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IMDbPro

Saint Clara

Original title: Clara Hakedosha
  • 1996
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
813
YOUR RATING
Saint Clara (1996)
DramaFantasyRomance

The year is 1999 and the storyline is actually a number of subplots all revolving around the 13-year old Clara, a girl who can predict the future and has telekinetic powers. The subplots inc... Read allThe year is 1999 and the storyline is actually a number of subplots all revolving around the 13-year old Clara, a girl who can predict the future and has telekinetic powers. The subplots include a boy in her class who has a crush on her, his family, her family, and her principal ... Read allThe year is 1999 and the storyline is actually a number of subplots all revolving around the 13-year old Clara, a girl who can predict the future and has telekinetic powers. The subplots include a boy in her class who has a crush on her, his family, her family, and her principal who keeps talking French for some strange reason.

  • Directors
    • Ari Folman
    • Ori Sivan
  • Writers
    • Ari Folman
    • Jelena Kohout
    • Pavel Kohout
  • Stars
    • Lucy Dubinchik
    • Halil Elohev
    • Johnny Peterson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    813
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Ari Folman
      • Ori Sivan
    • Writers
      • Ari Folman
      • Jelena Kohout
      • Pavel Kohout
    • Stars
      • Lucy Dubinchik
      • Halil Elohev
      • Johnny Peterson
    • 11User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 6 nominations total

    Photos5

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Lucy Dubinchik
    Lucy Dubinchik
    • Clara Chanov
    Halil Elohev
    • Eddie Tikel
    Johnny Peterson
    • Rosy
    Maya Maron
    Maya Maron
    • Libby
    Maya De-Fries
    • Eleanor Galash
    Tal Feigenboim
    • Galit Biron
    Igal Naor
    Igal Naor
    • Headmaster Tissona
    Joe El Dror
    Joe El Dror
    • Teacher Mounitz
    Orly Silbersatz
    Orly Silbersatz
    • TV Reporter
    • (as Orly Silbersatz Banai)
    Tal Ben-Bina
    • Tikel's Mom
    Menashe Noy
    Menashe Noy
    • Tikel's Dad
    Evgenia Dodina
    Evgenia Dodina
    • Clara's Mom
    • (as Jenya Dodina)
    Ronald Heilovsky
    • Clara's Dad
    Israel Sasha Demidov
    Israel Sasha Demidov
    • Elvis Chanov
    • (as Israel Damidov)
    Ronny Bachar
    • Vered Rosental
    Tomer Patlock
    • Asthma
    Divan Sivan
    • Baby Chanov
    Helena Zo-Btov
    • Seismographic Engineer
    • Directors
      • Ari Folman
      • Ori Sivan
    • Writers
      • Ari Folman
      • Jelena Kohout
      • Pavel Kohout
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.9813
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    10

    Featured reviews

    Aizyk

    Depressing, unusual

    As I watched this movie, I was unsure whether it was trying to present a realistic image of common Israeli lives, or if it was complete fantasy. It had the wacky characters and a cinematographic/color style reminiscent of Pedro Almodovar films, although with absolutely none of the exuberance. The featureless architectures colored in dreary pastels, located in grassy nowheres, then juxtaposed in other scenes with environments covered in concrete, lent a very odd and bleak feeling to the film. Buildings seemed devoid of humanizing artistic style--although the style of the film itself was very distinct. Every place seemed deserted, even when there were pedestrians around (walking in all directions without apparent regard to the paths of roads and sidewalks, somewhat like zombies). Often, there was what looked like cement plants nearby, as well as glass objects handy for shattering. The sky seemed to be perpetually overcast, or in twilight, except in the night scenes. Fortunately, there were no references, visual or otherwise, to religion or Israel's governmental politics. If there had been, it would have created a familiarity, corrupting the weird vibe of the film's environment. It was like watching the inhabitants of a semi-abandoned wasteland, a place which could exist anywhere.

    This was an interesting film, and I don't know if I've ever seen anything quite like it. Was it entertaining? I'm still not sure, although as a comedy, it wasn't really about laughs, but more about quirks.
    dinopup

    cool premise, but not exactly lives up to it

    The premise of a girl receiving magic powers and disrupting her town is cool, but the movie doesn't exactly live up to it. You want there to be more to her magic powers than predicting the answers on tests. The movie does have a nice ending though and the principal, math teacher, lawyer father, and Uncle Elvis are a blast.
    cacn327

    See this film!

    I'd say this was a sweet and romantic film, almost in a John Waters style. It's refreshing, honest, and certainly endearing. Each character was a symbol of a virtue or vice, the set direction was campy, and the overall mood was hopeful in the midst of impending doom. I'd like to see more from this director.
    10awalter1

    Oh, Clara of the violet eyes!

    A class of Israeli junior high kids has discovered a miracle in its midst. One of the students, Clara, a 13 year old Russian immigrant, has begun to see the future. This singular talent arrives suddenly like an unexpected blessing from the gods of puberty, and for a few exciting days, Clara's predictions about math tests and lottery numbers turn her world upside down.

    And what a world it is. The film, released in 1996, is set three years in the future in an absurdist, industrial cityscape. The school kids talk tough about revolution as they tromp through polluted swamps and through streets lined with huge squares of beehive apartment buildings. The city seems on the very cusp of apocalypse, though it's not clear whether the final crisis will arise from a man-made ecological disaster or from the hand of God in the form of an earthquake. Meanwhile, the revolution threatens to develop into a new religion, with Saint Clara at the center. The entire city listens for her predictions, adult men get crushes on her, and of course the boys in her class end up fighting over her.

    To complicate things for Clara, her powers may disappear if she falls in love. One of her admirers, Tikel, has a good chance with her though. He's obsessed with her violet eyes, and chicks always fall for that--at least in junior high. "I think your visions come from your eyes," he tells her.

    "Saint Clara" really is about as good as films get. It is a beautiful thing to be able to imagine the near-future, accelerate the world's problems slightly, and then just continue to smile at life. In this way, "Saint Clara" is reminiscent of the irresistibly optimistic films Wim Wenders made during the 1990s. Perhaps the film's best surprise, however, is the voracious, adolescent energy which tints its vision. All the kids in the film are bursting with potential, thirsty for life; and the adults are sad but charming caricatures, thinly-veiled trolls and witches, forever dreaming of their lost youth. A naive misconception, certainly, but here it is also fantastically endearing.

    Kudos to Kino Video for making this gem available on video. And don't miss the sweet little film at the end of the tape: "Personal Goals."
    9howard.schumann

    An offbeat gem

    Pals Eddie Tikal (Halil Elohev), skinhead wannabe Rosy (Johnny Peterson) and the boyish-looking Libby (Maya Maron) swallow some pills before entering school. Instead of going to class, however, they are summoned to the principal's office to be questioned about a strange event. It seems that the students at Haifa's Golda Meir Junior High School have turned in perfect scores on a Math test and the perplexed teacher and principal of the school are determined to hunt down and punish the cheater. The teacher asks, "Aren't you guys smart enough to make a few mistakes so we won't catch on that you're cheating?" When they find out, however, that the class did not cheat but were provided answers by a clairvoyant Russian immigrant, their authority is shaken.

    Based on a novel by Pavel Kohout, a Czech writer who adapted its story from a screenplay by his wife Jelena, Ari Foman and Ori Sivan's Saint Clara is a film of surreal charm that bears comparison to Bunuel and Truffaut. While it is quirky, it is not self consciously so, and contains characters that we can recognize as real people. Contrary to typical Hollywood fare, the film shows psychic abilities such as clairvoyance to be natural attributes of the human mind, although in this case, according to a family tradition, they will last only until the young girl falls in love. The psychic is 13-year old Clara (Lucy Dubnichek), a very quiet girl with deeply expressive eyes. While she is regarded as odd by her punk classmates, they are more than happy to receive her help on their examinations and equally eager to enlist her help in planning a revolution that never quite gets off the ground.

    The oddness in the film is not limited to the students. Mathematics teacher (Joseph El Dror) had a tour of duty in Vietnam where he claims that he once beat international chess champion Bobby Fischer. The principal (Yigal Naor), nattily dressed in a red suit, claims to have made love to French singing star Edith Piaf. On television, we see a weirdly dressed newswoman who constantly speaks about the impending environmental catastrophe and we learn from Rosy that the Richter scale was inspired by Marilyn Monroe. While it has its uneven moments, Saint Clara is an offbeat gem that offers with deadpan humor some intriguing insights into adolescent behavior. As Tikel becomes infatuated with Clara, the film hints at a more conventional outcome but maintains its irresistible charm and originality until the end.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Fantasy
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film takes place in 1999.
    • Quotes

      Tikel's Dad: [Upon winning the lottery] The first time you're happy about something I did.

      Tikel's Mom: [Looking at their son] The second time.

    • Connections
      Featured in Hagan Reviews: Saint Clara (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Nitzotzot
      (Acoustic)

      Composed by Rami Fortis / Berry Sakharof

      Performed by Berry Sakharof

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 1996 (Israel)
    • Country of origin
      • Israel
    • Official site
      • Movie information
    • Languages
      • Hebrew
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Den heliga Klara
    • Filming locations
      • Kiryat Gat, Israel
    • Production companies
      • Israeli Film Fund
      • Paralight Ltd.
      • Transfax Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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