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Film

Laughter in the face of grief

October 6, 2016 10:58
06102016 OWAAD key still (Copy)

ByAnne Joseph, Anne Joseph

4 min read

Thirty-something, US-born, Israeli-raised writer-director, Asaph Polonsky admits that a film about parental grief is, "not a usual go-to matter that someone of my age does, but I was drawn to it. I was always intrigued about what happens when the shivah ends - that moment where you are really kind of forced to go back [to your day to day life]."

Polonsky's debut feature, One Week and a Day is about the different ways in which a husband and wife cope with the death of their only child, their 25-year-old son, Ronnie. The film opens at the end of the shivah, just as the last guests are leaving, and spans an entire day. For Vicky (Evgenia Dodina), it means an immediate return to her routine, which Eyal (Shai Avivi) avoids by smoking his dead son's medical marijuana and hanging out with his young, doofus neighbour, Zooler (Tomer Kaplan). But as they each try and gain a sense of control over their lives, they find the world around them stops for no one.

Speaking on the phone from Israel last month, shortly before the film's Israeli theatrical release, Polonsky laughs when he says that his life has been "amazing" since the film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May, earning a five-minute standing ovation and a Critics' Week prize. "Before you make a film, there's this theory that no one is going to see it. You hope for Cannes, but I never even said it out loud," he admits. One Week and a Day went on to receive several awards at the Jerusalem Film Festival, where the jury praised Polonsky for his, "constant and impressive command of tone and his fine work with a small cast. [This] young director displays a surprising maturity." The film had also been nominated for many Ophir Awards (the Israeli Film Academy Award), including best film and best screenplay, but lost out to Elite Zexer's debut, Sand Storm. It will continue screening on the international festival circuit, including showing here later this autumn at the London Film Festival and the UK Jewish Film Festival.

The film is an acutely observed, finely nuanced and unsentimental portrait of bereavement. But it's also funny. Polonsky's use of light comedy highlights some of the absurdities that the couple find themselves in, be it blocking out the sound of nymphomaniac neighbours, dealing with the supply teacher who refuses to leave or solving the issue of a burial plot.