Аватар персоны Yair Raveh

Yair Raveh

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Yair Raveh is better known as one of Israel's leading film critics and journalists. Apart from his widely read print column, since 2006 he also runs Israel's most popular and influential film-blog, Cinemascope. Besides his work as critic and film-school lecturer, Raveh has also written scripts to diverse projects - film-noir (Death of a Disco Dancer, 1998), comedy skits (Bruno, 1993) and documentaries. In many of his projects Raveh collaborated with Israeli comedic superstar, Shlomo Bar-Aba, which recently become internationally renowned as the elderly and grumpy professor in Footnote. Raveh is the co-creator and co-writer of Kathmandu, the Israeli TV drama series of 2012, that launched Gal Gadot's acting carreer.

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4 Works

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2 Works

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Sharon Amrani: Remember His Name

Sharon Amrani: Remember His Name

Raveh does not only document the past, he documents a future that will never be, and the films that Amrani did not live to create. Researching Amrani's documents, Raveh found several short screenplays, and sought out three directors of Amrani's generation to bring them to life. The short films are interwoven throughout the documentary - "The Boat", directed by Nir Bergman, "Albert and Ronit", directed by Dover Kosashvili, and "Sabbath Eve", directed by Joseph Cedar. The warmth, intensity and drama of family life; issues of Persian ethnicity; tradition and the desire to break away from tradition; the competition and camaraderie of boys and men; the search for love; a persistent spiritual search and a love of the sea - all these are reflected in the brief yet intriguing vignettes, imbuing the film with a sense of Amrani's vision as a filmmaker and how his presence might have influenced the Israeli film scene.
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Year:

2010

Sharon Amrani: Remember His Name

Sharon Amrani: Remember His Name

Raveh does not only document the past, he documents a future that will never be, and the films that Amrani did not live to create. Researching Amrani's documents, Raveh found several short screenplays, and sought out three directors of Amrani's generation to bring them to life. The short films are interwoven throughout the documentary - "The Boat", directed by Nir Bergman, "Albert and Ronit", directed by Dover Kosashvili, and "Sabbath Eve", directed by Joseph Cedar. The warmth, intensity and drama of family life; issues of Persian ethnicity; tradition and the desire to break away from tradition; the competition and camaraderie of boys and men; the search for love; a persistent spiritual search and a love of the sea - all these are reflected in the brief yet intriguing vignettes, imbuing the film with a sense of Amrani's vision as a filmmaker and how his presence might have influenced the Israeli film scene.
0.0

Year:

2010

Nesher

Nesher

“All my movies are personal without being autobiographical,” says Avi Nesher, a filmmaker who combines his personal life and the history of Israel in his films. This documentary examines the DNA of Nesher’s cinematic creations , which include musicals, dramas, and comedies, chronicling the homeland in which he started his career at the age of 24 and where he continues to create at 71.
10.0

Year:

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Nesher

Nesher

“All my movies are personal without being autobiographical,” says Avi Nesher, a filmmaker who combines his personal life and the history of Israel in his films. This documentary examines the DNA of Nesher’s cinematic creations , which include musicals, dramas, and comedies, chronicling the homeland in which he started his career at the age of 24 and where he continues to create at 71.
10.0

Year:

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