Video Sources 0 Views

  • Watch traileryoutube.com
  • Source 1123movies
  • Source 2123movies
  • Source 3123movies
Walk on Water 2004 123movies

Walk on Water 2004 123movies

He was trained to hate until he met the enemy.Feb. 05, 2004103 Min.
Your rating: 0
9 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: LaLehet Al HaMayim 2004 123movies, Full Movie Online – Eyal, an Israeli Mossad agent, is given the mission to track down and kill the very old Alfred Himmelman, an ex-Nazi officer, who might still be alive. Pretending to be a tourist guide, he befriends his grandson Axel, in Israel to visit his sister Pia. The two men set out on a tour of the country during which, Axel challenges Eyal’s values..
Plot: Eyal, an Israeli Mossad agent, is given the mission to track down and kill the very old Alfred Himmelman, an ex-Nazi officer, who might still be alive. Pretending to be a tourist guide, he befriends his grandson Axel, in Israel to visit his sister Pia. The two men set out on a tour of the country, during which Axel challenges Eyal’s values.
Smart Tags: #mud_bath #male_in_a_shower #outdoor_shower #male_full_frontal_nudity #israel #mossad #israeli_folk_dancing #pubic_hair #male_pubic_hair #road_trip #urination #suicide_of_wife #penis #male_rear_nudity #male_frontal_nudity #listening_to_music #hypodermic_needle #eye_drops #crying #campfire #assassination


Find Alternative – LaLehet Al HaMayim 2004, Streaming Links:

123movies | FMmovies | Putlocker | GoMovies | SolarMovie | Soap2day


Ratings:

7.3/10 Votes: 6,865
72% | RottenTomatoes
65/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 69 Popularity: 5.876 | TMDB

Reviews:

Authentic and moving (though, more than slightly Self-righteous)
Sometimes the opening credits predict a great deal about the film itself. Sometimes it’s a deliberate decision of the director and sometimes it’s a plain business decision. James bond’s movies always began with silhouettes of highly attractive women holding guns in a “I’m having a seizure” postures (a long and annoying tradition that stopped only on “Die another day”) , Ed Wood films opening credits were presented as epitaffs on graves (indicating that people would see the films over their dead bodies) etc.

This film’s credits are pretty conventional, only they are in English. This is more than slightly perplexing since this film is not only shot, mainly, in Israel but also because it deals with a topic that is highly charged and controversial among Israelis, namely, the collaboration with modern day Germany, in light of the not so distant past of the Holocaust.

Eyal (Lior Ashkenazi in a terrific performance) is a Mossad agent, returning from Turkey after an efficient and clean assassination of a Terrorist only to find that during his absence his wife, Iris, committed suicide. Eyal, an obtuse individual who only benefited from it in his work, seems unaffected emotionally by such a tragic loss and the worried powers that be demote him (to his dismay) to gather information about a Nazi criminal that lives a clandestine life in an undisclosed location. Eyal poses as a tour guide for Axel, the Nazi’s grandson, visiting his sister in a Kibbutz (a once glorified and now decaying socialist community) after she disengaged herself from her parents.

The “Spying” mission turns soon enough to be a “Roman a clef”, a self discovery voyage where Eyal deals with his upbringing in a house of Holocaust survivors and the flaws of his character that made him a first rate assassin but a third rate human being. Axel, the German tourists who starts as Eyal’s nemesis (not only because of his origin but also due to his gay tendencies and his merry and merciful personality), ends up as the one who turns Eyal’s life around.

The relationship with modern day Germany is still a touchy subject in Israel and will probably remain so for many decades to come. Till this day, many families don’t travel to Germany or even buy German products and although I believe that no generation is born with a debt, I never judge those who boycott Germany considering the demons they have to face as a result of the never too distant to be forgotten Holocaust. This movie deals with the dealing of both Israelis and Germans with their past and with each other by the impossible friendship between Eyal and Axel.

The Latin credits, as I said before, are the prophecy for the filmmakers’ intention for foreign viewing. It begins with the almost apologetic mentioning that Eyal’s assassination “victim” is a terrorist , continues with the too PC and not very plot-essential coexistence with the Israeli-Arab population and the atmosphere of the gay night life.

Moreover, the film conveniently deals with another controversial subject, Palestinian Terror, in a manner that is easier for the European “creative stomach” to digest. At a certain point, its over flown with excessive self-righteousness that is rarely identified in a terror ridden country.

That reservation is the film’s only major flaw and, altogether, the collaboration between the writer, Gal Uchovski, and director, Eitan Fuchs, spawns one of the best written and directed Israeli films I came across. Aided with wonderful acting and well constructed plot, this film encounters its major controversial issue bravely and authentically which I assume, atones the writer and driector’s failure to do so in its minor one.

8.5 out of 10 in my FilmOmeter.

Review By: eyal philippsborn
Two Opposite Men Unpredictably Learn A Very Personal Detente
“Walk on Water” piles layers of personal, family, religious, cultural, historical, employment, geopolitical, sexual, geographical, guilt and responsibility issues on two men — and still makes it work as the gripping story of two individuals whose lives affect each other.

I saw an interview with director Eytan Fox where he said he wanted to imagine the two most opposite men possible and make them deal with each other. With writer Gal Uchovsky, he focuses on two men who are almost philosophical constructs of dissimilarity yet they come across as real people whose actions and reactions are unpredictable.

The central character Eyal is the quintessential sabra (Israeli-born native), a craggy, macho Mossad agent unable to discuss his feelings about his ravaged marriage, a child of a Holocaust survivor, fatigued with terrorist attacks and revenge, but in the opening moments efficiently murders a Hamas leader.

He is sent by his mentor/father figure on a rogue mission that annoys him in every possible way — going undercover to gain the confidence of a young German fully integrated into the EU whose every opinion, action, lifestyle and family background he despises, a continental take on “Donnie Brasco.” They personify Faulkner’s dictum that “The past is never dead. It’s never even past.” as each man learns that the measure of a man is not just what he does today and did yesterday, but the genetics and heritage that make up his identity and does influence his choices — choices that we hold our breaths to see played out.

Lior Ashkenazi captures the screen projecting the relaxed casualness of male camaraderie comfortable from years in the military and then his reactions as he gradually realizes he’s been thrust into more complex situations.

Though the situations get a bit too artfully complicated when their somewhat picaresque adventures range from the German’s kibbutznik sister to Palestinians to skinheads and a somewhat unnecessary though emotionally satisfying coda, the dialog does refrain from a couple of the most obvious ironies as each man gradually reveals their true nature to each other.

Hearing “Achtung!” amidst Israeli folk dancing is among the unusual juxtapositions in a movie where the characters can only communicate across the divides in English, amidst the three languages they speak among themselves.

While the original music by Ivri Lider is particularly good at emphasizing the underlying emotional content and the diverse cultural environs they find themselves in, the selection of popular music they are listening to adds an additional level of knowing commentary, from the agent’s preference for Bruce Springsteen, the avatar of rock ‘n’ masculinity (particularly the symbolism of him favoring “Tunnel of Love”), to European pop and oldies novelty songs to Israeli folk and popular songs, including the agent’s great discomfort at having to translate a poignant romantic song from the Hebrew.

Review By: noralee

Other Information:

Original Title LaLehet Al HaMayim
Release Date 2004-02-05
Release Year 2004

Original Language he
Runtime 1 hr 43 min (103 min)
Budget 1400000
Revenue 444
Status Released
Rated R
Genre Drama, Mystery, Thriller
Director Eytan Fox
Writer Knut Berger, Caroline Peters, Andreas Struck
Actors Lior Ashkenazi, Knut Berger, Caroline Peters
Country Israel, Sweden
Awards 4 wins & 10 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Arricam Cameras
Laboratory Geyer-Werke, Germany
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 35 mm (Kodak)
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format 35 mm

Walk on Water 2004 123movies
Original title LaLehet Al HaMayim
TMDb Rating 6.891 69 votes

Similar titles

Sniper: Reloaded 2011 123movies
Dark Waters 2019 123movies
Amare Amaro 2018 123movies
Mysteries of Lisbon 2010 123movies
Nobel Son 2007 123movies
Twenty 2015 123movies
Tumko Na Bhool Paayenge 2002 123movies
Agatha 1979 123movies
WWE Royal Rumble 2016 2016 123movies
Maborosi 1995 123movies
Tlamess 2019 123movies
The Eyes of My Mother 2016 123movies
TVMuse.app