Venice: US filmmaker Julian Schnabel, a New York Jew, tells it like it is from the Palestinian point of view in Miral screening as the Venice film festival got into full swing today.
Based on an autobiographical novel of the same name by Palestinian journalist Rula Jebreal, the French-Israeli-Italian-Indian production traces the more than four decades from the creation of Israel until the Oslo peace accords of 1993, a moment of great hopes later to be dashed.
Like Jebreal, Miral grew up in an orphanage in East Jerusalem set up by a Jerusalem socialite from a wealthy Palestinian family who one day in 1948 came across a group of children who escaped the massacre of Deir Yassin, a nearby village, committed by radical Jewish militants.
"I feel a great responsibility to the subject," said Schnabel, whose The Diving Bell and the Butterfly won the award for best director at Cannes in 2007 as well as several Oscar nominations.
"This conflict has to end as soon as possible. Every time a child dies on either side, there's no reason for it," he told a news conference.
Jebreal said she wrote the book out of her "great love for the teacher who put me on the right path," adding: "It's the story of a big land and a little girl who survived simply because she had someone to help her."
Speaking to AFP earlier, Schnabel, 58, said of the film, one of 24 competing for the prestigious top prize here, the Golden Lion: "Obviously it's a Palestinian story, but it's very important that an American Jewish person tell a Palestinian story."
The filmmaker and neo-expressionist artist recruited Indian actress Freida Pinto, who played Latika in Slumdog Millionaire, for the role of Miral and Hiam Abass of Israel (The Syrian Bride) for the elegant orphanage director Hind Husseini.
Also today, Robert Rodriguez hacked his way onto the Lido's silver screen with "Machete," a provocative action film mixing blood, humour and immigration issues.
In it, a hitman with a gift for slashing his targets, Machete (Danny Trejo), takes on corrupt officials on both sides of the US border.
Trejo shares top billing for the first time along with Robert de Niro, Steven Seagal, Don Johnson and Lindsay Lohan.
Based on an autobiographical novel of the same name by Palestinian journalist Rula Jebreal, the French-Israeli-Italian-Indian production traces the more than four decades from the creation of Israel until the Oslo peace accords of 1993, a moment of great hopes later to be dashed.
Like Jebreal, Miral grew up in an orphanage in East Jerusalem set up by a Jerusalem socialite from a wealthy Palestinian family who one day in 1948 came across a group of children who escaped the massacre of Deir Yassin, a nearby village, committed by radical Jewish militants.
"This conflict has to end as soon as possible. Every time a child dies on either side, there's no reason for it," he told a news conference.
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Speaking to AFP earlier, Schnabel, 58, said of the film, one of 24 competing for the prestigious top prize here, the Golden Lion: "Obviously it's a Palestinian story, but it's very important that an American Jewish person tell a Palestinian story."
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Also today, Robert Rodriguez hacked his way onto the Lido's silver screen with "Machete," a provocative action film mixing blood, humour and immigration issues.
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Trejo shares top billing for the first time along with Robert de Niro, Steven Seagal, Don Johnson and Lindsay Lohan.
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