Three Days and a Child

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Three Days and a Child
File:Three Days and a Child Poster.jpg
Film poster
Directed by Uri Zohar
Produced by Amatsia Hiuni
Written by Dahn Ben Amotz
Uri Zohar
Amatsia Hiuni
Starring Oded Kotler
Music by Dov Seltzer
Cinematography David Gurfinkel
Edited by Jacques Ehrlich
Distributed by Ergo Media (US)
Release dates
1967
Running time
90 minutes
Country Israel
Language Hebrew

Three Days and a Child (Hebrew: <templatestyles src="Script/styles_hebrew.css" />שלושה ימים וילד‎, translit. Shlosha Yamim Veyeled) is a 1967 Israeli drama film directed by Uri Zohar. It is a modernist adaptation of a short story by the same name by A. B. Yehoshua and draws on the techniques and sensibilities of French New Wave cinema.[1]

Plot

Eli (Oded Kotler) is a young graduate student in math who lives with his girlfriend in Jerusalem. He agrees to babysit Zvi (Illi Gorlitzky), the young son of his beloved former girlfriend, Noa (Judith Solé), and her husband. Eli and Zvi spend three days touring Jerusalem, as Eli relives painful memories of his life with Noa on the kibbutz and her subsequent rejection of him. Uncertain if he is the child's father, Eli's feelings towards Zvi are ambivalent and for unexplained reasons (perhaps resentment, anger, jealousy, alienation, boredom, or guilt) he plays dangerous games with the boy.

Cast

Themes

According to one student of Israeli film, Three Days and a Child "ostensibly . . .sets up a dichotomy between [Eli's] alienated life in Jerusalem and the kibbutz idyll. His life in the city is characterized by loneliness, despair, estrangement from his lover and a mise-en-scène that stresses desolation, graves and thorns. In the hero’s consciousness, his kibbutz past is a memory of first love, flowering fields and flowing water. Yet . . . this perception of the protagonist is not so clear cut: life in the kibbutz wasn’t so harmonious, whereas his life in Jerusalem was not so terrible."[2]

Critical reception

Three Days and a Child was a great success, critically and commercially, selling some 308,000 tickets.[1] It was entered into the 1967 Cannes Film Festival where it was nominated for Best Film and Oded Kotler won the award for Best Actor. [3]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Judd Ne'eman, "Israeli Cinema," in Oliver Leaman, ed., Companion Encyclopedia of Middle Eastern and North African Film (Routledge, 2001), p. 311.
  2. Eldad Kedem, The Kibbutz and Israeli Cinema: Deterritorializing Representation and Ideology (PhD, University of Amsterdam, 2007), p. 78 (retrieved November 12, 2012).
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External links