Noodle (film)

Noodle

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Ayelet Menahemi
Produced by Assaf Amir
Eitan Mansuri
Elie Meirovitz
Yoav Roeh
Written by Shemi Zarhin
Ayelet Menahemi
Starring Mili Avital
Chen Baoqi
Music by Haim Frank Ilfman
Production
company
Norma Productions
EZ Films
Distributed by EZ Films
United King Films
Release dates
July 26, 2007 (Israel)
Running time
90 minutes
(South Korea, 100 minutes)
Country Israel
Language Hebrew
Some Mandarin Chinese
Some English

Noodle is an award-winning 2007 Israeli film directed by Ayelet Menahemi, written by Shemi Zarhin and Ayelet Menahemi, and starring Mili Avital, Chen Baoqi, and Alon Aboutboul.

Plot

When the Chinese woman working in Israel for Miri Kalderon, an Israeli flight attendant, is suddenly deported for overstaying her work visa, her lack of Hebrew-language skills makes it impossible for her to convince the Israeli authorities that she has a young child with her. Miri, twice-widowed because of the ongoing Arab-Israeli conflicts, has been going through the motions of living, somehow detached from a real connection to life itself. Her decision to help reunite the child—nicknamed "Noodle"—with his mother, now back in Beijing, ends up helping her, not just the boy and his mother, in ways Miri herself could not have expected.

Cast

Main cast
Supporting characters

Awards

The film won the Best Supporting Actress Award from the Israeli Film Academy (Ophir Awards), and a Special Grand Prize of the Jury from the 2007 Montreal World Film Festival.[1] It also won numerous other awards at film festivals throughout the United States and around the world, including the award for Best Feature Film Audience Choice Award at the 2010 Jersey Shore Film Festival.[2]

The film was an official nominee for numerous Israeli Film Academy Awards, including Best Actress, Best Cinematography, Best Director, Best Editing, Best Film, Best Music, Best Screenplay, and Best Sound.[1]

Critical responses

As one review put it, "This Israeli film about grief and loss surprisingly takes the form of a crowd pleaser."[3] Other reviewers agreed, noting that films like Noodle are rare, combining great stories and performances with enough "heart" to involve the audience emotionally.[4] Ultimately, as a review from the 18th annual Tucson Jewish Film Festival put it, "The film is a touching comic-drama of two human beings accompanying each other on a remarkable journey that takes them both back to a meaningful life."[5]

References

  1. 1 2 IMDB.com awards.
  2. Jersey Shore Film Festival.
  3. The Sydney Morning Herald, SMH.com, Paul Byrnes, Jun 24, 2009.
  4. Cross "Cultures: Australia's leading website for Entertainment News and Reviews."
  5. 18th annual Tucson Jewish Film Festival.
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