CHICAGO – If you’ve never seen the farcical ensemble theater chestnut “Noises Off,” you will see no better version than on the Steppenwolf Theatre stage, now at their northside Chicago venue through November 3rd. For tickets and details for this riotous theater experience, click NOISES OFF.
Great Performance Anchors Devastating ‘The Attack’
Rating: 4.0/5.0 |
CHICAGO – “The Attack,” opening this week at the Landmark Century in Chicago, is a melancholy, mournful piece about an unimaginable tragedy and a man faced with the realization that he may not know the truth about the woman he loved. It’s an accomplished drama anchored by an understated, captivating performance from an actor who fills nearly every frame of every scene. It is about an attack not just on innocent lives but a man’s very understanding of his family. It’s a strong alternative to blockbuster fare this weekend.
Ali Suliman plays Amin Jaafari, a successful Palestinian doctor working and living in Tel Aviv. On the same night he accepts an award for his accomplishments, he is called into deal with a waking nightmare. A bomb has gone off, killing over a dozen people, many of them children, and this doctor has to deal with the bloody aftermath. The horror becomes significantly worse when it’s revealed that his wife Siham (Reymond Amsalem) was not only killed in the attack but her wounds are consistent with that of a suicide bomber. Could the wife he thought was visiting her grandfather really been at the heart of a terrorist attack? Can we really live with someone we know so little about that they could end up a mass murderer to some and a martyr to others?
The Attack
Photo credit: Cohen Media Group
Naturally, the revelation sends Jaafari spinning. He refuses to believe it at first and the cops (led by the fascinating Uri Javriel, popping up everywhere lately in films like “The Dark Knight Rises” and “Byzantium”) push Amin to admit that he was a part of the plan of the attack. Not only did your wife kill 17 people but you knew about it. The investigation seems to clear Amin but he’s still unconvinced that there isn’t more to the story. He heads off to Nablus to figure out what could have turned his wife into a terrorist or discover that the truth of the attack is not what he has been told.
Jaafari, through the remarkably subtle performance from Suliman, becomes a fascinating character in the context of peace in the Middle East in general. Writer/director Ziad Doueiri, working from a novel by Yasmina Khadra, gets at the deep emotional currents and complex relationship caught up in decades of turmoil between Arabs and Israelis. Jaafari is a man personally impacted both in his family and in the dead bodies of children he tried to save. Other than a few bouts of rage and confusion, Amin, like so many people on both sides, is trying to figure out how to move forward, dealing with both Israelis and Palestinians in his quest for answers.
The Attack
Photo credit: Cohen Media Group
“The Attack” works best when it’s not quite so reliant on the mysterious motives of a woman who we only see in flashback. In fact, the final act, so dependent on reveals, includes a few too many “here’s what you’re looking for” moments (I think I counted three such scenes back-to-back-to-back). I loved the flashbacks – often naturally lit, blurry like memories, and surprisingly sexy – to happier times. And I liked the general melancholic confusion of the middle act more than the answers of the final one.
The main strength of “The Attack” lies in the performance of Ali Suliman, never stooping to cynical, melodramatic tricks, and always anchoring this complex character in something truthful. “The Attack” could have been exaggerated soap opera but Suliman never allows that to happen, feeling always in the moment and honest with his character in ways that other actors could never have been. He fully embodies a man forever changed by terrorism. A character tells him that he believes that terrorists commit their acts of violence because something in them snaps and they “don’t see the world the same way.” “The Attack” makes the case that it’s not just the perpetrators of violence but those who feel the ripple effect who must forever change their view of the world.
By BRIAN TALLERICO |