraw from the West Bank as it did from the Gaza Strip in 2005 And the prospect of a two state solution to the Palestinian conflict diminishes daily threatening the future of Israel as a Jewish democracy 20 Haaretz Edit Uri Klein film critic of Haaretz called The Gatekeepers one of the most intelligent mature and self disciplined documentaries that have been made here recently 20 But Aluf Benn the editor of Haaretz wrote in a column that the film is convenient for the Shin Bet painting its chiefs as victims of the political leadership and going light on their own bending of the law 20 The Jerusalem Post Edit In an op ed for The Jerusalem Post Roz Rothstein and Roberta Seid of the advocacy group StandWithUs accused the film s director of intellectual dishonesty and of ignoring history and context saying that while the film tries to portray Israel s antiterrorism policies as counterproductive and cruel the interviews inadvertently tell a different story They wrote that the film fails to acknowledge that Israel instituted Palestinian municipal self government and administration introduced freedom of speech and association and vastly modernized the Palestinian economy as well as Palestinian health welfare and education turning the West Bank and Gaza into the world s fourth fastest growing economy in the 1970s and 1980s 27 In addition charged Rothstein and Seid the viewer of The Gatekeeper never learns that Israel has repeatedly tried to do precisely what Moreh advocates only to have its offers of land for peace rejected repeatedly While Moreh wishes audiences to believe that Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank would bring peace Israel s 2000 pullout from its Lebanese security zone and its 2005 removal of Gaza settlements led to increased threats and terrorism from Iranian proxy Hezbollah in Lebanon and from Iranian client Hamas in Gaza Moreh ignored the hard realities that make the Shin Bet s work so crucial and so heroic 27 Troy criticized the Shin Bet heads for parlay ing their perspective as intelligence heads into preaching and politics and characterized Moreh s placement of Ayalon at the end of the movie as film making sleight of hand that makes his leftist views appear to be the sextet s consensus position Troy also noted what he called the outrage gap while a Jerusalem audience had reacted viscerally to descriptions of the beating deaths of two Palestinian terrorists it seemed blase about photos of suicide bombing carnage Troy argues Rabin s assassin did not murder hope Hamas and Islamic Jihad did Troy expressed pride that these thoughtful tough but human and sensitive heroes helped Israel navigate the agonizing questions the country faces in defending itself from toxic terrorists but added that I know of no Palestinian movies agonizing about similar dilemmas 28 Similarly in an op ed for The Jerusalem Post history professor and Zionist activist Gil Troy wrote that the film showcases Israel s democratic vitality while seeking to undermine it Characterizing the interviewees as blaming Israel and robbing Palestinians of their responsibility culpability and dignity Troy viewed their outspokenness as a product of a voyeuristic Facebook culture Troy argued that spooks should not speak expressing doubt that the past six CIA directors would dare so abuse their positions and the American public s trust 28 Honors and awards EditThe Gatekeepers was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Feature Documentary in 2013 and for the Israeli Film Academy Award for Best Documentary It won the Golden Trailer Award for Best Foreign Documentary Trailer won Special Mention at the Biarritz International Festival of Audiovisual Programming in 2013 won the Los Angeles Film Critics Association award for Best Documentary Non Fiction Film It shared the Cinema for Peace Award for Most Valuable Documentary of the Year in 2013 with Searching for Sugar Man It was named one of the year s top five documentaries by the National Board of Review and won the award for Best Non Fiction Film from the National Society of Film Critics Awards It won second place in the Best Non Fiction Film category at the New York Film Critics Circle Awards It was nominated for the PGA Award for Outstanding Producer of Documentary Theatrical Motion Pictures and for Best Documentary at the Satellite Awards 29 better source needed It was also nominated for Best Documentary Feature Film at the 7th Asia Pacific Screen Awards 30 See also EditThe Law in These PartsReferences Edit פרחומובקי מרט שומרי הסף דוקומנטרי חשוב ומטלטל Walla Retrieved 12 January 2013 The Gatekeepers 2013 Box Office Mojo Retrieved 5 November 2013 Gatekeepers the Film Retrieved 13 December 2012 Oscars 2013 Complete list of nominees The Los Angeles Times January 10 2013 Retrieved 10 January 2013 Interview with the director YouTube Retrieved 13 December 2012 Wool Danny An Interview with Dror Moreh Retrieved 14 December 2012 a b c d e The Gatekeepers A Sony Pictures Classics Release Sony Classics Retrieved 28 October 2013 Horn John 1 February 2013 Dror Moreh s The Gatekeepers sheds light on Israel s Shin Bet Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2 February 2013 The Q amp A Dror Moreh Power is in their hands The Economist 9 April 2013 Retrieved 28 October 2013 Ginsburg Mitch How I persuaded six intelligence chiefs to pour out their hearts Times of Israel Retrieved 28 October 2013 Mac Guff website Retrieved 15 December 2012 AVRAHAM SHALOM 1980 1986 The Gatekeeprs Retrieved 28 October 2013 YAAKOV PERI 1988 1995 The Gatekeepers Retrieved 28 October 2013 CARMI GILLON 1994 1996 The Gatekeepers Retrieved 28 October 2013 AMI AYALON 1996 2000 The Gatekeepers Retrieved 28 October 2013 AVI DICHTER 2000 2005 The Gatekeepers Retrieved 28 October 2013 YUVAL DISKIN 2005 2011 The Gatekeepers Retrieved 28 October 2013 Telluride review Retrieved 13 December 2012 a b Burke Samuel 28 January 2013 Six Israeli security chiefs stun the world CNN Retrieved 28 October 2013 a b c d Rudoren Jodi 25 January 2013 Most Israelis Are Not Listening Gatekeepers Oscar Nominee Has Muted Reaction in Israel New York Times Retrieved 28 October 2013 a b c d e f Ravid Barak In a flurry of telegrams Israeli diplomats respond to The Gatekeepers Haaretz Retrieved 28 October 2013 The Gatekeepers at Rotten Tomatoes The Gatekeepers Reviews Metacritic Retrieved March 18 2016 Scott A O December 14 2012 25 Favorites From A Year When 10 Aren t Enough The New York Times Retrieved December 14 2012 Dargis Manohla 14 December 2012 Against the Odds Smart Films Thrive at the Box Office New York Times Retrieved 16 December 2012 Morgenstern Joe December 27 2012 Welcome Fruits of a Late Harvest The Wall Street Journal Retrieved December 27 2012 a b Rothstein Roz The dishonesty of The Gatekeepers The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 28 October 2013 a b Troy Gil The Gatekeepers Speaking spooks coup d etat Retrieved 28 October 2013 The Gatekeepers 2012 Awards IMDb Retrieved 28 October 2013 Winners amp Nominees 2013 asiapacificscreenacademy com Archived from the original on 2013 12 20 Retrieved 2013 12 19 External links EditOfficial website The Gatekeepers at IMDb Interview with Dror Moreh at the New York Film Festival The Gatekeepers streaming via SBS On Demand Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Gatekeepers film amp oldid 1123525745, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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