The Band's Visit (2007)

Once - not long ago - a small Egyptian police band arrived in Israel. Not many remember this... It wasn't that important.

Sony   |   87 minutes   |   PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)   |   July 29, 2008
Comedy / Satire


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Squid Rank

Content Video Audio Extras Overall
89 - - - -
Very Good - - - -

Release Info

Blu-ray Release Theatrical Release
July 29, 2008 (USA) September 13, 2007 (Israel)
Studio Runtime Rating Region
Sony 87 minutes PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) -

Description

Once, not long ago, a small Egyptian Police band arrived in Israel. They came to play at an initiation ceremony, but due to bureaucracy, bad lack, or for whatever reason, they were left stranded at the airport. They tried to manage on their own, only to find themselves in a desolate, almost forgotten, small Israeli town somewhere in the heart of the desert. A lost band played in a lost town. Not many people remember this. It wasn't that important.

Amazon Editorial Review

Can movies change the world? In a word, no. But Israeli writer and director Eran Kolirin's utterly charming and engaging The Band's Visit suggests that if we could somehow put aside the politics and the religion, stifle the governments and the rhetoric, and mix in a little Gershwin, maybe even people with a history of cross-cultural suspicion and hostility really can get along. Not that the film has such pretensions--far from it.

This is a simple tale involving a group of Egyptian musicians, the Alexandria Police Ceremonial Orchestra, who arrive in Israel for a concert. Things don't go well; there's no one to meet them at the airport, and they mistakenly end up in a small, drab desert town called Bet Hatikva, a place whose own residents refer to it as "bloody nowhere." But the people, especially café owner Dina (a marvelous performance by Ronit Elkabetz), are friendly and welcoming, and when they urge the band members to stay overnight before heading to their proper destination the next day, strait-laced leader Tewfiq (Sasson Gabai) finally relents.

What follows is a series of plain but lovely scenes, as the Egyptians and Israelis (speaking English, their common language) tentatively search for common ground. Khaled (Saleh Bakri), the ladies man of the group ("Do you like Chet Baker?" is his favorite pick-up line), accompanies two young couples to a roller rink, where he comically helps the painfully timid Papi (Shlomi Avraham) connect with his date; meanwhile, the dignified but taciturn Tewfiq gradually warms to Dina's manifest charms, and the other musicians share a rousing chorus of "Summertime" with their Israeli hosts.

The Band's Visit is filled with moments of humor, tenderness, tension, sadness, regret, and, as one character puts it, "tons of loneliness," every one of them delivered without the slightest bit of pretension or manipulation (not to mention political or religious overtones). And when, at the end, we finally hear the Orchestra perform, we only wish we could spend more time with all of these delightful characters.

--Sam Graham

Technical Info

Disc 1 of 1: Main   

The Band's Visit
Main Video:1.85:1 / 1080p / MPEG-4 AVC
Original Audio:Hebrew Dolby TrueHD 5.1 (48 kHz)
Subtitles:English

Extras
Other:BD-Live (Profile 2.0)

Review Links

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Review Content Video Audio Extras Total Review Date
No disc reviews found.
SQUID RANK 89 - - - -  
Summary Very Good - - - -  

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Product Codes

UPC MPN EAN ASIN
043396275539 - 0043396275539 B001AVZWJM


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