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Amos
Gitai's ALILA intertwines the stories of over a dozen distinct
characters who inhabit an apartment complex located in a rundown
neighborhood of Tel Aviv.
Holocaust
survivor Schwartz (Yosef Carmon) has enjoyed a peaceful existence
living in his small apartment with Linda (Lyn Shiao Zamir),
a young Filipino who comes regularly to give him medication
and company. But recently, Schwartz's treasured silence has
been replaced by a cacophony of bangs, loud sounds and aggressive
voices.
One
of the many obtrusive men audible to Schwartz is Hezi (Amos
Lavie). He recently rented one of the nearby apartments in the
building for a secret rendezvous with a beautiful and self-deprecating
woman named Gabi (Yael Abelcassis). Their intense, unequal and
often-violent love affair turns Gabi's life into a public and
dissonant garble of psychological pain and physical pleasure.
Also disrupting Schwartz's rest is a group of illegal Chinese
construction workers who expand one of the apartments into the
courtyard, without the landlord's permission.
Divorcee
Mali (Hanna Laslo) has her own problems as well. Their neighbors'
construction workers have been contracted by her ex-husband
Ezra (Uri Klauzner), who is himself unwilling to give up his
regular rapport with Mali and let her continue her life with
a new young boyfriend. And to make matters worse, their son
Eyal (Amit Mestechkin) is missing after having deserted his
military service.
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