Rabin, the Last Day

Summary

Rabin, the Last Day is a 2015 Israeli-French docudrama political thriller film[3][4] directed by Amos Gitai. It was selected to compete for the Golden Lion at the 72nd Venice International Film Festival.[5]

Rabin, the Last Day
French release poster
Directed byAmos Gitai
Written byAmos Gitai
Marie-José Sanselme
Produced byJean-Baptiste Dupont
Cyril Colbeau-Justin
Sylvie Pialat
Francesco Di Silvio
Amos Gitai
CinematographyEric Gautier
Edited byYuval Orr
Tahel Sofer
Isabelle Ingold
Music byAmit Poznansky
Production
companies
LGM Cinéma
Les Films du Worso
France 2 Cinéma
Orange Studio
Hamon Hafakot
Agav Films
Distributed byLe Pacte (France)
Release dates
  • 7 September 2015 (2015-09-07) (Venice)
  • 4 November 2015 (2015-11-04) (Israel)
  • 16 December 2015 (2015-12-16) (France)
Running time
153 minutes[1]
CountriesIsrael
France
LanguagesHebrew
English
Budget$4.6 million[2]

Premise edit

The film depicts the events surrounding the final days and assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.

Cast edit

  • Yitzhak Hiskiya as chairman
  • Pini Mittelman as commission member
  • Michael Warshaviak as commission member
  • Einat Weizman as commission lawyer
  • Yogev Yefet as Rabin's murderer
  • Tomer Sisley as Rabin's driver
  • Rotem Keinan as commission lawyer
  • Tomer Russo as hospital director
  • Uri Gottlieb as attorney general
  • Ruti Asarsai as police spokeswoman
  • Dalia Shimko as psychiatrist
  • Gdalya Besser as police officer
  • Odelia More as teacher
  • Eldad Prywes as Rabin's bodyguard
  • Shalom Shmuelov as intelligence officer
  • Mali Levi as journalist
  • Stephen D. Root as journalist
  • Liron Levo as soldier
  • Yona Rosenkier as rallye driver
  • Yael Abecassis as interviewer
  • Shimon Peres as himself

Reception edit

Rabin, the Last Day has a score of 61% on Metacritic.[6] The Playlist gave the film a grade of B+, describing it as "deeply absorbing and intelligent".[7] The Hollywood Reporter wrote that the film "benefits from fine technical work throughout, from Eric Gautier's sober cinematography to a soulful musical theme by Amit Poznansky".[4] Jonathan Romney of Screendaily considered the film as one of Gitai's "most ambitious and compelling works yet", noting that the film's "slow, deliberate approach makes for a detached air which allows Gitai to show events with distinct clarity".[8]

References edit

  1. ^ "Venezia 72". Venezia.
  2. ^ "French Companies Back Amos Gitai's New Drama". Variety. 8 November 2014.
  3. ^ "Venice entry 'Rabin, The Last Day' probes an Israeli trauma". Associated Press.
  4. ^ a b "'Rabin, The Last Day': Venice Review". The Hollywood Reporter. 7 September 2015.
  5. ^ "Venice Film Festival Unveils Star-Studded Lineup for 72nd Edition". The Hollywood Reporter. 29 July 2015.
  6. ^ "Rabin, the Last Day". Metacritic.
  7. ^ "Venice Review: Amos Gitai's Powerful, Political, Provocative 'Rabin: The Last Day'". The Playlist. 9 September 2015.
  8. ^ "'Rabin, The Last Day': Review". Screendaily.

External links edit

  • Rabin, the Last Day at IMDb  

Reviews

  • A. O. Scott. (January 28, 2016).Review: Amos Gitai’s ‘Rabin, the Last Day’ Looks Back in Anguish. New York Times.
  • J. Hoberman (January 26, 2016). ‘Rabin, The Last Day’ makes Oliver Stone's ‘JFK’ look stone-cold sober. Tablet
  • Brandon Judell (January 2, 2016). Amos Gitai: With Rabin, The Last Day , Israel’s Godard Takes on Netanyahu, Extremist Rabbis, and an Artist’s Duty. HuffPost.
  • Jill Lawless (8 September 2015). Venice entry ‘Rabin, The Last Day’ probes an Israeli trauma. Times of Israel.
  • Thomas L. Friedman (September 23, 2015).
  • Politicians Seeing Evil, Hearing Evil, Speaking Evil. New York Times.