Dawn (2014 film)
Dawn | |
---|---|
Directed by | Romed Wyder |
Produced by |
Samir Romed Wyder |
Written by |
Billy MacKinnon Elie Wiesel |
Starring |
Jason Isaacs Joel Basman Sarah Adler |
Music by | Bernard Trontin |
Cinematography | Ram Shweky |
Edited by | Kathrin Plüss |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 95 minutes |
Country |
Switzerland United Kingdom Germany Israel |
Language |
Hebrew English French |
Dawn (French: L'Aube, German: Morgengrauen) is a drama film directed by Romed Wyder, written by Billy MacKinnon and based on the novel Dawn by Elie Wiesel.[1]
Synopsis
Dawn is a psychological drama behind closed doors, in which four comrades in arms pressure the young Elisha to overcome his moral qualms and fully commit to the armed struggle.
The story is set in Palestine in 1947, during the British mandate period. The Zionists are fighting for the establishment of a Jewish state. A member of the armed Jewish underground has been sentenced to death by the British authorities. In return, the resistance has kidnapped a British officer, trying to redeem their friend. The insurgents spend the night together, waiting for the outcome of the negotiation. If the British hang their friend at dawn, one of them will shoot the British officer held as a hostage.
Based on the novel by Nobel Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel, Dawn sheds a new light on a key moment in history that allows us to re-examine the current political disputes.[2]
Cast
- Joel Basman (Elisha)
- Moris Cohen (Joav)
- Sarah Adler (Ilana)
- Liron Levo (Gad)
- Rami Heuberger (Gideon)
- Jason Isaacs (Dawson)
Crew
- Director: Romed Wyder
- Screenwriter: Billy MacKinnon
- Author: Elie Wiesel
- Producers: Samir and Romed Wyder
- Executive producer: Tunje Berns
- Cinematography: Ram Shweky
- Production design: Roger Martin
- Editor: Kathrin Plüss
- Soundtrack: Bernard Trontin
Production
A coproduction of Dschoint Ventschr, Paradigma Films, Delirious Productions, Enigma Films, Radio Télévision Suisse / SSR SRG and Lama Films.
CH / UK / DE / IL – 2014 – 95 minutes - Hebrew, English and French[3]