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Wadjda (2012)
10/10
A Saudi "Whale Rider" with an O. Henry ending
26 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
If any of you remember Whale Rider, well Wadjda is the Saudi version: a triumph of a girl over the patriarchy. Except the patriarchy in Saudi Arabia is worse than that among the Maori.

Also, the mother's desperation for her husband not to take a second wife is played out quite openly in the daughter's/protagonist's presence, which I found quite interesting, almost biblical.

Having only Alrawabi School for Girls to compare to, the acting in Wadjda is far better, and the plot far more satisfying. See this flick!
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7/10
Laudable production, if uneven in the casting...
18 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
...by which I mean that the character of Miss Abeer was really annoying. Not only was she flat and one-dimensional, but it was as if the writers couldn't decide whether she was supposed to be comical or not. On the one hand, there was her toad-like features and her ever-present rod. On the other hand, she recited her lines with no emotion. The result was that she wasn't even endearing, which you need for an annoying character, e.g., Kirk in Gilmore Girls: Annoying, yet comically endearing. So much could have been done with Ms. Abeer, and instead she's just a cardboard cutout.

On the other hand, I was impressed with the characters of Dina and Nof. Dina really evolved, from a ditz to a character in her own right, with opinions and her own way of expressing them. Nof had immediate appeal, and though there were times when I couldn't understand her responses, her character was engaging to the end.

It was also hard for me to understand Rukkayia's purpose. She clearly wasn't going for the same things as her mean-girl friends, Layan and Raina, i.e., boys and clubbing...so what was her purpose in the plot? Just to take her down, I suppose. But the problem was that she didn't even elicit our empathy, so her takedown didn't have the punch that it should have had.
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Lane 1974 (2017)
10/10
captured the essence of Hypocrisy of Disco elegantly
26 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Just watched it. Bought it on iTunes. Worth every shekel. Lane's mother was exactly as I'd imagined her from the book, and the actress who played Lane nailed it. The character Tom Starchild was a perfect parody of himself, a la YouTube star awakenWithJP.

I don't understand why they decided to make Lane's mother Catholic, as the real Helene Resnikoff was Jewish, which is not simply a coincidence, as Jews were disproportionately represented in the counterculture. Regardless, HOD fans won't be disappointed. Tremendous.
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In Between (2016)
10/10
Palestinian rumspringa / women's version of The Bubble...
15 November 2017
...that's what jumped into my head as the ending credits rolled. Bar Behar / Lo Po Lo Sham packs a wallop: It's a powerful feminist film that shows us a little-known world: that of twenty-something Palestinians – from both the Palestinian Authority and inside Israel – who move to Tel Aviv to escape the confines of their conservative, patriarchal society.

Despite their differing backgrounds – one Christian, one secular Muslim, and one traditional Muslim – the three roommates stand by each other through their respective patriarchy-based crises with exquisite nurturing and tenderness. Must see.
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Campfire (2004)
10/10
submitting this as a review until synopses are unlocked (SPOILERS!)
14 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Campfire takes place in Jerusalem in the 1980s, and tells of the Gerliks, an Orthodox family headed by young widow Rachèl (Michaela Eshet), mother of two daughters, young teenager Tami (Hani Furstenberg), a member of the Orthodox Bnèi Akìva youth movement, and Esti (Maya Marón), a few years older. Rachel insists on rebuilding her disintegrating family following the death of her husband and the girls' father. She applies for acceptance to a group founding a settlement in Samaria, but the acceptance committee does not want a single parent. The absence of a man in their lives exposes the Gerliks to ongoing threats and harassment from their own (Orthodox) community, whether in the form of pressure on Rahel from her settler friends to remarry, or in the form of vulgar taunts aimed at Tami by the neighborhood boys, culminating in a rape scene.

But first, we see Rachel coming home from a meeting of her settlement group when she hears sounds in the stairwell. She nears the source of the sounds and through a broken window, sees Esti making out with her boyfriend. Rachel smiles at the sight of her daughter evoking such desire, enters the house, and telephones Yossi (Moshe Ivgy), a suitor, and asks him to accompany her to a settler rally the following day.

In the rape scene, which takes place on Lag BeOmer, Tami – who is in the initial stages of discovering her womanhood and budding sexuality – reluctantly joins her friend Inbál (Dina Senderson) at the "rebels'" or bad boys' bonfire – which they build at a distance from the "goody-goody" bonfire – one of whom, Rafi (Oshri Cohen) Tami has a crush on. At first, they all gather around the fire and tell dirty jokes. After a few of these, Inbal wants to leave as she disapproves of the boys' behavior. She agrees to wait for Tami, who's actually enjoying herself, in a car parked nearby. As soon as Inbal is gone, Ilán (Danny Zahavi), who's on leave from the army, puts his hand on Tami's thigh. She recoils and wants to leave, but he pins her to the ground and tries to kiss her. After a few seconds, he releases her and asks her if she's alright. Frightened and crying, she gets up to leave, when Ilan seizes her from behind, twisting her arm and covering her mouth, and says to his friends, "What?! This is how you treat them (meaning women)!" Their weak protests have no effect, and they move to cheering, "Ta-mi! Ta-mi!" as Ilan forces her to touch his penis.

On a visit of the settler group to the site of their future home on a wind-whipped hilltop, one of the teenage boys corners Tami and tries to get her to confirm the rumors he's heard about what happened to her at the campfire. He tells her, "It's OK. It's natural," hinting to her what awaits her when they're both residing in the same tiny, isolated community. She replies, "What? What's natural?"

Campfire exposes the hypocrisy of the Orthodox community in the film, which denies and silences the rape. Tami tells no one what happened on Lag BeOmer, shutting herself in her room. Rachel, unsettled in the face of her daughter's silence, demands of her fellow community members to investigate what took place that night. Not only do they refuse, but hint that her daughter's behavior invited the boys' actions. Consequently, Rachel decides to leave the settlers' group.

At the end of the movie, we see Rachel, her daughters, and Yossi – now her fiancé – happily riding in the car that belonged to Rachel's deceased husband – which had stood idle since his death – symbolizing the rebirth of the familial patriarchy. Tami's rape, which remains suppressed and unspoken of, is located in the narrative of family melodrama, and its role is dual: It serves to expose and criticize the loss of values and "departure from the path" of the Orthodox community, and at the same time reaffirms the nuclear family and mends the ideological tears in the community's fabric.
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Counting On (2015–2021)
2/10
not a fan...
10 April 2016
...although I do follow the Duggars, not out of admiration, but out of a sick fascination. Regardless, both Counting On and it's predecessor are just plain dumb: For every 30 seconds of even slightly interesting footage, you have to watch about five minutes of talking heads that add nothing of interest whatsoever.

Example: In the epi where JoyAnna and Sierra are preparing a baby shower, I was curious about Sierra, who Jessa referred to as Joy's best friend*. Sierra wasn't dressed fundy, so I was curious: Where did the two meet? Couldn't've been school, as Joy is homeschooled, and besides Sierra looks older than Joy.

But instead of giving us some background, we get Joy's brothers telling us that any suitors will get "screened" by them. Big DUH. Anyone who's been following the Duggars for five minutes already knows that; it's true of all the sisters. What we're interested in is what makes the siblings individuals.

*Their interactions were quite stilted for best friends. I saw no sign of friendship there at all.

In short, if you want to follow the Duggars, don't bother watching their shows; just type "Duggar" into the search bar: You'll get news of every sneeze and fart -- more than you ever wanted -- and you won't have to support the TLC network.
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Next to Her (2014)
9/10
deserves an Oscar
20 January 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I would've given Next To Her a 10, but took away one star for gratuitous sex. That aside, the acting was top notch; I actually felt myself clenching up watching this heartbreaking story unfold. I also liked that it's not Israel-specific, i.e., it could have taken place anywhere. The director and actors show us close up what it's like to care for a mentally handicapped adult day in and day out. I also like that the Hebrew title, aht li laila, translates to "You're my night", which could be a play on words with knight, i.e., Zohar is Cheli's night; and Cheli is Gaby's knight, in the rescue sense of the word. I'm not a native Hebrew speaker, so the dialog in the scene where the mom comes to visit got away from me, i.e., it wasn't clear to me why Cheli has custody of her sister, who Yaakov is, and what sum of money is being referred to. Highly recommended.
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10/10
straddling two worlds....and passing... (possible spoilers)
20 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Wow. Not only is the script a seamless combination of Sayed Kashua's two novels (Second Person Singular and Dancing Arabs), but it's seamless in its own right. Eyad is such a sensitive character, as is Edna; both elicit our sympathy without our pity -- especially when Eyad "goes entrepreneurial" at school, capitalizing on his ability to straddle two worlds.

I also liked the acerbic wink at coexistence efforts. Riklis nailed it.

Great acting and camera work, excellent subtitling. The use of the word "previous" to illustrate Eyad's grappling with his Arab accent was spot on. I'm also gratified by the English title; "Borrowed Identity" expresses the plot line so much better than does "Dancing Arabs". Regarding the latter, I take issue with other reviewers who read symbolism into the title; in my view, it refers quite literally to Eyad's family dancing on the roof during the Scud attacks, a known occurrence. The fact that he declines to join them says it all.

The relationship between Eyad and Yonatan was also done beautifully, showing how when dealing with severe disability, identities like "Jew" and "Arab" are dwarfed by more immediate, human concerns. The film did an excellent job of showing this. Highly recommended.
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3/10
walked out before it was halfway over_spoiler
25 April 2015
Garbage. There was no grounds for the romance between Kaz and Noni. We see why she was drawn to him -- who wouldn't be? Such a stand-up guy -- but what in the world did he he see in an overwhelmed-by-fame-and-an-overbearing-mom pop sensation?

First problem: editing. The opening scene shows a mom (Macy) watching her daughter enter a talent competition. Cut to second scene, where same mom is now managing a pop sensation. For all I knew, the child who had won 1st Runner Up in the talent contest is still a child, waiting at home for her entertainment agent mom. There is no clue that the pop sensation is the now-grown child. I still hadn't figured it out when Macy demands that Noni promise her she won't try suicide again. Give me on screen captions containing dates, years, something!

The musical numbers are embarrassingly trashy. The only interesting thing was discovering that Minnie Driver is a Brit, as I'd only seen her in one other role, Return to Me (also a waste of time), where I seem to recall she played an American. She had me fooled. She also has begun to resemble Mary Tyler Moore.

Don't waste your time.
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Is That You? (2014)
7/10
I expected more from a screenplay by Eshkol Nevó
14 January 2015
Warning: Spoilers
While "Is That You?" is an enjoyable road flick with a cute premise, its randomness distracted me from fully enjoying it and giving it a higher rating. It bothers me when writers give characters ethnic names / names that are obviously not of the dominant culture (Golan in this case, a distinctly Israeli name) when their backgrounds are immaterial to the plot. Doing so is just a distraction, as was the seemingly random choice of song that Roni plays at Rachel's birthday party. There having been no prior reference to or mention of this song, why was it chosen? Not a hit song from their youth (the 1970s), and certainly not a song that an Israeli is likely to know. Finally, a motel clerk declining a couple a room and then being persuaded to give them a room: Why bother putting it in? It gave us no added information; neither did it alter the plot. Superfluous. First-time screenwriters, we're watching you!
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9/10
clever plot, good acting = enjoyable IDF film
10 July 2014
Warning: Spoilers
How anyone could not enjoy *Efes Yachasei Enosh* is beyond me. The incomparable Dana Ivgy (Zohar) with her zinger lines and equally zing-y delivery, and the actress who portrays Irena (why is she not credited?) carry this zany, slightly dark IDF comedy.

I subtracted one star from 10 because I found it unrealistic that a shot could be fired on an IDF base and no one comes running.

Other than that, the plot is just complex enough with just enough loops to keep it moving, yet not confusing; and the characters were thoroughly differentiated, again simplifying things for the viewer.

The story treats contemporary issues such as date rape, sadistic commanders, and the plight of women soldiers assigned to unchallenging administrative jobs. I recommend Zero Motivation highly.

*By the way, I'd translate *yachasei enosh* יחסי אנוש as "people skills", but "motivation" works, as this crowd lacks both!
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The Wonders (2013)
9/10
Reviewer meddleCore nails it...
5 February 2014
Warning: Spoilers
...but I want to add my two *zuzim*, weighing in as an Israeli. I loved it: The dialog and plot were clever, and the stereotypes were employed to just the right degree. The balance between comedy and thriller was perfect, as was the casting...pure fun. I fell in love with both both Arnav (who wouldn't?) and the setting, which mirrored the plot in its twists, turns, and leaps over drainpipes and across alleyways. Enjoyable film, solidly recommended.

I admit that I failed to keep up with the plot's complexities, but it's to Nesher's credit that it didn't matter: Both viewers who grasp them, such as meddleCore (see review above) and viewers such as myself, who just "enjoyed the ride", will enjoy The Wonders equally. Kudos to Nesher!
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8/10
not just another basketball film
25 October 2013
Saw it quite a while ago, but I do recall it being quite touching. While it's certainly about basketball, it's also quite human. I don't want to give away what makes it special, but the player's initial sense of loneliness (despite his having a girlfriend) in this strange country, where he doesn't know the language and is completely at the mercy of his coach, really comes through. It's the perfect opening for his befriending the NBA-obsessed local sports journalist and through him, his sister. It makes a nice triangle because there's little room for jealousy or possessiveness, as the siblings are loyal to each other to the end. This film will appeal to sports fans and "civilians" alike.
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7/10
I think we got us a genre here...
2 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
...we should call it Reluctant Parents, the two examples that come to mind being Baby Boom starring Diane Keaton and Big Daddy starring Adam Sandler. Thus begins Orchim leRega: Homeless father Shaul takes custody of teenage daughter Libi...in the middle of Israel's 2006 Lebanon war.

What can I say? Naively, perhaps, I really wanted Shaul's invention to catch on. Thus we would have had a clever movie whose plot takes a downer situation and unexpectedly turns it into a win-win.

Instead, just when I was sure Shaul (and the audience) would have the last laugh all the way to the bank, the two end up just where they started: Shaul is jobless, broke, and still has nowhere to live. A shame. What began as a clever twist that exploits the wartime situation just...ends.

Why in the world couldn't the screenwriter have made Libi, say, 15, not 13? That way, this miserable, lonely teen could have reaped her own happiness from the bizarre situation. And most baffling: She justifiably calls her dad a loser, yet after he humiliates her and gives up his big chance at making something of himself...she goes back to him. Why?
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8/10
bittersweet and timeless
14 March 2013
It's the old story of the holdouts against the developers a la Milagro Beanfield, *bnót Braun*, and a million other stories. This time it's played out on a Galilee kibbutz that unbeknownst to a dozen or so of its founders, who reside on the premises in a special seniors' complex, the mired-in-debt community has gone into receivership.

The oldsters awaken one morning to an empty (save a cow and one Chinese laborer) kibbutz and after being offered millions by a corrupt tycoon and refusing his offer, hunker down to recreate their society on their own terms.

Simply told and ably acted, the characters draw us into their world, their decades-old unsettled scores, and their up-to-now unconfessed romances. It's a sweet, sad, timeless tale with a kibbutz twist yet no surprises. Recommended.
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Dr. Pomerantz (2011)
8/10
Good ol' Assi Dayan...
3 March 2013
...always there to remind us of the lost, desperate souls who reside among us a la Electric Blanket Named Moshe. Dayan himself stars as the self- loathing psychologist Doctor Yoel Pomerantz. His performance is so good that we feel his desperation and fatigue, the toll of obesity, smoking, and caring for his Aspberger's son, Yoav, played sensitively by Michael haNegbi. The rest of the acting is also quite apt (I want to cite especially Einat Maayan Segal as Rachel, the gum-chewing yet good-hearted secretary at the suicide hotline) forging, together with a script that fires off cynical-yet-funny gems, a dark comedy at its finest. I used to disparage Dayan, but after seeing Comrade, Time of Favor, and now Doctor Pomerantz, I recognize his art. If you like contemporary Israeli cinema, this is one you'll enjoy.
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9/10
Not a don't-miss-it, yet nevertheless a do-see-it
20 February 2013
Moonrise Kingdom combines elements of Ballad of Jack and Rose (set on an isolated island off New England; coming-of-age / loss-of-innocence), Mermaids (set in the early 1960s; coming-of-age / loss-of-innocence -- in turn reminding me of Hideous Kinky, wherein hipster mom has older daughter who longs to be "straight"), yet manages to be completely original. In addition, it's completely engaging, i.e., not once did I ask myself, "Where the hell is this going?" as I do while viewing many recent films, even ones I end up liking. Along with Moonrise Kingdom being a delightful period piece (saddle shoes, rotary-dial phones and a switchboard operator, the all-important close 'n' play record player) the acting, the dialog, the plot, and the setting combine to produce a totally entertaining product. Not a don't-miss-it, yet nevertheless a do-see-it.
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8/10
unexpected delight!
28 January 2013
I'd never heard of this film until it was shown on TV just now, and I can't imagine myself caring about an old Bollywood film, which is the real "star" of this flick. As a European (Ashkenazi) immigrant, I found some of the dialog / dialect a little hard to follow, but I've read my share of Dudu Busi novels, so I know a thing or two about ha-Argazim, the neighborhood where *kikar haChalomot* / Desperado Square takes place, and I was charmed. Plus the added bonus of Mohammed Bakhri. Interesting how the screenplay lets him off the hook from reciting the Kaddish! No one can replicate that scarface's Clint Eastwood-like demeanor. Colorful, feel-good story of decades-old oaths, alliances, and camaraderie in a low-income yet close-knit community. A gem.
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Metzitzim (1972)
9/10
slice of pre-Yom Kippur War (low)life
16 January 2013
While the rest of the world was smiling benevolently under the impression that in their spare time between valiantly defeating our enemies, young Israelis were roasting potatoes and singing around the campfire, overgrown playboys Guteh and Eli, are going nowhere, or going 'round in circles, although they haven't hit bottom.

While Guteh is presumably a lifeguard, he spends little time actually guarding lives and more time chasing boys away from peeking into the women's changing rooms and trying to get laid; while his friend Eli, married and with a toddler daughter to whom he pays zero attention, tries to convince his neighbor Altman to let him open a nightclub in Altman's basement; in between which both friends swig bucketsful of Turkish coffee and cognac while commenting on each others' lives.

Like many Israelis, Guteh and Eli are two men stuck in adolescence, as they were never taught what it is to be men other than the one-dimensional macho ethos prevalent in the Mediterranean at the time. Yet in contrast to the cartoonish, vulgar characters inhabiting Chagigá beSnuker and Charlie veChetzi (of the same period, but featuring primarily Jews of Middle Eastern origin), Guteh and Eli embody the allegory of the spiritually "empty cart" that is Israeli society to which the rabbis referred in the early years of the state. Thus perhaps it's no irony that Uri Zohar, who plays Guteh, later became twice-over famous for abandoning the life portrayed in Metzitzim and "getting religion".

Guteh and Eli are barely employed and stay just this side of the law (what's that stuff they snort out of a dropper?), with zero values or anything to carry them from day to day other than the next drink, the next ruse to disperse the persistent peeping Toms, the next scheme to open a nightclub. Meanwhile Altman Junior, who absorbs the message that sexual conquest is respected, and later toddler Meirav (having received no attention from her father and thus craving male attention) will be next in line to take the places of the prostitutes who work the beach and their johns. While I disagree with the other reviewer that it's the best Israeli film ever (I would award that to Or (Mon Tresor) and Knafayim Shvurot), Metzitzim is an engaging study.
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Big Shots (1982)
9/10
Israeli crime flick!
7 January 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Mitachat La'af surpassed my expectations. It was not only an Israeli crime flick, but quite well done. Not only did I get caught up in it, but the acting was quite good. What a kick seeing the young Moshe Ivgy as a coke- addicted punk; and the rest of the cast, including the only woman, played their parts well. This especially became apparent after the theft of the safe, when things began unraveling, as they always do in crime flicks. What amazes me is that the screenplay is based on an actual crime, and although the three who actually carried out the theft got short sentences, the file of the one who walked away with nothing because he was cheated out of his share got thrown out for lack of evidence. Sweet revenge on the scumbag! Recommended; viewers won't be disappointed.
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Snooker (1975)
2/10
Oy vey...
18 November 2012
...should've known: I was all set to like Hagiga beSnooker, but it ends up it's only slightly less stupid than Charlie vaChetzi, with the same actors (Yehuda Barkan, Zeev Revach) playing sleazy scumbags trying to scam each other, one stupider and sleazier than the other, same as Charlie vaChetzi. Then just when you think it can't get any stupider, along comes the requisite meeting-the-relative-at-the-airport scene, always connected with some sort of promise of marriage to some character that has no clue s/he's been promised or has a clue but no intention of marrying the newcomer. The glamour element? I quit watching as soon as the bar owner said, "We have to steal the guy's check back from him".

The previous reviewer called this a cult flick in the Israeli collective memory (or something to that effect). Really? I love Israeli cinema and one reason I love seeing Israeli films is to fill in the "cultural holes" I have as an immigrant, but this is just garbage. I gave it a "2" because Charlie vaChetzi deserves a "1", but I couldn't even come up with the minimum 10 lines to say so.
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Comrade (2006)
8/10
can't help comparing it to Clara haKdoshá
26 March 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Caveat: I love all Israeli films except those directed by Assi Dayán. Ironically, Dayán acts in Comrade, and puts in the strongest performance. As in Clara haKdoshá, the male lead is a young teen from a semi-dysfunctional background in his sexual awakening, thus it was hard for me not to compare them, and although I enjoyed Comrade, Clara haKdoshá wins this cinema battle -- yet not by a lot.

Ilan is an appealing and sympathetic character, while Dayán's is volatile, causing us to vacillate between sympathizing with him and fearing him, although we like the bond that forms between he and Ilan.

The other bond -- between Ilan and Dalia -- is stronger in its continuance that is hinted at at the close of the film than it is in the actual story. An appealing film showing the grittier side of Israel.
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If These Walls Could Talk (1996 TV Movie)
9/10
most of the reviewers missed the entire point
20 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
First of all, I want to thank fayR for calling a spade a spade: I'm pro-abortion, period. I believe all three women should've aborted. I gave this film a nine because, as testified to at I'mNotSorry.net, I don't believe it's true that all women who find themselves pregnant and don't want to be agonize over it; and neither do I believe that having an abortion necessarily affects a woman negatively or for a long period of time. For that I'm grateful for the character in the middle segment who admits to having felt relieved after aborting. Hard for me to believe that relief isn't the Number One sensation felt by a woman after undergoing a safe, effective abortion. No, it will not haunt you for the rest of your days, and this needs to be said.

I also thank Merwyn Grote, though we sit on opposing sides of this issue, for submitting the only review that actually looked beyond the surface to see the message. The message I got, however, differs from the one Grotes saw: What I saw was the horror of conservative backlash. The only character who had access to a safe, legal abortion without getting mobbed or firebombed was the 1970s one. Our society passed through a blip of progressiveness that lasted about a decade, and that's what I find the most disturbing thing this movie showed. Every viewer should agree with that.

Veering a little off-topic here, but I never understood why back-alley abortionists couldn't take the extra minute to wash their hands and disinfect their instruments. It's not as if it added to their overhead. What motivated this pond scum? Money? OK. But he already got paid! What harm could it have done to swab some alcohol onto the speculum? Tom in the 1950s segment was the one who deserved to be shot. Where are all the indignant anti-abortion voices when it comes to him and his ilk -- and don't think they don't still exist. The state of Wyoming has not a single legal abortion provider. Who do you suppose is performing abortions in Wyoming?
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