Jellyfish Movie Review
Jellyfish Review
"Jellyfish" Overview

Rating: NR
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Etgar Keret,Shira GeffenProducer : Amir Harel,Ayelet Kit,Yael Fogiel
Screenwiter : Shira Geffen
Starring : Sarah Adler,Nikol Leidman,Gera Sandler,Noa Knoller,Ma-nenita De Latorre,Zharira Charifai,Ilanit Ben-Yaakov
Like figures in a Robert Altman film left too long in the sun, and who possibly never
had that much going on upstairs to begin with, the characters of Etgar Keret and
Shira Geffen's Jellyfish wander about and go missing in their own lives, eventually
washing up on the Tel Aviv beach like the silent hulks of dead jellyfish scattered
across the sands. There's action and episode here, but little purpose or necessity,
just people trying to find their way in a world that baffles them with its willful
obtuseness, and more often than not, gets them lost in the process. Everything comes
back to the sea.
With the only real connective tissue among them being the grey and somewhat mournful
Mediterranean and a certain cluelessness about their lives, the three women whose
stories constitute Jellyfish seem specialists in not getting what they want. The
most painful to behold is Batya (Sarah Adler), a dizzy-headed and recently-dumped
young woman who waitresses at a wedding reception hall and always seems on the verge
of getting fired. (And who could blame her? It's the kind of place that requires waitresses
to wear bachelorette party-style tiaras while working.) Unable to connect with her
father, a clueless old fool with a nervous anorexic of a new girlfriend who's about
Batya's age, or her mother, who's too busy organizing charity functions to pay much
attention to her child, Batya only seems to focus when she finds herself the unwitting
guardian of a nameless and mute young girl (Nikol Leidman) who seemed literally to
wash up on the beach.
Similarly at sea is Keren (Noa Knoller), a bride who we see at the reception hall
getting in a supremely bad jam. Stuck in a locked bathroom stall, she tries to climb
her way out, breaking her leg in the process. This ruins her and her new husband's
chance for a dream Caribbean honeymoon, marooning them instead at a lousy hotel where
they can't even view the Mediterranean. Keren moons about their cramped room, while
her husband Michael (Gera Sandler) tries haplessly to make things better, but ends
up becoming enthralled with the single woman writer he keeps passing in the hotel, the
one with the smoky voice and intellectual sensuality.
Less willfully clueless is Joy (Ma-nenita De Latorre), a Philippine domestic worker
who gets shuttled from one thankless assignment to the next, and who is first also
viewed at the wedding reception. Wracked with guilt over having had to leave her
son behind in the Philippines, Joy seems competent enough in her own life (unlike Batya
and Keren, who can't seem to manage crossing the street) but is just cursed with
bad luck. This tendency seems doubly reinforced when she's assigned to be essentially
a house nurse for a racist, dyspeptic old woman who can barely stand her own daughter,
much less a worker who can't speak Hebrew.
While Keret is best known in the States as a writer of quirky short stories, one
of which was the basis for 2007's winning black comedy Wristcutters, here he serves
strictly as co-director, leaving the writing to his wife and co-director Shira Geffen.
Not surprisingly, though, Keret's knack for conjuring blithely surrealist snippets
is on full view here, from the police officer who shruggingly hands over the nameless
child to Bayat for a couple days of utterly unlicensed guardianship, since the social
workers don't work weekends, to the glimpse we get of a god-awful-seeming, avant-garde Hamle
t. The Tel Aviv that Keret and Geffen conjure is also familiar territory from his
fiction, a companionably rundown beachside place, looking like a quieter Miami, without
the glitz or desperation. In this rundown antithesis of a seaside mecca, Jellyfi
sh conjures up a handful of winsome delights in its brief running time, skipping across
the screen with an amiable lack of pretension.
Aka Meduzot.
I asked for a fork, kid.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti



