Difference between revisions of "The Other Son (2012)"
(Created page with "200px|thumbnail|left === An accident pushed both families to understand the ‘other’ === When 18 year-old Joseph Silberg is to join the Israe...") |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[File:2012 The otherson.jpg|200px|thumbnail|left]] | [[File:2012 The otherson.jpg|200px|thumbnail|left]] | ||
− | === An | + | === An Accident Pushed Both Families to Understand the ‘Other’ === |
When 18 year-old Joseph Silberg is to join the Israeli Defense Forces, the routine tests show that his DNA is different to that of his family. The hospital where he was born conducts an investigation and discovers that the day Joseph was born he was taken to a shelter after a bombing attack and switched by mistake with another baby: Yacine Al Bezaaz. Initially, the parents are reluctant to accept the situation, but the circumstances force them to reconsider their resistance and to understand the motivations of the ‘other’. The underlying story points out that direct interaction and immersion in the daily life of the enemy leads to cross-cultural understanding. | When 18 year-old Joseph Silberg is to join the Israeli Defense Forces, the routine tests show that his DNA is different to that of his family. The hospital where he was born conducts an investigation and discovers that the day Joseph was born he was taken to a shelter after a bombing attack and switched by mistake with another baby: Yacine Al Bezaaz. Initially, the parents are reluctant to accept the situation, but the circumstances force them to reconsider their resistance and to understand the motivations of the ‘other’. The underlying story points out that direct interaction and immersion in the daily life of the enemy leads to cross-cultural understanding. | ||
[[Category: Film as Cultural Diplomacy]] | [[Category: Film as Cultural Diplomacy]] |
Latest revision as of 10:08, 23 October 2014
An Accident Pushed Both Families to Understand the ‘Other’[edit]
When 18 year-old Joseph Silberg is to join the Israeli Defense Forces, the routine tests show that his DNA is different to that of his family. The hospital where he was born conducts an investigation and discovers that the day Joseph was born he was taken to a shelter after a bombing attack and switched by mistake with another baby: Yacine Al Bezaaz. Initially, the parents are reluctant to accept the situation, but the circumstances force them to reconsider their resistance and to understand the motivations of the ‘other’. The underlying story points out that direct interaction and immersion in the daily life of the enemy leads to cross-cultural understanding.