White Eye (2019) Poster

(2019)

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8/10
The Police response time is impressive, actually
isaacsundaralingam17 April 2021
White Eye is a uniquely simplistic movie about a man who finds his stolen bike in the street. The story follows the 20 minutes he spent trying to claim back his property. As simple a story as is, it is written quite masterfully and made to seem almost as tense as a thriller of some sort.

A great movie worth watching.
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8/10
Sensational, Israeli masterpiece...
RosanaBotafogo8 April 2021
A heavy and touching short, for a white bicycle ... What a horrendous outcome, in the synopsis he seemed to fight for his humanity, but he only won revenge and resentment, screwing with the life of a family man and destroying a good he wanted, I felt angry of this short, sensational, Israeli masterpiece...
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8/10
Excellent movie, very well done...
stevedgrossman29 April 2021
Nothing is ever black and white. I don't know if non-Israelis will get this movie. There are nuances here that some might miss.

Even so, well worth watching.
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Circular Reasoning
Cineanalyst25 April 2021
Interesting, I suppose, that both the Israeli (this, "White Eye") and Palestinian ("The Present" (2020)) films nominated for Live-Action Short Oscars this season are both critical of the indignities and injustices inflicted upon ordinary people by law enforcement. This one involves a stolen bicycle, which is only made worse by calling the police, who are more interested in paperwork and deporting illegal immigrants than serving in the capacity for which they were called.

The cinematic-technical hook is that it's shot in one take, with the circular camera tracking reinforcing the circular issues here over a bike, migration and law. The only two minor flaws I found were that around the 12-and-a-half-minutes mark the camera operator appeared to have stumbled momentarily, and the symbolic ending is rather silly. I mean, does he also need an illustration of the unintended environmental harm caused by his wastefulness. Quite well done otherwise.
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7/10
So Many Questions...
rbsteury25 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Interesting in terms of how it would turn out but ends on a perplexing note. Why destroy the bike? Is it a sign of regret? Is it a reference to the Judeo-Christian story of dividing the baby in half (1 Kings 3:16-28)?

And why the recurring pickup of a prostitute (we assume)? What does that add to the story? Why "cut off the baby carrier"? And I get that the film wants to comment on immigrants who were no longer legally in Israel but what did that really add that those of us in America have not heard many times over? And the whole thing about needing to file a report that the bike was stolen when the police are right there seems silly.

For me, it is hard to believe this is one of the 5 best live action shorts up for an Academy Award.
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10/10
Stolen bike stands for contest over Israel
maurice_yacowar7 June 2021
Warning: Spoilers
In 20 minutes the Israeli Tomer Shushan's White Eye manages to convey a more insightful and constructive approach to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict than the current two-hour dramatic feature reconstructing the 1993 Oslo talks (Oslo) does.

Like Ahab's whale the white bicycle is a contested object of subjective value. It carries the complex question of conflicted legality that troubles the very state of Israel. Omer is its original owner, his brand the purple heart his girlfriend put on it. That's Israel, hard won by the Jews in war.

But the imigrant Yunis has established his own claim on it. By buying it from the man who stole it he has established his own legal right. He added the baby-seat, which enables him to leave his infant daughter at kindergarten so he can go work in the meat-packing plant. His 250-shekel bike means more to him than the 2,000-shekel bike Omer claims. But both claims are rightful. Therein lies the challenge - and the tragedy.

The class tension is clear. "It's my car," Yunis tells Oker. The humble object means more to the poor man than to the rich. Here the film evokes the moral heft and dramatic authority of da Sica's classic Bicycle Thieves (1948), where again one deeply-felt theft pointed to a tragic disproportion in social advantage and justice. (That point was missing in John Guillermin's 1960 remake, Never Let Go. Peter Sellers headed a car-theft gang that deprived mailman Richard Todd of the car he needed for his job. The stakes were batheticaly lower) The background action confirms that drama. As an Eritrean illegal Yunis is especially vulnerable when the Israeli Omer involves the police. So are the other illegals who hide in the meat freezer when the police arrive and scurry to brief safety after.

Hence the other drama in the background. An unknown woman teeters off for a presumably sexual transaction in a small car. Her self-selling transaction plays out in real time during Omer's dealing with Yunis. Again the car owner has the advantage. Again a human is reduced to transactional meat.

The police are the usual Israeli authority, wavering, tense, bent to the letter of the law. They freeze on the formality of complaint and ownership.

As for the other Israelis, the first merchant is willing to cut the chains for Omer if he's paid - but not after the police are involved. A theatre worker is more adventurous, providing the tool Omer needs to cut the chain.

Omer's pursuit of his ownership - of the bike as the Israeli's of the land - results in an unjust justice, the downfall of the innocent Yunis. Here this drama establishes a conflicting legality that the usual debate over Israeli/Palestinian rights, based solely on the letter of history, neglects to find.

Omer owned the bike originally. Yunis innocently bought it later and improved it (the baby seat). So both have conflicting but just claims over it.

The plant manager proposes a fair solution: Omer can buy it back for what Yunis paid for it. But this humane resolution arises too late. With the arrival of the police the process becomes uncontainable, injustice inevitable. Yunis pays more in his expulsion than either man's cost of the bike.

Also like Ahab's whale the white bike connotes a prized purity but also the pallor of death. It's a ghost bike. This potential is articulated by the graffiti artist's word 'corpse' that drops down the wall behind. A present claim to legality makes a past claim ghostly, superseded.

The word also foreshadows the fate of the bike. When Omer finally frees "his" bike, it's newly freighted with his inadvertent destruction of Yunis's life and family. Now Omer doesn't just cut the chain but - echoing the threatened wisdom of Solomon - cuts the bike in two as well.

To complete the parable, whatever weight the warring "legalities" over the land are accorded the bitter result is the contested value's destruction. That's how he titular white eye is the white bike we see through.
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8/10
Liked the short.......hate the imdb exposition......... lol
661jda24 February 2023
There is a full 2 hour movie wrapped up in this 29 minute short. Hindsight is always better that dealing with the present. Why did Omer push the envelope so far. If Yunis knew his visa status why did he push? The factor boss KNEW Yunis' situation because all the other worker were illegal immigrants as well (why were they hiding in the freezer and then when the coast is clear - the clear out of the scene?). Why destroy the bicycle afterwards? A very good film that cries to be watched at least one more time and probably several times after that. I never figured out the recurrence of the prostitute either.
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