Film

What's on at the cinema plus reviews of the latest movie and DVD releases

Search cinema listings

Browse cinemas A-Z

Search 20,000 reviews

 

Waltz With Bashir (2008)

Director: Ari Folman

Time Out rating

Average user rating
4 reviews

Movie review

From Time Out London

‘Memory is dynamic… It’s alive.’ This animated documentary, for which Israeli filmmaker Ari Folman’s wizard colleague, the artist David Polonsky, dazzlingly illustrates talking-head recollections and reconstructions of a past war, comes across like a therapy session made vivid with bizarre, expressionist colours and the jolty, episodic mood of remembrance.

The film is a cathartic trip down memory lane for Folman – only he doesn’t know where he’s going. As a young soldier, he took part in Israel’s 1982 invasion of Lebanon and was in Beirut when the Lebanese Christian militia known as Phalangists murdered 800 Palestinians in the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps – perhaps with the approval of the Israeli army. It was a massacre that caused Ariel Sharon, Israel’s defence minister, to resign from his post when an inquiry found him indirectly responsible for the deaths.

Then and now, Folman puts himself centre-stage – which means he’s always dancing on the edge of self-indulgence. It’s a game that neatly frames a ramshackle tale but also grates the more it’s emphasised. Now in his forties, this urbane, bearded character visits other lucid contemporaries to hear their versions of the experience they shared. There’s a guy living in Holland who’s made a fortune selling falafel. There’s the war correspondent Ron Ben-Yishai, who marched gung-ho, John Simpson-like into Beirut. There’s a guy whose talk is oddly associative: he talks of the patchouli scent, a sort of aftershave, that everyone was wearing at the time of the war. For him, like Folman’s inability to remember much at all, it’s the lasting gift of the conflict.

Presumably Folman filmed all these interviews, later animating them with the events of which each interviewee speaks, so blurring the line between fact and fiction and stressing the power and failings of memory. But take away the unusual form of illustration and the model is that of a traditional, flashback-driven, dramatised doc. In fact, the animation is the film’s strength: it’s revelatory, from the portrayal of dreamy, gold-and-black-coloured episodes of soldiers bathing in the sea with distant flares lighting up Beirut to more realist depictions of death such as when a soldier driving a tank suddenly takes a fatal bullet.

It’s this sort of erratic, ground-level experience that Folman focuses on the most; even the facts of the massacre take a back seat. He wants to show war as ridiculous, and his concern for the horrors and absurdities of battle feels fresh and affecting.

And yet, despite the grim subject, this is a beautiful film. A paradox? Only if you expect coherence – and ‘Waltz with Bashir’ is anything but coherent, and pointedly so. It’s recollection refracted – and then some. It’s messy and unusual, not always gratifying, sometimes frustrating, always compelling.

Author: Dave Calhoun

Time Out London Issue 1996, Nov 20-26, 2008


  • Find Show Times
  • Print this page
  • Send to a friend

User reviews of this film

  • Debbie Ferrer said...
    Posted on Jan 03 2009 13:43 Excellent and very original.
    Report as inappropriate
  • jane said...
    Posted on Dec 12 2008 15:31 fascinating, creative and very moving
    Report as inappropriate
  • Chris Beney said...
    Posted on Dec 06 2008 15:36 The animation is terrific, the dogs, the sea. It would have been absurd for middle aged men to be remembering by re-enacting. But by filming them and then rejuvenating them by animation it became real. The short but relevant bit of porn could have been shorter without loss, maybe that's just me. The blending in of real footage at the end was seamless and wholly effective. History rewrites facts but the guilt in broad terms was clear, I would have liked some reference to formal inquiries and their findings, but that might have spoiled the overall flow of the film and the personal and human nature of its story. Do not miss seeing it.
    Report as inappropriate
  • Madison said...
    Posted on Nov 27 2008 13:38 Mesmerizing and moving
    Report as inappropriate
4 comments

What do you think?
Post your review now

clear rating
Min 1 star. Zero stars will be treated as unrated.

*mandatory fields


Now showing

Find out where this film is showing near you

Cast & crew

Director: Ari Folman

Rated: 18

Duration: 87 mins

UK Release: Nov 21 2008
US Release: Dec 26 2008






Top Stories

Sir David Hare: interview

Sir David Hare: interview

Wally Hammond meets Sir David Hare to talk about his latest screen adaptation, which tackles Bernhard Schlink’s post-Holocaust romance ‘The Reader’

The softer side of Sam Peckinpah

The softer side of Sam Peckinpah

Ahead of a retrospective of his films at BFI Southbank, Time Out look at the softer side of Sam Peckinpah

Best films of 2008

Best films of 2008

Time Out’s film critics remember 2008’s silver screen highs, lows and welcome reissues

Harold Pinter (1930-2008)

Harold Pinter (1930-2008)

With the sad news of the death of one of British theatre's most iconic figures, Harold Pinter, we take a look back at a career that has embraced performance, stage and screen writing and political activism

Cinema's most memorable drinkers

Cinema's most memorable drinkers

Time Out toasts some of the big screen’s most inimitable inebriates

Spring film preview 2009

Spring film preview 2009

Take a peek at what the Time Out Film team are looking forward to in the new year with our spring film preview