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A Borrowed Identity

Original title: Dancing Arabs
  • 2014
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Yaël Abecassis, Danielle Kitsis, Tawfeek Barhom, and Razi Gabareen in A Borrowed Identity (2014)
Trailer for Dancing Arabs
Play trailer1:41
3 Videos
16 Photos
Drama

A Palestinian-Israeli boy named Eyad is sent to a prestigious boarding school in Jerusalem, where he struggles with issues of language, culture, and identity.A Palestinian-Israeli boy named Eyad is sent to a prestigious boarding school in Jerusalem, where he struggles with issues of language, culture, and identity.A Palestinian-Israeli boy named Eyad is sent to a prestigious boarding school in Jerusalem, where he struggles with issues of language, culture, and identity.

  • Director
    • Eran Riklis
  • Writer
    • Sayed Kashua
  • Stars
    • Tawfeek Barhom
    • Razi Gabareen
    • Yaël Abecassis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Eran Riklis
    • Writer
      • Sayed Kashua
    • Stars
      • Tawfeek Barhom
      • Razi Gabareen
      • Yaël Abecassis
    • 18User reviews
    • 57Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 5 nominations total

    Videos3

    Dancing Arabs
    Trailer 1:41
    Dancing Arabs
    A Borrowed Identity
    Trailer 1:44
    A Borrowed Identity
    A Borrowed Identity
    Trailer 1:44
    A Borrowed Identity
    A Borrowed Identity Trailer
    Trailer 1:45
    A Borrowed Identity Trailer

    Photos16

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Tawfeek Barhom
    Tawfeek Barhom
    • Eyad
    Razi Gabareen
    • Young Eyad
    Yaël Abecassis
    Yaël Abecassis
    • Edna
    Michael Moshonov
    Michael Moshonov
    • Yonatan
    Ali Suliman
    Ali Suliman
    • Salah
    Danielle Kitsis
    Danielle Kitsis
    • Naomi
    • (as Daniel Kitsis)
    Marlene Bajali
    Marlene Bajali
    • Aisha
    Laëtitia Eïdo
    Laëtitia Eïdo
    • Fahima
    Norman Issa
    Norman Issa
    • Jamal
    Khalifa Natour
    Khalifa Natour
    • Bassem
    Kais Natour
    • Wassim
    Loai Nofi
    Loai Nofi
    • Wajdi
    Rona Lipaz-Michael
    Rona Lipaz-Michael
    • Headmistress in Jerusalem
    Shirili Deshe
    Shirili Deshe
    • Literature Teacher
    Keren Tzur
    Keren Tzur
    • History Teacher
    Shani Klein
    Shani Klein
    • Nurse
    Adham Abu Aqel
    • Young Nidal
    Danny Berman
    • Nadal
    • Director
      • Eran Riklis
    • Writer
      • Sayed Kashua
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    7.21.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7Garcwrites

    heartfelt moving film

    The film started off innocently, much like Eyad / Iyad is at the beginning. It's sweet, funny and almost carefree and gets serious overtime as Eyad grows up and tries to understand and fit into this adult world. Dancing Arabs' comedic tone reflects Eyad's childhood innonce, the tension and drama later on in the movie attests of this young arab's struggles to find his place and his identity around jews in Israel.

    Eran Riklis succeeded in capturing Iyad's evolution in My son, coherently interlacing different tones and getting a good performance out of Razi Gabareen & Tawfeek Barhom who both embody Eyad's life. Years of Eyad's life are smartly intertwined with the tensions in the region and Eyad's choices. Although Riklis, very skillfully took on a difficult subject and managed to make a movie advocating coexistence, My Son felt at times a bit too sugar coated. There's no denying that it is about Eyad and his journey to self discovery but some of the characters - although secondary - completely lacked substence or development. The mothers for instance, both brilliantly played by Abecassis & Eido kind of lacked personality. The Arab-Israeli tensions are in the film but they are addressed very subtle, hinted.

    The cast nicely played the bonds and chemistry between the characters. Tawfeek Barhom, awkwardness and isolation in his new surroundings is on point. He is utterly believable and convincing as the good- intentioned young arab who wants to fit in. My Son is a beautiful, funny film shining a good light on both population.

    @wornoutspines
    9jakob13

    Phenomenology of Identity

    Eran Riklis in collaboration with gifted writer Sayed Kashua has brought to the screen a thoughtful and riveting film based on Kashua's 'Dancing Arabs'. Released in North America as 'A Borrowed Identity', it unfortunately is shown only in select art houses, to a limited audience. 'Borrowed Identity' has come on to the American scene at a time of racial and ethnic tension, which in the US context is a reflection of the strain in defining who and what a person is. Kashua's script is informed in the ongoing debate in Israel for its Arab citizens of what its means to be an Israeli, at a time of rabid Jewish nationalism: at a time when the degenerative Zionist elite dreams of expelling 20 percent of Israel's population, i.e., Arabs of the right of citizenship. 'A Borrowed Identity', in a Hegelian trope, in a rude dialectic informs us that the only way Eyad, a gifted Arab Israeli, can find complete fulfillment in Israel is to become a Jew by assuming the identity of Jonathan, his doppelganger, who dies after a long bout of muscular dystrophy, with the complicity of the deceased Israeli's mother. Riklis' film should strike a chord in America in the light of the Rachel Dozeal brouhaha, whereby a white woman passes as black. The connection is problematic? And the climate in the US is hardly welcoming for understanding the plight of Arab citizens of Israel, who, as it turns out, are 'les negres d' Israel'. There is nothing to fault in the probing eye of Riklis' camera. Yael Abecassis is as ever the embodiment of discernment as Jonathan's mother, the young Tawfeek Barhom has a shrewd understanding of the film's protagonist Eyad; he infuses his character with a delicate understanding of the transformation of what Hegel calls the alter ego and then becoming Jonathan. However the love angle is predictable, but creditable, and shows the limits of Israeli liberalism. Above all, the talents of Riklis and Kashua have produced a film worthy of prizes, which the hands of less talented artists would render 'Dancing Arabs' cartoon like if not soppy in sentimentality.
    10elieli22

    Very good movie.

    I am an Israeli. There will be no spoilers here. (And sorry for my spelling mistakes).. This is very good movie tries to show both sides from one persons view.... So it is very very real.. It shows that we are just the software someone puts into us... Which means software can change and your software is only valid were you are now... It is not Valid for the future nor in a different culture. This also shows how we judge people just because of their name appearance or religion!

    Very very very good movie.
    JohnDeSando

    A beautiful love story amid chaos.

    "Of course, I'm aware of the animosities destroying brain cells on both sides, and I know all about the obstinacy of the warring parties, their refusal to reach an agreement, their devotion to their own murderous hatred…." Yasmina Khadra, The Attack

    Identity is indeed the heart of A Borrowed Identity about Palestinian boy, Ayed (Tawfeek Barhom), sent to a premiere boarding school in Jerusalem, but beset by prejudice against him and decisions about which culture he should embrace. This informative film is a crash course in cultural clash with enough character and interpersonal drama to satisfy the most discerning cinephile. Those who found The Attack an unforgettable interpretation of the conflict will have a similar reaction to this film.

    From the early '80's nothing is going right for Palestinians: Israel dominates the split of the region while Hamas begins to retaliate. Meanwhile Ayed has the misfortune to fall in love with a Jew, Naomi (Daniel Kitsis), whose love will drive some of his basic decisions, like staying at the boarding school, and therefore his life.

    The charm of this film is that it does not take sides, just empathizes with the protagonist, whose love is not only natural but also an emblem of the absurdity of cultural wars when one considers that it's really about people, whose loves cannot be controlled, and shouldn't be. Her mother would rather Naomi be "a lesbian, a drug addict, or has cancer" than be in love with an Arab.

    The more time director Eran Riklis lets us spend with these Romeo- and-Juliet lovers, the more we are convinced the Arab-Israeli conflict is an absurdity born of historical hatreds that really shouldn't apply in the modern World. The tragedy is that Ayed must deal with the debilitating prejudice daily and make decisions on it rather than his natural love and brilliance.

    But that conflict is what makes A Borrowed Identity such a watchable drama that gives more insight into that region of the world than all the Wikipedia articles touching on the Arab-Israeli conflict.
    9Red-125

    Palestinian Israelis must "dance at two weddings"

    The Israeli film "Dancing Arabs" was shown in the U.S. as "A Borrowed Identity." It was directed by Eran Riklis. The movie stars Tawfeek Barhom as Eyad, a Palestinian boy who is an Israeli citizen. Although his plight isn't as bad as a non-Israeli Palestinian, he is nonetheless a second-class citizen. (Palestinian citizens work in restaurants as dishwashers. Jewish citizens work as waiters.)

    Despite being Palestinian, Eyad is allowed to attend a prestigious Israeli boarding school. Naturally, he's the target of racial slurs, but he isn't physically injured, and he moves forward toward adulthood. As part of a class assignment, he meets Jonathan (Michael Moshonov), a young man who has progressive muscular dystrophy. He also meets an Israeli girl, Naomi, played by Daniel (Danielle) Kitsis. Naomi is intelligent and loving, but the question is whether their relationship has a future, because of their cultural and religious differences.

    The plot moves in unexpected directions, and the movie is emotionally powerful and gripping. The acting is excellent, and I think the plot represents a balanced picture of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, as it plays out among individuals.

    We saw this movie at the Little Theatre in Rochester, as part of the highly successful Rochester International Jewish Film Festival. The film will work well on the small screen.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Goofs
      At around 1 hr there is a scene in which the main character sits on his dorm room bed and stares forlornly at the wall upon which there is a New York State license plate. The plate's design was initiated in 2010, but the scene in the film takes place in 1990.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Matzav Ha'Uma: Episode #8.11 (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      The Rape Song
      from the rock opera "Mami"

      Lyrics: Hillel Mittlepunkt

      Composed by Ehud Banai, Yossi Bar Haim

      Arranged and Produced by Yonatan Riklis

      Performed by 'Poster Bots" and Rotem Alajem

      Recorded and Mixed by Keren Biton

      Assistant: Amit Shtriker at DB Studios

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 27, 2014 (Israel)
    • Countries of origin
      • Israel
      • Germany
      • France
    • Official site
      • Pyramide Distribution (France)
    • Languages
      • Arabic
      • Hebrew
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Dancing Arabs
    • Filming locations
      • Jerusalem, Israel
    • Production companies
      • United Channel Movies
      • MACT Productions
      • Alma Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $281,540
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $10,308
      • Jun 28, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $930,958
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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