Login Form






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Some sections of this Web require you to login. It will also get you some nice prizes. It's painless.

Other Reviews

E! Online (US) - Movie Reviews
The Freshest Flicks to hit the Cineplex
EW.com: Reviews -- Movies, DVD, music, books
Reviews from Entertainment Weekly's EW.com

In the Photo Gallery

Home arrow now playing (film) arrow Jellyfish (Zeitgeist Films, NR)
Jellyfish (Zeitgeist Films, NR) Print E-mail
Written by Sarah Boslaugh   
Friday, 20 June 2008
Digg!

film_jellyfish_sm.jpgThis type of film makes great award bait, allowing critics and audiences alike to congratulate themselves for spotting the connections the filmmakers have so cleverly planted throughout.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jellyfish, the debut feature film of Israeli directors Shira Geffen and Etgar Keret, has one of those puzzle-piece plots in which the lives of seemingly unrelated characters have a surprising number of interconnections. Batia (Sarah Adler) is a caterer at Karen's (Noa Knoller) wedding, which is also attended by Joy (Ma-Nenita De Latorre), a Filipino home-care attendant for one of the guests. Joy phones her family from a pay phone under a poster of Batia's mother, a prominent charity fundraiser. And so on. The connections are too many to enumerate or to be credible in any universe but the one created by the directors for this particular film.

This type of film makes great award bait, allowing critics and audiences alike to congratulate themselves for spotting the connections the filmmakers have so cleverly planted throughout. Case in point: the 2006 Best Picture Oscar for Crash. Jellyfish hasn't fared badly in the award department, either; it won the Camera d'Or (for best feature film debut) and SACD Screenwriting Award at the 2007 Cannes Festival.

As a viewer, you have to be willing to go with a filmmaker's initial premise or you might just as well stay home, and this is particularly true with puzzle-piece movies. Although I'm no great fan of obvious puzzle plots (outside of Agatha Christie) I did enjoy Jellyfish, primarily because the contrivances serve as a device to allow the filmmakers to tell the stories of a number of different characters who would otherwise have no business being in the same film. Viewed from that perspective, Jellyfish is a successful film that centers on the stories of three women, none of whom are particularly remarkable but each of whom is unique.

The most interesting story concerns Batia, the sad-sack daughter of successful parents who gets dumped by her boyfriend and fired from her catering job, and lives in a dreary flat with a leaky roof. She drifts passively through life like a jellyfish washed up on the beach by the tides, until one day a silent little girl walks out of the sea and the two outsiders form a mystical bond.

Karen breaks her leg at her wedding reception (don't ask), forcing the cancellation of a planned Caribbean honeymoon in favor of a stay at a Tel Aviv hotel. For reasons never explored, Karen spends the relocated honeymoon complaining about everything and neglecting her new husband (Gera Sandler), which not surprisingly encourages him to seek more pleasant company elsewhere.

Joy offers a refreshing contrast to the self-centered behavior of many of the Israelis in Jellyfish. She's a Filipino who supports her son by doing work the Israelis don't want to do, like caring for their cranky elderly parents. Her outsider's perspective offers a less-than-flattering view of some aspects of Israeli society, including racism and unmotivated cruelty toward outsiders.

All the actors are good and the technical elements of Jellyfish, particularly the cinematography by Antoine Heberle, are outstanding. It was filmed on location in Tel Aviv, but there's very little exploitation of that specific setting. This is a disappointing choice for those of us who like a little travelogue in our foreign films, but does place the emphasis squarely on the interactions among characters while making the point that similar stories could take place anywhere. | Sarah Boslaugh





Reddit!Del.icio.us!Google!Facebook!Slashdot!Netscape!Technorati!StumbleUpon!Newsvine!Furl!Fark!Blogmarks!Yahoo!Ma.gnolia!Squidoo!BlogMemes!Free social bookmarking plugins and extensions for Joomla! websites!
Comments
Add NewSearch
Only registered users can write comments!

Related Items:
An Evening with Patti Lupone and Mandy Patinkin | 04.02.09
12 (Sony Pictures Classics, PG-13)
A Christmas Tale (IFC Films, NR)
A Girl Cut in Two (IFC Films, NR)
A Jihad for Love (First Run Features, NR)
A Swiss Rebel (Frameline, NR)
Absurdistan (First Run Features, NR)
Agent Orange: A Personal Requiem (First Run/Icarus, NR)
Alexander McCall Smith | The Miracle at Speedy Motors (Anchor)
All About Steve (Fox 2000, PG-13)
Always Been a Rambler (Arhoolie, NR)
Amartya Sen, ed | AIDS Sutra: Untold Stories From India
American Harmony (This Is Just a Test Productions, NR)
Anger Me (Frameline, NR)
Anita O'Day: The Life of a Jazz Singer (AOD Productions, NR)
Another Gay Sequel: Gays Gone Wild (TLA Releasing, NR)
Antichrist (IFC Films, NR)
Ballerina (First Run Features, NR)
Beauty in Trouble (Menemsha Films, NR)
Beauty in Trouble (Menemsha Films, NR)
Bigger, Stronger, Faster (Magnolia Pictures, PG-13)
Brick Lane (Sony Pictures Classics, PG-13)
Caligula (Image Entertainment, NR)
Call Me Troy, transparent (Frameline, NR)
Chelsea on the Rocks (Aliquot Films, R)
Cherry Blossoms (Strand Releasing, NR)
Chris & Don: A Love Story (Zeitgeist Films, NR)
Citizen Jane Film Festival | 10.16-18. 09
City of Ember (Walden Media, PG)
David Garrett | 10.21.09
Deadgirl (Dark Sky Films, NR)
Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father (MSNBC Films, NR)
Departures (Regent Releasing, NR)
Dolly Parton | 9 to 5 and Odd Jobs(RCA Nashville/Legacy)
Douglas McEwan | The Q Guide to Classic Monster Movies
Dreams Deferred: The Sakia Gunn Film Project (Third World Newsreel, NR)
Earth Days (Zeitgeist Films, NR)
Elsa and Fred (DistriMax, PG-13)
Enlighten Up! (Balcony Releasing, NR)
Ernest V. Stoneman | The Unsung Father of Country Music (Long Gone Sound)
Everlasting Moments (IFC, NR)
Every Little Step (Sony Pictures Classics, PG-13)
Fear(s) of the Dark (IFC Films, NR)
Filth and Wisdom (IFC Films, NR)
Four Wives - One Man (Women Make Movies, 2007)
George Johnson | The Ten Most Beautiful Experiments
Glen Campbell | Meet Glen Campbell (Capitol)
Gomorrah (IFC Films, NR)
Happy-Go-Lucky (Miramax, R)
Henry Poole Is Here (Overture Films, PG)
Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer blu-ray (Dark Sky Films, NR)
How to Cook Your Life (Roadside Attractions, PG-13)
I Served the King of England (Sony Pictures Classics, R)
Ian Frazier | Lamentations of the Father
Il Divo (Music Box Films, NR)
In the Loop (IFC Films, NR)
James Monaco | How to Read a Film: Movies, Media and Beyond
James Wood | How Fiction Works (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Johnny Cash | Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison (Columbia/Legacy)
Kristin Chenoweth | 01.10.09
Lakeview Terrace (Overbrook Ent,, PG-13)
Lemon Tree (IFC Films, NR)
Live and Become (Menemsha Films, NR)
Lorna's Silence (Sony Pictures Classics, R)
Lou Reed | Berlin: Live at St. Ann's Warehouse (Matador)
Manda Bala (City Light Pictures, NR)
Marc Augé | Casablanca: Movies and Memory
Max Brockman, ed. | What's Next? Dispatches on the Future of Science (Vintage)
Mister Lonely (IFC Films, NR)
Monkey: Journey to the West (XL Recordings)
Moon (Sony Pictures Classics, R)
More Than a Game (Lionsgate, PG)
My Life in Ruins (Fox Searchlight, PG-13)
No Impact Man (Oscilloscope Pictures, NR)
NOFX Backstage Passport (Sharp Entertainment/Fat Wreck Chords)
Nothing Like the Holidays (Overture Films, PG-13)
Once Upon a Time... Rome, Open City (First Run/Icarus Films, NR)
Paper Dolls (Strand Releasing, NR)
Paris (IFC Films, NR)
Paris 36 (Sony Pictures Classics, PG-13)
Paul Auster | Man in the Dark (Picador)
Phèdre (National Theatre)
Phil Hall | The History of Independent Cinema
Randy Charles Epping | The 21st-Century Economy: A Beginner's Guide
Rashevski's Tango (Menemsha Films, NR)
Refusenik (Foundation for Documentary Projects, NR)
Revanche (Janus Films, NR)
Richard A. Isay, M.D. | Being Homosexual/Becoming Gay
Richard Lingeman | The Nation Guide to the Nation
Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired (Thinkfilm, NR)
Roy Orbison: The Soul of Rock and Roll (Monument/Orbison Records/Legacy)
Santana | Santana III: Legacy Edition (Sony Legacy)
Séraphine (Music Box Films, NR)
Sin Nombre (Focus Features, R)
SLIFF 2007 Preview | Boslaugh
SLIFF 2008 Preview
Somers Town (Film Movement, NR)
Stargate Infinity: The Complete Series (Shout! Factory, G)
Still Walking (IFC Films, NR)
Summer Hours (IFC Films, NR)
Television Under the Swastika (First Run Features, 1999)
The Boys are Back (Miramax, PG-13)
The Children of Huang Shi (Sony Pictures Classics, R)
The Class (Sony Pictures Classics, PG-13)
The Country Teacher (Film Movement, NR)
The Dave Brubeck Quartet | Time Out (Columbia)
The Day the Earth Stood Still (20th Century Fox, PG-13)
The Duchess of Langeais (IFC Films, NR)
The Edge of Heaven (Strand Releasing, NR)
The Edge of Love (Capitol Films, NR)
The Hurt Locker (First Run Features, NR)
The Johnny Cash Christmas Specials, 1978 and 1979 (Shout! Factory, NR)
The Last Mistress (IFC Films, NR)
The Stoning of Soraya M. (Roadside Attractions, R)
The Wild Child (The Film Desk, G)
The Women (Picturehouse, PG-13)
The Wrestler (Fox Searchlight, R)
Three Japanese DVDs (Captive Files I, Paradise, and Operation: Pussycat)
Tokyo Sonata (Regent Releasing, PG-13)
Tokyo! (Liberation Entertainment, NR)
Tosca (Metropolitan Opera, NR)
Traitor (Overture Films, PG-13)
Trumbo (Goldwyn, PG-13)
Tulpan (Zeitgeist Films, NR)
Were the World Mine (SPEAKproductions, NR)
Whatever Works (Sony Pictures Classics, PG-13)
Willie Nelson | Naked Willie (RCA/Legacy Media)
World's Greatest Dad (Magnolia Pictures, R)
 
Sponsor Pod3
 
Metromix
mmmmm. burritos
ISC
Paste
ichannelonline