Film festivals Venice Film Festival 2024

Why War

Venice Film Festival 2024: Why War | Review

For as long as there have been humans, there’s been war. Despite the untold death, destruction, and horrors that have been caused as a direct result of the millennia of conflicts, war continues to be a prominent part of civilisation. In Israeli filmmaker Amos Gitai’s Why War, they explore why this is the case. Inspired by letters between Albert Einstein and Sigmund Freud on the subject, Gitai touches upon several intriguing ideas spanning gender, patriotism, power, culture as he digs through these grand philosophical questions. While Gitai’s essay-like approach to the topic is conceptually rich, the execution is muddled and often too abstract in design to pin down what the filmmaker is trying to say.

Despite this film’s grand questions, Why War is a tiny production comprised of a handful of actors who often deliver long monologues to the camera. With usually no more than two characters onscreen at once, watching this film often feels like attending a theatre performance. The feature even opens with an orchestral overture and there’s scenes of the actors putting on their costumes to complete the illusion.  By taking grand ideas and scaling them down, Gitai makes engaging with them a more personal experience, as if the viewer were sitting in the room with the actors portraying Einstein and Freud.

For this small production to grapple with the grand ideas being posed, the filmmaker deploys an abstract cinematic language to illustrate what’s being discussed. The trouble, though, is that any meaning behind the imagery is often too experimental in design for any meaning to be gleamed from them. In one scene, for example, a woman wakes on a beach covered in a white veil. As Freud and Einstein look on, she gets up, strips naked, and walks into the ocean never to be seen again as the sound of war rages unseen. In another, a woman dyes her hair only for the dye to become literal blood on her hands. Although these images are bold and visually striking, it’s impossible to discern what Gitai is aiming to achieve with them.

Why War seeks to explore age old questions that the greatest minds in history have pondered. While Gitai’s intellectual expedition into this area doesn’t lack in ambition, it’s ultimately let down by an incomprehensible cinematic language that will leave viewers more puzzled than enlightened.

Andrew Murray

Read more reviews from our Venice Film Festival coverage here.

For further information about the event visit the Venice Film Festival website here.

More in Film festivals

“The movie’s whole goal is to provide trans kids a source of joy, a source of light and a source of safety”: Siobhan McCarthy and Nico Carney on She’s the He

Mae Trumata

Orwell: 2+2=5

Christina Yang

Nouvelle Vague: On the red carpet with Richard Linklater at London Film Festival 2025

Mae Trumata

Finding Optel

Christina Yang

Black Rabbit, White Rabbit

Christina Yang

Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery

Mae Trumata

One Woman One Bra

Mae Trumata

Lady

Ronan Fawsitt

Rental Family

Christopher Connor