Film
What's on at the cinema plus reviews of the latest movie and DVD releases
Close to Home (2005)
Director: Dalia Hager, Vidi Bilu
Movie review
From Time Out London
Generally underwhelming and disappointingly parochial, Vardit Bilu and Dalia Hagar’s rites-of-passage drama is at least paved with good intentions. It follows two 18-year-old female Israeli conscripts, by-the-book Mirit (Neama Shendar) and rebellious Smadar (Smadar Sayar), through their military service, spent patrolling Jerusalem with clipboards notating the ID numbers of Palestinians. The filmmakers’ laudable purpose is to highlight the under-represented experience of women soldiers within an adolescent context, exploring the difficulties these women have assimilating the moral implications of their reluctantly assumed role of political policewomen while still struggling with their own development. Shendar and Sayar are pretty and engaging, but their will-they-bond-or-won’t-they relationship is a little strained and unconvincing, while the film’s emphasis on minutiae – illicit fag breaks, quick clothes-shopping trips – becomes finally trivialising, leaving the larger political questions unaddressed.Author: Wally Hammond
Time Out London Issue 1911: April 4-10 2007
Cast & crew
Director: Dalia Hager, Vidi Bilu
Producer: Marek Rozenbaum, Itai Tamir
Cast: Smadar Saya, Naama Schendar, Irit Suki, Katia Zimbris full cast
Genre(s): Drama
Duration: 90 mins
UK Release: Apr 6 2007
Most popular on this site

Top Stories
Time Out weekender at the BFI Southbank
Calling all readers… We’d love to see you at a special season we’re planning at BFI Southbank this weekend to celebrate ‘40 years of Time Out and 40 years of British cinema’'.
2-for-1 tickets for IMAX screenings
Get two tickets for the price of one for selected screenings at BFI IMAX cinemas
Film is better than TV
Following Alexi Duggins’s case for TV as a superior visual medium to the big screen, Film editor Dave Calhoun returns fire
Colin Firth: interview
Admit it – many of us think Colin Firth is just bland, middle-class totty. But, as Dave Calhoun has discovered, the former Mr Darcy has grown up and moved on, and in his latest films, he’s riveting
The computer games that should be movies
To celebrate the release of ‘Max Payne’ starring Mark Wahlberg, Time Out looks at some classic computer games and guesses how they might translate to the big screen







What do you think?
Post your review now