The Bubble Movie Review
The Bubble Review
"The Bubble" Overview

Rating: NR
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Eytan FoxProducer : Ronen Ben-Tal,Amir Feingold,Gal Uchovsky
Screenwiter : Eytan Fox,Gal Uchovsky
Starring : Ohad Knoller,Yousef Sweid,Alon Griedmann,Roba Blal,Shredy Jabarin
The "bubble" in the title of The Bubble refers to the carefree world in which hip young
Israelis who hate politics choose to live, disconnected from all the epic historical
drama taking place all around them. Of course, a bubble will eventually burst, and
that's what happens here. The world intervenes.
Three cool kids share a Tel Aviv apartment and try to make their way in the world.
Soft-spoken Noam (Ohad Knoller) works in a record store while his gay friend Yali
(Alon Friedmann) manages a café. Noam has a second job as a weekend national guard
soldier who monitors border crossings into Palestinian territories. Director Eytan Fox has
no problem showing the petty humiliations the Palestinians must suffer as they try
to move through territory they consider their own. Naturally they resent living their
lives at the point of an Israeli gun. Noam doesn't much like the whole situation either.
As it turns out, Noam, like Yali, is gay, and he has the good fortune/misfortune
to find a Palestinian boyfriend, Ashraf (Yousef Sweid). It's a Romeo and Juliet situation,
but the two try to get around Ashraf's illegal status in Israel by giving him a Heb
rew name and getting him a job in Yali's café. The roommates are not pleased at first
but soon come around and embrace their new friend, seeing in their quartet an expression
of a happy future in which everyone just gets along and goes to beachside raves. It's all
quite fun and sexy.
For a while. The bad news is that Ashraf's sister (Roba Blal) intends to marry a
Hamas leader with the unfortunate name of Jihad (Shredy Jabarin), and Muslims aren't
big on the whole gay thing. Events race along, and what was a little hipster paradise
looks doomed to become just another Middle Eastern hell. It's a depressing message:
politics and history seem destined to steamroll over youthful hope and optimism.
The Bubble is jam-packed with relationships, politics, suspense, humor, and even a little
sex. It's a fascinating and incisive look at a troubled corner of the world and at
the people who live there and try to make the best of it against all odds.
Aka Ha buah, Ha-Buah.
What a glorious day to hug on the roof.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



