Kibbutz (film) explained

Kibbutz
Director:Racheli Schwartz
Producer:Gal Schwartz
Cinematography:Roni Katzanelson
Eyal Zehav
Editing:Yael Perlov
Distributor:Seventh Art
Runtime:54 minutes
Country:Israel
Language:Hebrew

Kibbutz (he|קיבוץ) is a 2005 Israeli documentary directed by Racheli Schwartz about Kibbutz Hulata, where she lived for 30 years.

Schwartz follows various members, including her own family, over the course of five years, tracing the stages of grieving and disillusionment that follow the kibbutz's economic collapse and disintegration as the community reduces its communal commitment to its members. Three older women from the founding generation become symbols of the kibbutz's lost ideals and abandoned history, as they die off, one by one.

For the director, the narrative is a very personal story and admits early on that “making the movie helped me to decide to stay.”[1]

Synopsis

Five years of documenting the director's kibbutz during a severe crisis that shook its foundations and drove people to extreme actions. The film tells the story of the downfall of a single kibbutz through the perspectives of several characters, including three close friends, founding members of the kibbutz, who, at the end of their lives, are forced to witness its collapse. They roam the kibbutz grounds on motorized carts, venturing out into the beautiful, steadfast nature.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Film Review: Kibbutz. November 8, 2012.