Juggles several storylines that include the personal and political, but is unable to get beyond soap-opera shtick.
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What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Village Voice by Akiva Gottlieb
The timelier elements of Campfire, which cleared house at Israel's Academy Awards this year, are too salient to dismiss.
Chicago Reader by Andrea Gronvall
The darker aspects of tribalism come under scrutiny here as nonconformists (unmarried men, women alone) are shown being marginalized.
New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman
A good movie that could have been better, Joseph Cedar's sensitive Israeli drama falters when he trades sociological observations for political ones.
Coming at a time when the settlements on the Gaza Strip are being dismantled, Cedar's film offers a sly critique of their origins, and refreshingly different point of view.
Campfire looks a bit drab, perhaps to show the dullness of Zionist life in the 1980s. But this doesn't take away from the poignancy of the film.
Typical of too many films produced in Israel: plodding, verbose, badly-made and completely monotonous.
The Hollywood Reporter by Sheri Linden
An affecting portrait of a young widow and her two teenage daughters.
The New York Times by Stephen Holden
If Campfire is solidly acted, it is visually drab and has a haphazard narrative momentum.