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The Farewell Party(Mita Tova)

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Israel, Germany · 2014
1h 30m
Director Sharon Maymon
Starring Ze'ev Revach, Levana Finkelstein, Alisa Rozen, Ilan Dar
Genre Comedy, Drama

A group of friends at a Jerusalem retirement home build a machine for self-euthanasia in order to help their terminally ill friend. When rumors of the machine begin to spread, more and more people ask for their help, and the friends are faced with an emotional dilemma

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What are critics saying?

33

The A.V. Club by

The Farewell Party leaves no doubt as to where it stands on the right to die with dignity when facing terminal illness, but it’s so clumsily made that it serves only to exasperate.

70

Village Voice by Abby Garnett

[Depicts] the end of life not as an isolated horror (as in Michael Haneke's Amour) or as the contested site of legal and political factions, but as a complex social phase, its wobbly moral scale hinging on empathy.

70

The Dissolve by Andrew Lapin

The film’s deft, improbable balance of tone makes its success feel well-deserved. Not many directors could have pulled off the blend of somber reflection and gallows humor that Tal Granit and Sharon Maymon manage here.

90

Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan

The Farewell Party succeeds as well as it does because the core dilemma always feels real and the filmmakers take great care to see that the inevitable emotions put into play are never overdone.

90

Arizona Republic by Randy Cordova

It actually is quite funny. It is also warm and empathetic, though a viewer's reaction to the film might vary depending how they view the subject of assisted suicide.

75

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

The performers, working in Hebrew (with English subtitles), make their characters empathetic, emphatic, human and humane.

63

Washington Post by Stephanie Merry

Despite its missteps, The Farewell Party feels special in the way it covers the Big Stuff — love, death, friendship, family — without losing its playful streak.

60

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

For all its sensitivity to the subject, The Farewell Party makes a number of tonal missteps of which the most glaring is the insertion of a musical number that upsets the movie’s otherwise sensible balance between the comedic and the morbid.

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