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// Films // To See if I'm Smiling (Lir’ot Im Ani Mehayechet)

To See if I'm Smiling (Lir’ot Im Ani Mehayechet)

Tamar Yarom / IL / 2007 / 60 ' / Hébreux / S.T. Anglais

Credits

Eyal Or
Tamar Yarom
Shiri Bar-On, Daniel Gal et Itamar Mendes-Flor
Jonathan Bar-Giora
Tamar Yarom

Awards & Festivals

Silver Wolf Award Int’l Doc FF, Amsterdam (IDFA)
Audience Award Hot Docs
Special Jury Price WATCH DOCS: Human Rights Int'l Film Festival
Jacek Kuron Short Documentary Competition First Prize Sarasota FF
Special Documentary Jury Prize Haifa Int’l FF
Best Documentary Dokufest
Best Feature Documentary Israeli Documentary Competition
Best Documentary Montpellier Festival
Documentary Prize * New Orleans Middle East FF
Human Rights Watch Int'l FF, NY
One World Int’l Human Rights Doc FF, Prague
FICCO, Festival Int'l of Contemporary Cinema, Mexico City
Human Rights Watch Int'l Traveling FF

Links & Reviews

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Six female former soldiers reveal the pshychological scars of serving in the Occupied Territories.

Synopsis

Israel is the only country in the world where 18-year-old girls are drafted for compulsory military service. In this award-winning documentary, the frank testimonials of six female Israeli soldiers stationed in Gaza and the West Bank pack a powerful emotional punch. The young women revisit their tours of duty in the occupied territories with surprising honesty and strip bare stereotypes of gender differences in the military. The former soldiers share shocking moments of negligence, flippancy, immaturity and power-tripping as they describe atrocities they witnessed and participated in. The psychological transformation that these young women underwent as a result of military service is both upsetting and riveting. The culture of war transforms people: personalities change, moral codes are subverted, values are supplanted and masks are constructed to dull the pain of what they did and didn't do in uniform. At a time when women in the military are increasingly on the frontlines, and the actions of soldiers all over the world are being questioned, this powerful film explores the ways that gender, ethics and moral responsibility intersect during war. [Description taken from Women Make Movies]