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Israel is tense and violent — perfect horror material

‘Rabies’ is Israeli cinema’s first ever slasher movie. The film’s co-director explains why it took so long

October 27, 2011 10:46
A killer is on the loose in  Rabies

ByAnne Joseph, Anne Joseph

4 min read

'It's like an emotional roller-coaster. You're going to be scared, you're going to laugh and sometimes it's going to be dramatic," enthuses Israeli film director Navot Papushado, talking about the experience of watching a horror film.

Papushado is one half of the writer/director partnership (the other is Aharon Keshales) that has made Israel's first horror film, Rabies (Kalevet in Hebrew), which is showing at the UK Jewish Film Festival next month. It debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival earlier this year, with one critic describing it as "whip smart", and has continued to create waves of attention at subsequent festivals around the world. A few weeks ago it was awarded an Ophir, the Israeli equivalent of an Academy Award.

Frightening, funny, and surprising, with appropriate lashings of blood and gore, Rabies is the dramatic tale of a psychotic killer on the loose in the woods, who crosses paths with a couple, a ranger, a group of unsuspecting tennis players and two police officers. But all is not what it seems and the film plays on the viewer's expectations, culminating with an unpredictable, thrilling twist.

Horror films often serve as a commentary on issues within contemporary society and Rabies is no different. Papushado says that his film "makes a statement about human nature, and about living in Israel".