

Israeli filmmaker Amos Gitaï offers a look impressionist long history of armed conflict in their nation.
Direction
Gitai's hypnotic, non-linear memory palace construction.
Cinematography
Stunning Carmel coast landscapes against brutal history.
Writing
Ronit Matalon's poetic narration weaves personal and political.

Director
Amos Gitai
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Gitai shot this between larger narrative projects, calling it his 'oxygen' from Hollywood pressures.
The film's structure mirrors Jewish textual tradition—layered, cyclical, and refusing linear resolution.