Germany, France, Israel

Synopsis

One night at a bar, an old friend tells director Ari about a recurring nightmare in which he is chased by 26 vicious dogs. Every night, the same number of beasts. The two men conclude that there's a connection to their Israeli army mission in the first Lebanon War of the early eighties. Ari is surprised that he can't remember a thing anymore about that period of his life. Intrigued by this riddle, he decides to meet and interview old friends and comrades around the world. He needs to discover the truth about that time and about himself. As Ari delves deeper and deeper into the mystery, his memory begins to creep up in surreal images …

Director's Statement

Did you start this project as an animated documentary?
Yes indeed. WALTZ WITH BASHIR was always meant to be an animated documentary. For a few years, I had the basic idea for the film in my mind but I was not happy at all to do it in real life video. How would that have looked like? A middle-aged man being interviewed against a black background, telling stories that happened 25 years ago, without any archival footage to support them. That would have been SO BORING! Then I figured out it could be done only in animation with fantastic drawings. War is so surreal, and memory is so tricky that I thought I'd better go all along the memory journey with the help of very fine illustrators.
What came first - the desire to make a documentary or the desire to make an animated film?
lt was always my intention to make an animated documentary. Since I had already made many documentaries before, it was a real excitement going for an animated one. I made an experiment in my documentary TV series "The Material That Love Is Made Of". Each episode opened with a three-minute animated scene introducing scientists talking about the "science of LOVE". It was basic Flash animation, but it worked so well that I knew a feature-length animated documentary would eventually work.
What can you tell us about the animation process used in the film?
WALTZ WITH BASHIR was made first as a real video based on a 90-page script. It was shot in a sound studio and cut as a 90-minute length video film. It was made into a story board, and then drawn with 2,300 illustrations that were turned into animation.
The animation format was invented in our studio "Bridgit Folman Film Gang" by the director of animation Yoni Goodman. It's a combination of Flash animation, classic animation and 3D. It's important for me to make clear that by all means this film was not made by rotoscope animation, meaning that we did not illustrate and paint over the real video. We drew it again from scratch with the great talent of art director David Polonsky and his three assistants.
Is the film based on your actual personal experiences?
The story is my very personal experience. It follows what I went through from the moment I realized that there were some major parts in my life completely missing from my memory. I went through a major psychological upheaval during the four years I worked on WALTZ WITH BASHIR. I discovered a lot of heavy stuff regarding my past and meanwhile, during those years, my wife and
brought three kids into this world. This makes you wonder, maybe I am doing all this for my sons. When they grow up and watch the film, it might help them to make the right decisions, meaning not to take part in any war, whatsoever. Was the making of WALTZ WITH BASHIR therapeutic for you?
A journey trying to figure out a traumatic memory from the past is a commitment to long-term therapy. My therapy lasted as long as the production of WALTZ WITH BASHIR: four years. There was a shift from dark depression as a result of things discovered to being in euphoria over the film finally being in production with complicated animation being done by the team at a pace better than expected. If I was the type of guy who believes in the cult of psychotherapy, I'd swear the film had done miracles to my personality. But due to previous experience, I'd say the filmmaking part was good, but the therapy aspect sucked.
Are all the interviewees the actual people portraying themselves? Seven out of the nine interviewees in the film are the actual people. They were interviewed and filmed in a sound studio. For personal reasons, Boaz (my friend who had the dream about the dogs) and Carmi (my friend living in the Netherlands) did not want to appear on camera, so they were played by actors. But their testimonies are real.
Are there others like you who have had similar experiences?
Of course, I am not alone out there. I believe that there are thousands of Israeli ex-soldiers that kept their war memories deeply repressed. They might live the rest of their lives like that, without anything ever happening. But it could always burst out one day, causing who knows what to happen to them. That's what Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder is all about.
What are your feelings about the Sabra and Shatila massacre today?
The same as I've always felt: it's the worst thing that humankind can do to each other. One thing for sure is that the Christian Phalangist militiamen were fully responsible for the massacre. The Israeli soldiers had nothing to do with it. As for the Israeli government, only they know the extent of their responsibility. Only they know if they were informed or not in advance about the oncoming violent revenge.
And your feelings about war?
Having made WALTZ WITH BASHIR from the point of view of a common soldier, I've come to one conclusion: war is so useless that it's unbelievable. It's nothing like you've seen in American movies. No glam, no glory. Just very young men going nowhere, shooting at no one they know, getting shot by no one they know, then going home and trying to forget. Sometimes they can. Most of the time they cannot.
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Cast & Crew

Directed by: Ari Folman

Written by: Ari Folman

Produced by: Ari Folman, Yael Nahlieli, Serge Lalou, Gerhard Meixner, Roman Paul

Cinematography: Ari Folman

Original Score: Max Richter

Animation: Yoni Goodman

Nominations and Awards

  • European Composer 2008
  • European Film 2008
  • European Director 2008
  • European Screenwriter 2008
  • Feature Film Selection 2008