Talking to family
In this brief yet deeply intimate documentary, director Kwei Shun-Yu invites viewers into the quiet, often unspoken wor...
In her directorial debut, Natalie Portman brings to life the semi-autobiographical world of renowned author Amos Oz in this deeply evocative drama set in 1940s Jerusalem. The story unfolds through the eyes of young Amos, a boy growing up in a cramped apartment with his scholarly father and his deeply imaginative mother, Fania. As the fledgling state of Israel takes shape around them, Fania, portrayed with haunting vulnerability by Natalie Portman, struggles to find her place in a world that feels increasingly suffocating. Her son watches as she retreats into the stories she tells him, a bittersweet escape from the harsh realities of poverty, political turmoil, and a marriage strained by unfulfilled dreams. The film masterfully weaves together the personal and the political, exploring the weight of unspoken sorrow and the fragile beauty of a mother’s love. With a tone that is both poetic and melancholic, this intimate character study offers a poignant glimpse into the forces that would shape one of Israel’s greatest literary voices.