Kadosh
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Kadosh
  • Ghosts
  • Disgusted
  • heart breaker
  • What Is Truly Sacred? Let the Viewer Decide ...
Kadosh
Starring: Yaël Abecassis , Yussuf Abu-Warda , Meital Barda , Samuel Calderon , and Yoram Hattab
Manufacturer: Kino Video
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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  5. A Life Apart - Hasidism in America A Life Apart - Hasidism in America

ASIN: B0000541TP
Release Date: 2000-11-28

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Kadosh.......2007-07-13

A beautifully realized and sensitive drama, Amos Gitai's controversial "Kadosh" observes a little-seen religious community where women's roles are severely restricted to child-bearing and strict obedience to their husbands. Love is both triumphant and tragic in Gitai's story, the ultimate cause of dark disruptions. Abecassis and Hattab inhabit their roles with deep feeling, making us believe in their mutual respect and reverence for tradition. Barda is also wonderful as the younger woman whose need for escape materializes when her new husband proves incapable of warmth or tenderness. Somber yet hopeful, "Kadosh" is a marvelous Israeli gem.

5 out of 5 stars Ghosts.......2007-04-20

Rivka (Yaël Abecassis), Meir (Yoram Hattab) and Malka (Meital Barda) walk through the frames of Amos Gitai's "Kadosh" as if they were ghosts: human beings without a physical presence, without a solid place on which to land their phosphorescent bodies, souls and hearts. Their haunting unhappiness with their lot in life makes them transparent. You can see their hearts slowly break as they go about the business of life.
Set in the ultra-Orthodox quarter of Jerusalem called Mea Shearim, "Kadosh" (meaning "sacred") studies two sisters, Rivka and Malka, enduring the ironhanded restrictions of their tiny, airtight society. Director Gitai fastidiously features the endless rituals of the sisters lives: everything from how tea is taken to how love is made. Then one day someone sends a note to Rivka, happily and lovingly married to Meir for ten years...but childless, stating "A woman without a child is no better than dead." And thus begins the forced and tragic separation of Rivka and Meir.
Malka is younger than Rivka and questions everything about the Orthodox way. She is also in love with a Mea Shearim deserter, Yaakov (Sami Hori) but is forced into a loveless, arranged marriage with a blustering bully: the scene of their first night of marriage is brutal and frankly disgusting with Malka's beautiful spirit and life force seemingly extinguished in the process.
"Kadosh" is very still, very quiet, claustrophobic. The only sounds evident are the sounds of hearts and souls in anguish as they are being crushed and strangled from the inside.

1 out of 5 stars Disgusted.......2007-01-23

First off, it was a bad movie-- scenes were too long, little character introduction, development, etc.

However, I am writing to express my disgust and devastation at a very different issue: Jewish Orthodoxy. Let's just start by saying that there were many, many unimportant details of Jewish Law that the Producer/Director royally messed up. If they weren't even familiar with laws such as the opening scene of waking-up rituals, then how much more so would they be prone to fallacy in their depiction of the real underlying issues that they were trying to explore?!

All I can say is that there were way too many mistakes-- small and large-- to make any point whatsoever. If you want to see a good film about Orthodoxy-- and issues of childlessness, see Ushpizin.

3 out of 5 stars heart breaker.......2006-09-07

I just saw this movie tonight. All I can tell you is it was a heart breaker. Rivka and Meir had a loving marriage until the Rabbi ruined it. Malka was doomed from the start. Her husband was a disgusting, frightening, sick man. The wedding night scene was a nightmare for Malka. This man was an animal. Absolutely an uncaring lover. He never heard of the word foreplay? Guess not. He was extremely rough on their first time lovemaking. (she was a virgin) It turned my stomach. The ending will definitely call for tissues. This movie was not rated... but deserves an R. Not for teens, or children.

4 out of 5 stars What Is Truly Sacred? Let the Viewer Decide ..........2006-07-12

Amos Gitai sheds light on how stifling and confining it may be for some women living within a Hasidic religious community. It looks nearly impossible for them to live fulfilling and joyous lives. The film has a universal message which can apply to any religion or community which influences and advises its members in personal life matters that are, in this viewer's opinion, best left to be determined for one's self. In this film, two sisters lose their self-determination and are sadly compelled to follow the norms of the community ... just because they are women ... whose roles are proscribed. They are to obey the man and be dependent rather than self-determining individuals. The community is run by men who define behavioral norms based on passages from the Torah. The rabbi interprets how these passages are to be understood in modern life. The community influences the lives of its members to a degree most viewers would find highly objectionable and down right intrusive. Whether or not this is a truthful depiction of the Hasidic way of life is unclear to this viewer but the point which is crystal clear by the director is that some areas of life are *indeed* *sacred* and are no one's business but one's own. This is a totally compelling and fascinating film in how it unravels, unbalances and destroys the lives of an apparently happily married couple who are childless after 10 years of marriage. Both Meir, the husband, and Rivka, the wife, are heart-broken after the rabbi at the Yeshiva compels Meir to consider divorcing Rivka in favor of an arranged marriage ... to produce offspring ... evidently his "sacred" duty to G-d. It is not at all clear why *only* Rivka is blamed for this flaw ...

The klezmer music at the beginning and throughout much of the film proclaims the joys of life and its meandering mournful paths as well ... the sadder tunes reveal the future anguish of Meir and Rivka as they sort out their problems within the expectations of their religion. Sadly, Malka who is Rivka's sister is not looking forward to an arranged marriage to Yosef because Malka has a boyfriend Yakov who had left the Yeshiva and religious community to pursue a secular life. He sang a haunting tune in a nightclub about how love can not be fulfilled in this world but instead he will meet his lover in the next one ... Malka obeys her parents and marries Yosef but her marriage life is a sham despite going to ritual baths to become spiritually more clean and praying as required. She follows her heart and breaks her sacred marriage bond by secretly meeting with Yakov for a tryst. The film shows Yosef to be an unthinking and insensitive man which is not entirely his fault but he is also brutish which again, he may not be able to change. He entered into a marriage for the wrong reasons - just as Malka became an obedient daughter rather than showing courage and breaking with tradition to do what is in her own best interests to follow her heart and mind ... even if it meant being banished from the Hasidic community. This film does indeed film less than joyful moments in the lives of its characters, the clothes and colors worn by the women, the older brick buildings and narrow passageways in the streets ... all are symbolic of a lifestyle which makes the insides of its members crumble and breakdown ... Who should decide in the final analysis of what is important in life? Erika Borsos (pepper flower)
Lost City [HD DVD]
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • An underrated film now available in HD!!!
Lost City [HD DVD]
Starring: Steven Bauer , Richard Bradford , Benjamin Bratt , William Marquez , and Julio Oscar Mechoso
Director: Andy Garcia
Manufacturer: Magnolia
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: HD DVD

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ASIN: B000PKG8U6
Release Date: 2007-05-01

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars An underrated film now available in HD!!!.......2007-07-13

First off, this movie is well done. Sure Bill Murray's character seems random, and I wish Dustin Hoffman would have had a bigger role, but still, it is a beautiful film. Andy Garcia captured a Casablanca-ish feel and the Cinematography is top-notch. I have a copy of the film on DVD and this HD-DVD is a BIG improvement. There are some minor artifacts in a couple of scenes, but that's it(I have 50 inch 1080P LED DLP). Check it out.
The Lost City [Blu-ray]
Average customer rating: Not rated
    The Lost City [Blu-ray]
    Starring: Steven Bauer , Richard Bradford , Benjamin Bratt , William Marquez , and Julio Oscar Mechoso
    Director: Andy Garcia
    Manufacturer: Magnolia
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: Blu-ray

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    ASIN: B000OPO61U
    Release Date: 2007-05-01
    Kadosh [Region 2]
    Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    • Kadosh
    • Ghosts
    • Disgusted
    • heart breaker
    • What Is Truly Sacred? Let the Viewer Decide ...
    Kadosh [Region 2]

    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

    GeneralGeneral | Drama | Genres | DVD | Video
    ( K )( K ) | Titles | Features | DVD | Video
    Similar Items:
    1. Ushpizin Ushpizin
    2. Time of Favor Time of Favor
    3. Late Marriage Late Marriage
    4. Left Luggage Left Luggage
    5. A Life Apart - Hasidism in America A Life Apart - Hasidism in America

    ASIN: B000058DV5

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Kadosh.......2007-07-13

    A beautifully realized and sensitive drama, Amos Gitai's controversial "Kadosh" observes a little-seen religious community where women's roles are severely restricted to child-bearing and strict obedience to their husbands. Love is both triumphant and tragic in Gitai's story, the ultimate cause of dark disruptions. Abecassis and Hattab inhabit their roles with deep feeling, making us believe in their mutual respect and reverence for tradition. Barda is also wonderful as the younger woman whose need for escape materializes when her new husband proves incapable of warmth or tenderness. Somber yet hopeful, "Kadosh" is a marvelous Israeli gem.

    5 out of 5 stars Ghosts.......2007-04-20

    Rivka (Yaël Abecassis), Meir (Yoram Hattab) and Malka (Meital Barda) walk through the frames of Amos Gitai's "Kadosh" as if they were ghosts: human beings without a physical presence, without a solid place on which to land their phosphorescent bodies, souls and hearts. Their haunting unhappiness with their lot in life makes them transparent. You can see their hearts slowly break as they go about the business of life.
    Set in the ultra-Orthodox quarter of Jerusalem called Mea Shearim, "Kadosh" (meaning "sacred") studies two sisters, Rivka and Malka, enduring the ironhanded restrictions of their tiny, airtight society. Director Gitai fastidiously features the endless rituals of the sisters lives: everything from how tea is taken to how love is made. Then one day someone sends a note to Rivka, happily and lovingly married to Meir for ten years...but childless, stating "A woman without a child is no better than dead." And thus begins the forced and tragic separation of Rivka and Meir.
    Malka is younger than Rivka and questions everything about the Orthodox way. She is also in love with a Mea Shearim deserter, Yaakov (Sami Hori) but is forced into a loveless, arranged marriage with a blustering bully: the scene of their first night of marriage is brutal and frankly disgusting with Malka's beautiful spirit and life force seemingly extinguished in the process.
    "Kadosh" is very still, very quiet, claustrophobic. The only sounds evident are the sounds of hearts and souls in anguish as they are being crushed and strangled from the inside.

    1 out of 5 stars Disgusted.......2007-01-23

    First off, it was a bad movie-- scenes were too long, little character introduction, development, etc.

    However, I am writing to express my disgust and devastation at a very different issue: Jewish Orthodoxy. Let's just start by saying that there were many, many unimportant details of Jewish Law that the Producer/Director royally messed up. If they weren't even familiar with laws such as the opening scene of waking-up rituals, then how much more so would they be prone to fallacy in their depiction of the real underlying issues that they were trying to explore?!

    All I can say is that there were way too many mistakes-- small and large-- to make any point whatsoever. If you want to see a good film about Orthodoxy-- and issues of childlessness, see Ushpizin.

    3 out of 5 stars heart breaker.......2006-09-07

    I just saw this movie tonight. All I can tell you is it was a heart breaker. Rivka and Meir had a loving marriage until the Rabbi ruined it. Malka was doomed from the start. Her husband was a disgusting, frightening, sick man. The wedding night scene was a nightmare for Malka. This man was an animal. Absolutely an uncaring lover. He never heard of the word foreplay? Guess not. He was extremely rough on their first time lovemaking. (she was a virgin) It turned my stomach. The ending will definitely call for tissues. This movie was not rated... but deserves an R. Not for teens, or children.

    4 out of 5 stars What Is Truly Sacred? Let the Viewer Decide ..........2006-07-12

    Amos Gitai sheds light on how stifling and confining it may be for some women living within a Hasidic religious community. It looks nearly impossible for them to live fulfilling and joyous lives. The film has a universal message which can apply to any religion or community which influences and advises its members in personal life matters that are, in this viewer's opinion, best left to be determined for one's self. In this film, two sisters lose their self-determination and are sadly compelled to follow the norms of the community ... just because they are women ... whose roles are proscribed. They are to obey the man and be dependent rather than self-determining individuals. The community is run by men who define behavioral norms based on passages from the Torah. The rabbi interprets how these passages are to be understood in modern life. The community influences the lives of its members to a degree most viewers would find highly objectionable and down right intrusive. Whether or not this is a truthful depiction of the Hasidic way of life is unclear to this viewer but the point which is crystal clear by the director is that some areas of life are *indeed* *sacred* and are no one's business but one's own. This is a totally compelling and fascinating film in how it unravels, unbalances and destroys the lives of an apparently happily married couple who are childless after 10 years of marriage. Both Meir, the husband, and Rivka, the wife, are heart-broken after the rabbi at the Yeshiva compels Meir to consider divorcing Rivka in favor of an arranged marriage ... to produce offspring ... evidently his "sacred" duty to G-d. It is not at all clear why *only* Rivka is blamed for this flaw ...

    The klezmer music at the beginning and throughout much of the film proclaims the joys of life and its meandering mournful paths as well ... the sadder tunes reveal the future anguish of Meir and Rivka as they sort out their problems within the expectations of their religion. Sadly, Malka who is Rivka's sister is not looking forward to an arranged marriage to Yosef because Malka has a boyfriend Yakov who had left the Yeshiva and religious community to pursue a secular life. He sang a haunting tune in a nightclub about how love can not be fulfilled in this world but instead he will meet his lover in the next one ... Malka obeys her parents and marries Yosef but her marriage life is a sham despite going to ritual baths to become spiritually more clean and praying as required. She follows her heart and breaks her sacred marriage bond by secretly meeting with Yakov for a tryst. The film shows Yosef to be an unthinking and insensitive man which is not entirely his fault but he is also brutish which again, he may not be able to change. He entered into a marriage for the wrong reasons - just as Malka became an obedient daughter rather than showing courage and breaking with tradition to do what is in her own best interests to follow her heart and mind ... even if it meant being banished from the Hasidic community. This film does indeed film less than joyful moments in the lives of its characters, the clothes and colors worn by the women, the older brick buildings and narrow passageways in the streets ... all are symbolic of a lifestyle which makes the insides of its members crumble and breakdown ... Who should decide in the final analysis of what is important in life? Erika Borsos (pepper flower)
    Amos Gitai 4-DVD Collection 1 (Zihron Devarim / Yom Yom / Kadosh / Milim) [ NON-USA FORMAT, PAL, Reg.2 Import - Italy ]
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Amos Gitai 4-DVD Collection 1 (Zihron Devarim / Yom Yom / Kadosh / Milim) [ NON-USA FORMAT, PAL, Reg.2 Import - Italy ]
      Director: Amos Gitai
      Manufacturer: Raro Video
      ProductGroup: DVD
      Binding: DVD

      GenresGenres | DVD | Video | Action & Adventure | African American Cinema | Animation | Anime & Manga | Art House & International | Classics | Comedy | Cult Movies | Documentary | Drama | Educational | Fitness & Yoga | Gay & Lesbian | Horror | Kids & Family | Military & War | Music Video & Concerts | Musicals & Performing Arts | Mystery & Suspense | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Special Interests | Sports | Television | Westerns
      ASIN: B000PRN68G

      Product Description

      "Italy released, PAL/Region 2 DVD: it WILL NOT play on standard US DVD player. You need multi-region PAL/NTSC DVD player to view it in USA/Canada. LANGUAGES: Hebrew (Dolby Digital 2.0), English (Subtitles), Italian (Subtitles), WIDESCREEN (1.85:1), SYNOPSIS: Zihron Devarim (Things): This Israeli drama is based on Yaakov Shabtai's novel Past Continuous and tells the story of three men living in Tel Aviv. Caesar loves his wife and son; he is devastated that they have separated. Now he leads a miserable life in a run-down apartment shared with the sluggardly Israel, a dead-beat musician... Yom Yom (Day After Day): Amos Gitai directed this Israeli-French family comedy-drama, the second film in a trilogy about contemporary Israeli cities. A Jewish woman, Hanna (Hanna Maron), runs a bakery with her Arab husband Yussef, while their son Moshe has problems with his wife Didi... Kadosh (Sacred): A dark drama of women living in a society where they are second-class citizens, Kadosh/Sacred begins with Meir, an Orthodox Jew living in the Mea Shearim district of Jerusalem, greeting the day with his morning prayers, which includes the phrase, 'Thank you, oh Lord, for not having made me a woman.' Meir and Rivkahave been married for ten years and have a solid relationship based on affection and mutual respect. However, they have been unable to have children, and as Meir is reminded, the Talmud says a woman without children may as well be dead. Milim (Words): Haunting and deeply personal, this stylized film reflects director Amos Gitai's feelings and response to the 1995 assassination of Israeli leader Yitzhak Rabin. The film is narrated by several notable personalities reading passages from the writings of Josephus Flavius, a Jewish commander who lead the Israeli Jews in a desperate bid to keep the Romans out of their holy land in 73 A.D... SPECIAL FEATURES: Box Set, Interactive Menu, Making Of, Multi-DVD Set, Photo Gallery, Trailer(s), "
      Kadosh "Sagrado"
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        Kadosh "Sagrado"
        Director: AMOS GITAI
        ProductGroup: DVD
        Binding: DVD

        DramaDrama | By Genre | Art House & International | Genres | DVD | Video
        DramaDrama | By Genre | Foreign & International | Stores | DVD | Video
        DramaDrama | By Genre | Indie & Art House | Stores | DVD | Video
        ASIN: B000NR94GQ

        Product Description

        OFFICIAL SELECTION CANNES TORONTO TELLURIDE. REGIONS 1 & 4, IN HEBREW WITH SPANISH SUBTITLES. NO ENGLISH. MEIR Y RIVKA HAN ESTADO CASADOS POR DIEZ ANOS, SE AMAN APASIONADAMENTE EL UNO AL OTRO, PERO NO HAN TENIDO HIJOS, LO QUE REPRESENTA UN GRAVE PROBLEMA PARA SU COMUNIDAD, UNA DE LAS ORTODOXAS EN JERUSALEN. LA HERMANA DE RIVKA, MALKA Y SU ENAMORADO, DECIDEN IRSE DE LA COMUNIDAD CUANDO EL RABINO ANUNCIA QUE MANTENDRA SU LLINAJE ASI QUE MEIR Y MALKA SE VERAN OBLIGADOS A CASARSE CON QUIEN NO AMAN..... UNA HISTORIA SOBRE UNA DE LAS SOCIEDADES MAS CERRADAS Y LA INCANSABLE LUCHA DE LA MUJER POR SU LIBERTAD.

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