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סרטם של מירי לאופר וארז לאופר

ONE DAY AFTER PEACE

English Site
פרסים
פרס חביב הקהל, Festival Movies That Matter, הולנד
פרס חבר השופטים, A Matter of Act Competition, הולנד
פרס לסרט הדוקומנטרי הטוב ביותר, Endouvers Doc Film Festival, סינגפור
פרס ראשון לדוקומנטרי באורך מלא, Peace- Windcloak-Media Film Festival, איטליה
פרס חבר השופטים ופרס חביב הקהל, Kimera International Film Festival, איטליה
פרס ראשון לדוקומנטרי באורך מלא, Show me Justice Film Festival, וורנסבורג, ארה"ב
פרס ראשון מטעם חבר השופטים הסטודנטים, The 11th Paris International. Film Festival on Human Rights, צרפת
פרס התחקיר, פסטיבל דוקאביב, ישראל
מועמד לפרס אופיר לסרט הדוקומנטרי הטוב ביותר, ישראל
פרס חבר השופטים לדוקומנטרי באורך מלא, Auroville Film Festival, הודו
פרס ראשון "ברוח האמונה", Religion Today Film Festival, טרנטו, איטליה.
Reviews

One day after peace, réalisé par les Israéliens Miri et Erez Laufer, actuellement en compétition au Festival international du film des droits de l’homme à Paris, porte l’espoir qu’un jour Palestiniens et Israéliens feront la paix comme les Sud-Africains : en demandant la vérité et le pardon. Le Secours Catholique participait au débat qui a suivi la projection. ” Secours Catholique - February 11, 2013


De l’Afrique du sud à Israel, un scénario de réconciliation ” la Croix.com - February 11, 2013


“Peace may be difficult to imagine, but this brave and inspiring film puts the process in a global, historical context that helps us glimpse what might be possible…”— Urban Times London, May 8, 2012


“This film is jam-packed with raw emotion and complex geopolitical issues … a powerful and moving testament to a woman's courage and the potential for healing in one of the world's most intractable conflict zones…”— Toronto.com - May 2, 2012


“The great strength of "One Day After Peace" is that neither Robi Damelin nor the filmmakers pretend that those questions have easy or definitive answers. The resulting work is one that nags at the conscience long after the end credits have rolled…”— The Jewish Week October 2012


“Most extraordinary of all, however, is the footage of former Apartheid Law & Order Minister Adriaan Vlok interacting with the families of his victims in South Africa. There's one particular scene where a woman in Soweto unexpectedly recognises Vlok, which will haunt you long after the screening…”—Daily Maverick - June 7, 2012


“This powerful and beautifully made film features, among others, APLA military director Letlapa Mphahlele, who ordered the Heidelberg Tavern bombing, Ginn Fourie, the mother of one of the victims and, most powerful of all, an apparently contrite Adriaan Vlok, Apartheid's last Minister of Law and Order…”—What's On! Johannesburg


“a layered, carefully rendered exploration of one woman's attempt to find her way through a horror which doesn't yield to platitudes or a simple division of sides … the documentary is a rare gift in the growing body of documentary film dedicated to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict…”— Torontoist - April 23, 2012


“When did you last cry at a movie? It happened to me two days ago: Three times the tears flowed during one film… Watching Miri and Erez Laufer's documentary "One Day After Peace" on Damelin's journey to the country of her birth, South Africa, is not only emotionally moving; it also reflects sadly on the abyss between Israel and South Africa. Just imagine Ehud Barak kneeling one day in the Jenin refugee camp to wash the feet of a bereaved Palestinian father …”— Gideon Levy, Haaretz Tel- Aviv, September 2012


“After seeing One Day After Peace I reached out my hand to the row behind and took hold of the hand of the old woman sitting behind me. I had realised she was the protagonist of the film and I was moved, and wanted to show it. Robi Damelin squeezes my hand before the light comes back on in the theatre, where a packed audience is giving the film a standing ovation. What is special about Damelin is that she has chosen to reconcile with the Palestinians who killed her son, an Israeli soldier. …”— Truls Lie, DOX Magazine, Autum 2012


“… Most extraordinary of all, however, is the footage of former Apartheid Law & Order Minister Adriaan Vlok interacting with the families of his victims in South Africa. There's one particular scene where a woman in Soweto unexpectedly recognises Vlok, which will haunt you long after the screening. …” Daily Maverick - June 7, 2012


“… This powerful and beautifully made film features, among others, APLA military director Letlapa Mphahlele, who ordered the Heidelberg Tavern bombing, Ginn Fourie, the mother of one of the victims and, most powerful of all, an apparently contrite Adriaan Vlok, Apartheid’s last Minister of Law and Order. …” What's On! Johannesburg


“… a layered, carefully rendered exploration of one woman's attempt to find her way through a horror which doesn't yield to platitudes or a simple division of sides … the documentary is a rare gift in the growing body of documentary film dedicated to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict …” ✩✩✩✩Torontoist - April 23, 2012


“… this film is jam-packed with raw emotion and complex geopolitical issues … a powerful and moving testament to a woman's courage and the potential for healing in one of the world's most intractable conflict zones…” ✩ Toronto.com - May 2, 2012




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