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Une famille vivant à travers l'Empire ottoman, le mandat britannique et la guerre d'indépendance d'Israël. Ce mélodrame historique multigénérationnel tournera à travers le pays en hébreu, en... Tout lireUne famille vivant à travers l'Empire ottoman, le mandat britannique et la guerre d'indépendance d'Israël. Ce mélodrame historique multigénérationnel tournera à travers le pays en hébreu, en anglais, en ladino et en arabe.Une famille vivant à travers l'Empire ottoman, le mandat britannique et la guerre d'indépendance d'Israël. Ce mélodrame historique multigénérationnel tournera à travers le pays en hébreu, en anglais, en ladino et en arabe.
- Récompenses
- 4 victoires et 14 nominations au total
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10wpcghys
Set in old Jerusalem under Ottoman and British rule this complex life drama gives a fascinating taste of the social, political and human context of the time through a beautifully written drama of love, death, family, sex and revolution. Also quite compelling to taste the Middle East of the past with glorious costumes and cinematography.
This drama series got me hooked on the first episode! I couldn't help but binge 3-4 episodes a night. I love the actors, the story line is captivating and left me looking forward to watching what would happen next! I really do hope they air season 3 and don't leave us hanging the way they ended season 2. It's a beautiful historical drama with several love stories entwined set in a time of war and religious conflict. The actors are fantastic and I'm so rooting for Luana. I really hope there will be a season 3 and that we don't have to wait a whole year for it to air either! I'm considering rewatching it already.
While the family drama is plodding, the backdrop of Palestine during the years leading up to the birth of the state of Israel has a beautiful feel, and, from what I've studied, an authenticity to it. Not everyone understands the nuances -- the wealthy Armozas have quite possibly been in Jerusalem since their family was expelled from Spain in 1492, so they look down on the Ashkenazim, the recent arrivals from eastern Europe, with their payos, their Yiddish and their shtetl ways. These divisions persisted. Also, it's very true that the birth of the state was accompanied by two wars, not one. By the late 1920s Jews in Palestine were being attacked by their Arab neighbors as a response to increased Jewish immigration, and the attackers didn't always distinguish between recent arrivals and Jews who had lived there for centuries. This war is not as well known as the War of Independence of 1948, but in Israel they have not forgotten it and these incidents are dramatized.
Admittedly, several of the key characters are not all that likeable so it's harder to care about what happens to them. Still, if you enjoy a production with a real sense of time and place, give it a try.
Admittedly, several of the key characters are not all that likeable so it's harder to care about what happens to them. Still, if you enjoy a production with a real sense of time and place, give it a try.
Quite entertaining but for me far too soapy-ish, I definitely miss the subtlety, the more intelligent stuff.
I don't like the violent scenes in the series. It is apparently meant to make it exciting to satisfy those who need it, but this kind of tension is not for me.
I find the constant switching in time unfortunate.
You are then just engaged in a story and then the series switches back to a moment in the past (or in the future). I am less happy about the faded colours applied to the scenes in the earlier time period.
Over all, I liked it well enough to continue watching the series. I especially liked the personnages and the story of Luna and her father.
I don't like the violent scenes in the series. It is apparently meant to make it exciting to satisfy those who need it, but this kind of tension is not for me.
I find the constant switching in time unfortunate.
You are then just engaged in a story and then the series switches back to a moment in the past (or in the future). I am less happy about the faded colours applied to the scenes in the earlier time period.
Over all, I liked it well enough to continue watching the series. I especially liked the personnages and the story of Luna and her father.
"The Beauty Queen of Jerusalem" has now completed two seasons. It follows, thus far, three generations of a middle-class Sephardic Jewish family living through British rule and thus far extended into World War II. The individual members of the Armoza family have distinct personalities which allows a variety of storylines. Grandma Mercada (Irit Kaplan) is strong-willed and traditional. Her son, Gabriel (Michael Aloni), is weak-willed and deceptive. He's forced to marry Rosa (Hila Saada), a woman he doesn't love. Rosa has a younger brother, Ephraim (Tom Hagi) who is part of the resistance to British rule. Gabriel's first love is an Ashkenazi Jewish woman, Rochel (Yuval Scharf). Gabriel and Rosa have three daughters--Luna (Swell Ariel Or) is the beauty queen and Gabriel's favorite. Rochelita (Eli Steen) is the brainy one in the family. The Franco family is the near neighbors to the Armozas.
The series begins in the 1920s and ends with 1941. The second season continues the war years, ending around 1944. "The Beauty Queen of Jerusalem" is entertaining soap opera. It relies greatly on family members keeping secrets from another, especially Gabriel. Breakthroughs come only in unavoidable crises. Even the storyline is somewhat predictable, it does weave historical threads together in an interesting fashion. And the writing is good enough so that the characters develop clear personalities even though they don't seem to learn any life lessons along way.
The series begins in the 1920s and ends with 1941. The second season continues the war years, ending around 1944. "The Beauty Queen of Jerusalem" is entertaining soap opera. It relies greatly on family members keeping secrets from another, especially Gabriel. Breakthroughs come only in unavoidable crises. Even the storyline is somewhat predictable, it does weave historical threads together in an interesting fashion. And the writing is good enough so that the characters develop clear personalities even though they don't seem to learn any life lessons along way.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe dialogue in the show is in Hebrew, English, Arabic, and even Ladino, the latter being a Sephardic language that primarily consists of old Spanish with borrowings from Turkish, Hebrew, Aramaic, Arabic, Portuguese, and French.
- GaffesThe British army show up several times during 1937 using Jeeps. The Jeep wasn't developed until 1941. In 1938, Zacks shows off his MG TD, a car that wasn't manufactured until 1952
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- How many seasons does The Beauty Queen of Jerusalem have?Alimenté par Alexa
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What is the Japanese language plot outline for La belle de Jérusalem (2021)?
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