The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
Junction 48 is more than a mere crowd-pleaser, and it refuses easy catharsis, ending with a cliffhanger. But since this is a movie about deciding to act, maybe that’s the perfect note.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Israel, Germany, United States · 2016
1h 37m
Director Udi Aloni
Starring Salwa Nakkara, Tamer Nafar, Samar Qupty, Ayed Fadel
Genre Action, Crime, Drama
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Amidst the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Palestinian rapper Kareem promotes his music in his crime-ridden ghetto and Tel Aviv's hip-hop club scene. In the process, he faces violent nationalist rappers, the government, drug-dealing friends, and threats against his singer girlfriend, Manar.
The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
Junction 48 is more than a mere crowd-pleaser, and it refuses easy catharsis, ending with a cliffhanger. But since this is a movie about deciding to act, maybe that’s the perfect note.
At its best, the film demonstrates that no art is more political than that which depicts the lived experience of the oppressed with accuracy, empathy, and moral clarity.
Issues are overly simplified and scenes are often poorly constructed (not helped by uneven editing), though Nafar is a charismatic performer. Ditto Qupty, and the energetic hip-hop scenes are welcome distractions. Visuals are spirited.
Village Voice by Kenji Fujishima
Junction 48 mostly sticks to uplifting formula, rarely offering anything particularly fresh or interesting.
We Got This Covered by Lauren Humphries-Brooks
Junction 48 is about a fusing of cultures, not a conflict between them. There are no easy solutions or simplistic answers, and the film doesn’t try to propose any.
Los Angeles Times by Michael Rechtshaffen
Through its keenly observed small moments and the presence of the charismatic Nafar and his infectious, socially charged raps, Junction 48 sensitively yet powerfully conveys the considerable challenges inherent in attempting to reconcile those rocky crossroads of coexistence and cultural identity.
The Hollywood Reporter by Stephen Dalton
While the fuzzy take-home message of peaceful coexistence is something most viewers can get behind, it is also too simplistic and banal to sustain an entire movie.
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