Bread (1986 film)


Bread is an 84-minute 1986 Israeli Hebrew-language Prix Italia-winning independent underground dramatic television art film directed by Ram Loevy and cowritten with and Meir Doron.

Synopsis

The film follows Shlomo Elmaliach, who loses his job at his town's local bakery when it is forced to close. Rather than join the other unemployed protesters, Elmaliach locks himself in his own home and launches a very personal hunger strike. At first, people come to visit him at his home, and there is even a rumor that television reporters might show up. Gradually, even Elmaliach's own friends abandon him, and he ends up dragging his own family down with him. A son, Baruch, seeks radical solutions to poverty, while a daughter, Navah, who has escaped to Tel Aviv-Yafo to study, returns to her home and takes on a job on a production line, and Elmaliach's wife, Mazal, takes on a job as a seamstress. At the end of the film, the factory is reopened as a result of all of the protests, however, by then it is too late for Shlomo Elmaliach. The film was produced by the Israel Broadcasting Authority, was broadcast on Channel 1, features music composed by Nahum Nardi to lyrics written by Nathan Alterman, and stars inter alia Shmil Ben Ari,,, and.

Reception

The journalist has compared the film to the works of Alain Resnais, Chris Marker, Agnès Varda, and Michelangelo Antonioni and has opined that it “is still very powerful, and it seems as relevant today as it was on the day it was first aired.” All five films were released in Israel as part of a limited edition DVD boxset in 2009.