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Paradise Now (2005) Certificate 15

Paradise Now
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Rated 3.5 stars
Average rating
(67%)
 
Starring: Kais Nashef | Ali Suliman | Lubna Azabal | Amer Hlehel | Hiam Abbass
Director: Hany Abu-Assad
Studio: WARNER HOME VIDEO
Run time: 88 mins
Genres: Drama | World Cinema
Languages: Arabic
Subtitles: English
Released: August 14, 2006

Two childhood friends are recruited for a suicide bombing in Tel Aviv.

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Highest rated reviews

48 out of 49 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
Paradise Now

SAI81 from from Tonbridge, 3rd May, 2006

am sure some people will take one look at the coverage of Paradise Now and vow not to see it. It's a Palestinian film about 24 hours in the life of two young childhood friends who are chosen for a 'martyrdom mission' in Israel. Given this there will be people who leap to the conclusion that it must be sympathetic to suicide bombers, or endorsing what they do. These people are wrong. Paradise Now is a sober, serious film which takes a long hard look at people we usualy just arbitraily brand as monsters. The first 20 minutes of the film lets us get to know Khaled (Ali Suliman) and Said (Kais Nashef) we spend an afternoon with them; two young men much like any others and we get to like them which makes what follows all the more shocking. While the film refuses, to its credit, to demonise Khaled and Said it absolutely doesn't endorse what they plan to do and shows the terrorist network around them as fundamentally evil and dishonest. The film is often chilling; witness Khaled's video statement about his actions, flawlessly played by Suliman, but doesn't forget that the grimness of it's subject needs some leavening and at the most tense moments a brief second of comedy is granted to you, almost as a way of letting you relax. Leads Suliman and Nashef are spectacular and surrounded by an able supporting cast, notably Lubna Azabal as a young teacher who is falling for Said and Amer Hlehel as Jamal, one of the minders assigned to Said and Khaled and the film's true villain. Debut director Hany Abu Assad doesn't use many filmmaking tricks, much of the film has the look of a documentary and that ring of truth extends to everything in the film. It's impossible to know how close Assad gets to the truth but this feels all too real. So why not a top grade? Well I guessed the ending. Not that unusual but I guessed almost every detail by the middle of the film (and by the start of the last scene I'd even guessed exactly what the final shot would be). This predictability does make Paradise Now a slightly lesser film than it might otherwise have been but it is still pretty extraordinary and very highly recommended.

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22 out of 26 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5.0 stars
A REALITY BEHIND THE POLITICS

Michelle Fallows from Doncaster, 24th February, 2006

I watched almost all the movie and i will order it to watch it again at home. This is a real face of what is happening in Palestine and Israel. It is based on a true story. I recommend People from all religion background or even without anyreligion watch this. It is a piece of Reality what we are facing nowadays in our daily life

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11 out of 11 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
Like screaming at a concrete barrier

PeterSays from , 1st May, 2007

Paradise Now makes no pretence at being a balanced view of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. There is neither illusion to, nor even the slightest suggestion of, the carnage and the loss of innocent blood when a suicide bomber strikes, which to their mutilated victims and the families of the dead and injured, must seem utterly senseless. The frustration and annoyance of the Palestinians under Israeli occupation is well portrayed, as is their close kinship and the claustrophobic atmosphere of a nation under siege. Arguments for both violent and non-violent protest are put forward in human terms in a very watch able film by the main characters, ordinary Palestinian people, while the organisers of the bombers are seen as cold and cynical. Films, books, protests, diplomacy and bombings all continue, on and on and on, for years and years and years, yet nothing seems to change. It is so frustrating and is so senseless.

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11 out of 13 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5.0 stars
A powerful, poignant, provocative drama !

A Customer from Glasgow, 18th March, 2006

'It would be difficult to undertake a more politically relevant film or explore a more volatile subject, and Abu-Assad attempts his project with skill and sensitivity.' #Other Palestinian films to watch : Private(2004); Rana's Wedding (2002) ; Jenin, Jenin (2002) ; Gaza Strip (2002) & Cup Final (1991).

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Most recent reviews

Rated 3.0 stars
Rather a missed opportunity

PetulaG from , 6th February, 2010

This film has a lot going for it: beautifully shot, moments of brilliant dialogue, great chemistry between the main characters and, above all, a sensitive and balanced approach in tackling such a controversial issue. But yet it didn't have the impact that I thought it would. I think the problem with it is that it tries to tackle too much in too short a time. The characterisation of the two leads is good, but there is no time to spend on anyone else, and they remain largely as cardboard cut-outs: the beautiful love interest, the cute younger brother, the grieving mother, the cynical manipulative bad guys whose motivation is never really explored. The whole political situation feels overly simplified: an hour and a half is just not long enough to set the scene. Overall: a film with some great moments but overall a bit unsatisfying.

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Rated 4.0 stars
Small countries, the big questions.

A Customer from London, 12th January, 2010

I loved this film as philopsophy disguised as art. The question is whether violence has a role in creating lasting, meaniful change. Conicius wrote of a man seeking revenge to first dig 2 graves.Last century Ghandhi, MLK,and Mandela changed society without bullets . Would Obama be president if African Americans had slaughtered those whom benefitted from their enslavement? Iraq and afghanistan will be better for the involvement of armies? the film is for both viewers and thinkers. a rare flower indeed .

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Rated 1.0 stars
Totally disconnected

JustKewl from , 23rd October, 2009

This film was not at all good to be honest. The subject matter was a tough one. Would've been interesting but the subtles are so poor! Who engineered the subtles shouldn't be allowed to continue. They were overly bold so that the letters in some words blended together, making reading very uncomfortable. Therefor, my drifted too easily while watching and that's the last thing that should happen when watching. I felt disconnected from the entire film and charactors as a result. The film seemed too slow and too much of the film centred on the build up to the bombing. A waste to be honest.... a waste of film.

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Rated 4.0 stars
Great film

A Customer from OXON, 13th September, 2009

Thought provoking and well acted. I was hooked within the first 10-20 minutes and really enjoyed it. Recommended

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