home  news    membership     spring 2006        sponsors  links

  SCREENING SATURDAY 25th February - change of date to facilitate a further performance of Cloughjordan Drama Group's "Big Maggie"      
 

PRIVATE

Dir: Saverio Costanzo (Italy 2004 90 minutes CLUB )
Cast: Lior Miller, Tomer Russo, Mohammad Bakri, Arin Omary, Hend Ayoub


There have been very few films that have attempted to bring the reality of the Israeli- Palestinian conflict into sharp focus. Private - Winner of the Golden Leopard for Best Film at the 2004 Locarno Film Festival - and directed by the Italian Saverio Costanzo, ventures into the minefield of this conflict in an attempt to convey one particular part of the struggle. It does so admirably, although some would say not impartially.

Costanzo has chosen to look at the war through the eyes of one Palestinian household – a well-educated, middle-class family. The family members are totally divided about what they should or should not do. Understandably worried about the safety of her sons and daughters, mother Samia wants to leave. Her husband, Mohammed, feels quite differently, insisting that they stay in their house and deal with the situation as it develops. Soon, their domestic arguments give way to a harsher reality when a group of Israeli soldiers enters the home unannounced and occupies it as an observation post, effectively turning its owners into prisoners.

Private is uncompromising in its realistic depiction of its chosen subject. Costanzo chillingly portrays the quotidian tensions that underlie this struggle, reducing it to something we can all relate to: a family, a house and its invasion by strangers. As the two parties get to know each other and come to an uneasy equilibrium, we begin to hope that some kind of understanding will follow. However, Costanzo provides no easy outs. The absence of simple solutions makes Private completely heartbreaking. - Piers Handling, Toronto International Film Festival

Saverio Costanzo (born Rome) studied media at the Università La Sapienza. He wrote the short film Il Numero (97) and the television movie Una Famiglia per caso (97), before making his directorial debut with the documentary Caffe Mille Luci, Brooklyn, New York (99). He followed this with the award-winning docudrama Sala rossa (01). Private (04) is his first feature-length narrative film.
“Demands to be seen, film of the month” - GQ

“Powerful” - ID

“Excellent” - Empire

Winner - Best Emerging Director / Nastri d’Argento
Winner - Golden Leopard Prize (Best Film), Best Actor (Mohammad Bakri) / Locarno Film Festival
Winner - Best New Director / David di Donatello Award
Winner - FIPRESCI Prize / San Francisco International Film Festival 2005


 

     
  Top G