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London Film Festival 2017

Foxtrot

London Film Festival 2017: Foxtrot | Review
2 October 2017
Filippo L'Astorina, the Editor
Filippo L'Astorina
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Filippo L'Astorina
2 October 2017
Public screenings
11th October 2017 5.45pm at Embankment Garden Cinema
12th October 2017 2.30pm at Embankment Garden Cinema

Movie and show review

Filippo L'Astorina

Foxtrot

★★★★★

Special event

Based on a classic Greek tragedy, Foxtrot tells the story of two parents – Michael and Daphne – who receive the saddening news of the death of their son Jonathan; we are then shown the life of Jonathan at the Israeli checkpoint where he works, in the desert, with three other fellow soldiers. A decision, made for a very good reason, will prove to be fateful.

The spectacular camera work of Samuel Maoz – who won the coveted golden lion in 2009 with his previous film, Lebanon – masterfully takes the viewer within the state of shock and desperation of the father. The bourgeois, ample apartment suddenly feels like a claustrophobic prison. Michael’s despair clashes with an army officer who treats the happening like a normal occurrence, describing each step of the soon-to-be-held funeral in a cold, admin-like fashion. At that point – the peak of the clash between the two – Foxtrot begins to reveal its sarcastic, black-humorous traits; it’s subtle, a series of details that make you smile, or even laugh. In the following scene Michael visits his mother to tell her about the tragic news: in a ballroom, old ladies dance at the back of the shot and, as the trumpet solo plays, a younger lady happily dances along the front of the screen – classy irony.

Maoz’s style becomes darker (the cinematography is fantastic, and so are the dystopic elements) and more entertaining in every checkpoint sequence; the loneliness of these four young men is the consequence of the absurd necessity to control a road in the middle of nowhere, where one of the most regular travellers is a camel they need to open the gate for.

Foxtrot is a film about coincidences that aren’t casual, that seem part of a bigger plan. It was inspired by a real episode experienced by the director, who nearly lost his daughter the day he told her she’d have to take the bus to go to school. She was late and she missed it, a few moments later a terrorist detonated his suicide vest on it.

★★★★★

Filippo L’Astorina, the Editor

Foxtrot does not have a UK release date yet.

Read more reviews and interviews from our London Film Festival 2017 coverage here.

For further information about the festival visit the official BFI website here.

Watch the trailer for Foxtrot here:

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Movie and show review

Filippo L'Astorina

Foxtrot

★★★★★

Special event

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