They say:
The trade in human flesh is a brutal business driven by an international network. In his Promised Land, Amos Gitai delivers a tough portrayal of one woman's journey into the nightmare of Israel's white slave trade.The film opens with several women of Eastern European descent huddled with Bedouin men over a campfire in the Sinai Desert. The group waits the dawning of a new day, but this delivers no trace of a 'promised land'. Corralled like four-legged chattels in a market, the women are paraded and traded, and then transported to a seedy brothel. But while Gitai portrays a harrowing world of exploitation and dehumanisation, the film is not without hope, which comes in the figure of Rose.
Gitai's films have become increasingly impressionistic, and Promised Land is no exception. The film's spare, indirect dialogue and its use of multiple tongues (often without subtitles) build the story obliquely, underscoring the lack of humanity in the flesh trade and the pure functionality of its relationships.
GrodsCorp says:
This film was shocking. Shocking as in dreadful but also literally shocking. The Editor has never seen so many people walk out of a film before. The Editor has also never covered his eyes in a film before. The raw depiction of the sex trafficking trade was sickening. Zero stars for the film as a work of art but five stars for the effectiveness of the message. The Editor has just donated $50 to Project Respect, an Australian organisation fighting sex slavery, and $50 to an international organisation, Coalition Against Trafficking In Women.
Art:
Message:


