In Between (2016 film)


In Between is a 2016 drama film written and directed by Maysaloun Hamoud, about three women of Palestinian heritage sharing a flat in Tel Aviv. An international co-production between Israel and France, the film depicts three young Israeli-Arab women living in liberal Tel Aviv, their struggles with the rule-bound Arab world, the inequality of Israeli society, and their desire to free themselves.

Plot

The three women share an apartment in Tel Aviv. Laila, a secular Muslim lawyer from Nazareth; Salma, a Christian Arab DJ and bartender from Tarshiha; and Nour, a devout Muslim student from Umm al-Fahm. Each of the three women experiences, in her own way, alienation and detachment from the traditional society they come from and the frameworks their families prefer for them.
Laila struggles to find a partner for a serious relationship who is willing to introduce her to his family without demanding she change her lifestyle. Salma hides her lesbian identity from her family, and Nour is trapped in an engagement to a man she does not love and who does not support her personal aspirations. Even in the heart of Tel Aviv's liberal society, where the three have found a degree of refuge, they struggle to feel a sense of belonging due to their Arab identity.

Cast

Production

Producer Shlomi Elkabetz and writer-director Maysaloun Hamoud brought the project to Jerusalem's "Pitch Point" in 2015, where it won two prizes: the Turkish YAPIMLAB Award and the IFP Award. The film was funded by the Israel Film Fund.

Release

In Between had its world premiere in the Contemporary World Cinema section of the Toronto International Film Festival on 11 September 2016, and was screend at the Haifa International Film Festival the following month. The film was released in theaters in Israel on 5 January 2017, while Paname Distribution released it in France on 12 April 2017 under the title . In the United States, Film Movement opened the film in theaters in New York City on 5 January 2018 and in Los Angeles on 12 January, followed by a national rollout.

Reception

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 98% based on 66 reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "In Between takes a light yet nuanced approach to dramatizing complex, timely themes, further enriched by outstanding cinematography and powerful performances." On Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film received an average score of 78 based on 19 reviews, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.
Yael Rubinstein wrote in her review of the film: "It seems that the celebrations welcoming the film were less about its intrinsic qualities and more about the fact that it fulfills a wish for a secular and Western Palestinian society. The film is supposedly a 'testimony' to the process of globalization that Palestinian society is undergoing. There was the optimism: here, peace is about to break out any moment now. Here, there is a partner on the other side. Here, 'they' have also come to the conclusion that there is no difference between genders, nationalities, and religions. The vision of 'let's have parties and everything will be fine' is reflected in the film and its warm reception. The embrace is the result of the illusion that this is a 'voice of a generation.'"
The film depicted women drinking, smoking and partying, causing outrage in the Muslim community of Israel. The film was declared haram by the mayor of Umm al-Fahm, the conservative Arab home town of the character Nour. A fatwa was issued against the director, Maysaloun Hamoud, who is a Palestinian born in Hungary but now resident in Jaffa.

Accolades

At the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival, a jury awarded In Between the NETPAC Award for World or International Asian Film Premiere.
The film won three awards at the 2016 San Sebastian Film Festival: the Premio EROSKI de la juventud, the Premio TVE - Otra Mirada, and the Premio Sebastiane.
At the 2016 Haifa International Film Festival, In Between won the Danny Lerner Award for a Debut Feature Film; additionally, its three principal cast members won the Fedeora Award for Artistic Achievement in an Israeli Feature Film.
At the 2017 Ophir Awards, the film received 12 nominations and won for both Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress.