![]() The project takes Folman around Israel and overseas to Holland. Was he near the Sabra and Shatila camps where Christian Phalangist militias murdered Palestinian refugees after the assassination of Lebanese President-elect Bashir Gemayel? (Gemayel is the movie's title character.) Folman can't seem to remember, so he begins to collect other veterans' stories. After learning what triggered the wolf-pack vision, Folman begins to wonder what he did or saw in Lebanon. ![]() The dogs are part of one man's Lebanon experience, remembered in a bar conversation with a cartoon version of the director himself. That's why the movie was drawn rather than filmed: to capture that mutability, the play between fact and fantasy, guilt and denial, in 25-year-old recollections. ![]() A series of flashbacks from Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon, Waltz With Bashir has been called an "animated documentary." Yet it's not about what happened, but what's remembered. In fact, Israeli writer-director Ari Folman's powerful, innovative film is composed largely of nightmares, all but the final one rendered in graphic-novel style. This 'toon is part of an angry pack of yelping, yellow-eyed predators - a nightmare vision. The first thing to appear in Waltz With Bashir is an animated dog, but it looks nothing like Bolt. Folman (left) had huge gaps in his memory of the time - until fellow soldier Boaz Rein Buskila told a story that sparked a quest.Īri Folman/David Polonsky/Sony Pictures Classics ![]()
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