Release Date : May 24, 2013 Limited
Mpaa Rating : PG Genre Movie :Art House & International,DramaEighteen-year-old Shira (Hada Yaron) is the youngest daughter of the family and is about to be married off to a very promising young man of the same age. On Purim, her twenty-eight-year-old sister, Esther (Renana Raz), dies during childbirth, leaving her husband to care for the child and postponing Shira's promised match. When the girls' mother finds out that Yochay may leave the country with her only grandchild, she proposes a match between Shira and the widower, which leaves Shira to choose between her heart's wish and her family's wish to keep the child with them. FILL THE VOID was the 2012 Venice Film Festival winner for Best Actress (Yaron), and has been selected as the Israeli entry for the Best Foreign Language Oscar at the 85th Academy Awards. It will also be featured in the Spotlight Program at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. (c) Sony Classics
Actors For Fill the Void
Hadas Yaron,Yiftach Klein,Irith Sheleg,Chaim Sharir,Raiza Israeli,Hila Feldman,Renana Raz,Yael Tal,Michael David Weigl,Ido Samuel,Neta Moran,Melech Thal,Razia Israeli,Irit Sheleg,Razia IsraelyNewVisitor Ranting & Critics For Fill the Void
User Ranting Movie Fill the Void : 3.7User Percentage For Fill the Void : 78 %
User Count Like for Fill the Void : 767
All Critics Ranting For Fill the Void : 7.6
All Critics Count For Fill the Void : 34
All Critics Percentage For Fill the Void : 85 %
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Best Review For Movie Fill the Void
[Burshtein] vividly depicts a clannish culture that is likely to feel foreign and perhaps off-putting to generations that came of age in a progressive post-feminist era.Susan Wloszczyna-Chicago Sun-Times
[Burshtein's] subject is a woman's right to choose her spouse, and what a weighty, giddy, confusing, clarifying and, ultimately, sacred choice that is.
Carrie Rickey-Philadelphia Inquirer
There's a clotted and cramped feeling to "Fill the Void" that's downright creepy.
Tom Long-Detroit News
A sympathetic, layered portrayal, rich with detail, that earns its more complex and resonant conclusion.
Nell Minow-Chicago Sun-Times
A moody, exquisitely told tale of love and duty.
Colin Covert-Minneapolis Star Tribune
None of the religious rituals feels particularly spiritual, and even the nominally happy ending fails to alleviate the oppressive tone.
Ben Sachs-Chicago Reader
Director Rama Burshtein's debut is nothing less than astonishing. She's a card-carrying member of Israel's Hared community and, with that experience, has crafted a work of moral complexity and visual artistry
Chris Chang-Film Comment Magazine
I suspect Burshtein achieved what she set out to do with "Fill the Void," but I found it repetitive and frustrating.
Chris Hewitt (St. Paul)-St. Paul Pioneer Press
Articulates this society's constant urgency and claustrophobic decisions.
Matt Pais-RedEye
Will they or won't they? Burshtein draws out emotional communication by secular actors, setting them amidst extras from the Orthodox community for convincing mise en scène.
Nora Lee Mandel-Film-Forward.com
an exquisite, poetic film that is full of both the joy of life, even in grief, and in the fact that life inevitably goes on
Andrea Chase-Killer Movie Reviews
To fill the void, means to simultaneously gain and lose. For Shira, she is keeping her family together at the cost of her own ambitions. It's a kind of self-sacrifice not seen in American films. Burshtein captures these delicate moments brilliantly.
Monica Castillo-Paste Magazine
Take it on its own terms, as a compelling emotional drama about an impossible situation.
Marshall Fine-Hollywood & Fine
a subtle, elegant movie that brings us into the structured world of Tel Aviv's ultra-Orthodox Hasidic community to show how one young woman navigates the demands of her religion and her family's expectations without losing herself in the process.
Laura Clifford-Reeling Reviews
Tonally, the film awkwardly straddles fluffy comedy and grief-stricken melodrama, hopping from one mode to other scene to scene.
Oliver Lyttelton-The Playlist
A lesser filmmaker would have condescended to this world, but Rama Burshtein, an Orthodox woman herself, treats it with abiding respect. Her movie is a masterpiece.
Robert Levin-amNewYork
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