We are opening the Israeli film AHED’S KNEE April 1 at the Glendale, Royal and Town Center and it’s a scorcher. As critic Guy Lodge put it, “Nadav Lapid does not make polite films: they spit and snarl and get way up in your face, brashly and constantly switching tack to disrupt your viewing pleasure, even if that means interrupting their own train of thought.”
A film of radical style and splenetic anger, AHED’S KNEE accompanies a celebrated but increasingly dissociated director (Avshalom Pollak) to a small town in the desert region of Arava for a screening of his latest film. Already anguished by the news of his mother’s fatal illness, he grows frustrated with a speech-restricting form he is encouraged to sign by a local Ministry of Culture worker (Nur Fibak). The confrontation ultimately sends him into a spiral of rage aimed at what he perceives as the censorship, hypocrisy, and violence of the Israeli government.
“Cuts to the heart of Lapid’s visceral genius and…points a new path forward for one of the world’s most irrepressible filmmakers.” ~ David Ehrlich, Indiewire
“What makes AHED’S KNEE so powerful is the way the movie detonates before our eyes.” ~ Bilge Ebiri, New York Magazine/Vulture
“Political outrage fuses with personal anguish in the Israeli director Nadav Lapid’s raucous, hard-edged dramatic rant about a filmmaker in crisis.” ~ Richard Brody, New Yorker
“It’s a howl of rage.” ~ A.O. Scott, New York Times
“AHED’S KNEE is a radical film for an Israeli movie – or for any movie.” ~ Jason Solomons, TheWrap