In the modern
world, terrorists cannot let feelings get in the way of their assigned
mission and those who must defend themselves against terrorist attacks
must be equally strong and ruthless. Killing is done with cold
efficiency and the killers cannot allow themselves to acknowledge
their own pain or the pain of others. A film that dramatizes the kind
of people we have become is Eytan Fox's Walk on Water, a film
about a Mossad secret agent, trained as a ruthless killer, who
uncovers his own humanity before it is lost forever. Fox, an openly
Gay Israeli director, has directed a film about the subjects he is
most familiar with: the problems of Gay people, the Arab-Israeli
conflict, and the unhealed wounds between Jews and Germans.
Based on an actual
incident related to the director by his therapist, Walk on Water
begins when Mossad agent Eyal (Lior Ashkenazi) efficiently carries out
an assassination of a Hamas leader in broad daylight in front of
hundreds of people including the leader's wife and young son. When he
arrives home, Eyal discovers that his wife has committed suicide.
Though Eyal is as unemotional as ever, his boss Menachem (Gideon
Shemer) refuses to give him a dangerous assignment until he has dealt
with this tragedy. Eyal accepts the temporary job of pretending to be
a tour guide for the grandchildren of a Nazi war criminal, Alfred
Himmelman, in hopes that they will lead him to their grandfather.
He meets young Axel
Himmelman (Knut Berger) an open, liberal-minded German who has come to
visit his sister Pia (Carolina Peters) who lives and works on a
kibbutz in Israel and refuses to have anything to do with her parents.
When he greets them at the airport, his dry sense of humor emerges. He
tells them that they just missed today's bomb, that there is usually
one a day and there will be another one for them shortly. As a tour
guide Eyal is cynical and taciturn but each gradually warms to the
other. Pia, though German, is quite content in Israel and tells Eyal
that people look upon her with pity but do not stop being friendly.
Both Eyal and Axel appreciate the same kind of music and a night of
dancing to Israeli folk music helps bridge the gap of understanding.
Eyal never loses
his focus on the job at hand, however, and plants a recording device
in Pia's room, then sits up at night listening to taped conversations
of "Hansel" and "Gretel" in hopes of learning the whereabouts of their
Nazi grandfather. When they visit the Sea of Galilee, Axel tells Eyal
that they can walk on water if they can purify themselves and as they
visit the tourist spots of Jerusalem, Eyal's demeanor starts to become
a bit softer. The agent's facade crumbles even further when Pia and
Axel mimic the song "Cinderella Rockafella" at a Kibbutz talent Quest,
evident in flashbacks to the tears on his wife's face and that of his
last victim's son. After Eyal calls Palestinians little better than
animals, he becomes very disturbed when he discovers Axel is Gay,
especially when he picks up an Arab boy (Yussuf Sweid) during a tour
of Jerusalem.
The boy, put off by
his attitude, tells him, "You, the Jews, are always busy thinking of
what has and what has not been done to you. Maybe, if you could stop
worrying about this past of yours, you could see…." But Eyal doesn't
want to see and tells him to shut up. The final scenes take place in
Berlin where Axel has gone to be at his father's 70th
birthday party, an event Ayel has also flown to Germany to attend at
Axel's invitation. The climax brings all the elements of the film
together in scenes that that are tense, emotional, and unpredictable
but filled with a deep humanity as each character reveals their
vulnerability.
Perhaps Fox tries
to tackle too many issues in a film of only 104 minutes, yet Walk
on Water is more about personal transformation than the rights and
wrongs of a particular cause. Fox has shown us with humor and
compassion that, beyond the terrorist bombs and the growing despair,
there is a common thread of humanity that exists between seemingly
irreconcilable people and ideas. It is an outstanding film that will
leave you feeling that you can walk on water.
Film
Grade: A-