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תסמונת סיזיפוס

What happens when a non-combatant army unit is given an unconventional assignment – organizing a ceremony marking the signing of a historic peace agreement? It turns out that military logic, given the character and nature of the soldiers involved, places the last stone border marker placed at the wrong location – an insignificant point in the desert. This leads to a series of errors that sabotage the gala peace ceremony and bring the anticipated peace to the brink of a new war.

Comedy | 100 Min. | 35mm | Language: Hebrew

Director: Avi Bohbot
Writers: Haim Idisis, Avi Bohbot
Producers: David Silber, Moshe Edri, Leon Edri, Avi Bohbot
Source: Metro Communications, United King, Chaos Films
Production Status: Final draft of script, Fund raising

The script was inspired by absurd allegories such as Catch-22, M.A.S.H. and others, in the spirit of such masterpieces as Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot and Albert Camus’s The Myth of Sisyphus. It comprises four parallel and interwoven stories, each naturally enhancing and continuing the others and offering new and surprising points of view concerning impossible realities.

091115-N-2456S-094 ATLANTIC OCEAN (Nov. 15, 2009) -- An MH-60S Seahawk, assigned to the "Nightdippers" of Helicopter Anti-submarine Squadron 5, prepares to deliver supplies aboard USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN 69) during an underway replenishment. Eisenhower is conducting a three-week Composite Training Unit Exercise (COMPTUEX) in preparation for its upcoming 2010 deployment. COMPTUEX, scheduled by Commander, U.S. Second Fleet and conducted by a training team led by Commander, Strike Force Training Atlantic, is a joint/combined exercise conducted from Nov 3-24 off the East Coast of the United States. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class John Suits/RELEASED)

Synopsis and Characters

The story takes place somewhere in the heart of a disputed desert, where a makeshift military border camp surrounds a large stone marker. The soldiers at this camp are getting ready for a rare ceremony, the likes of which this desert, ravaged by seven wars, has never seen: Placement of the final border stone – the territorial culmination of a long and exhausting peace process. Arriving at the camp is Shabtai, a reserve soldier who only reported for duty so he could be released.

Meanwhile, a helicopter is carrying the last border stone to its official location, where the ceremony is to be held. But Uri and Rehavam, the pilot and copilot, are forced to set it down several kilometers from their designated target. The helicopter crew leaves two soldiers behind to guard the stone, their objections notwithstanding: Avram, the bugler assigned to the ceremony, young and energetic despite his asthma and poor physical condition that render him unfit for combat duty – and Shabtai, who is still confident that he’ll soon be sent home. Avram, an armchair psychologist and Greek philosopher, makes the last moments of reserve duty miserable for Shabtai, who still thinks of himself as strong and fit.

An army truck is racing to this ceremony, bearing a huge rolled-up red carpet. Two soldiers are stuck in the stifling rear compartment: Sultan and Dror, the former a proud experienced and cautious reserve combat veteran and the latter a rash, impatient, hotheaded youngster in compulsory service. They appear to be unable to communicate with the speeding driver. Sultan, the more seasoned warrior of the two, imagines that they’re already dead and that the apparitional vehicle is headed straight for Hell. Dror, who loves life, cannot reconcile himself with this morbid tale of death and hell, but we only find out if he’s actually dead or alive as the closing credits come up.

At the same time, in that same desert wilderness, Amos, a bloodthirsty combat soldier with a glorious battle history, is guarding Omar, who shares the same attributes. Neither is happy about the romantic peace taking shape around them. Omar is a prisoner due to be released during the ceremony in a symbolic act and Amos, his guard, is bored to death by his unchallenging assignment and by Omar’s quarrelsome demeanor. In a moment of weakness, Amos orders Omar to escape and then goes off to capture him. Also recruited to the chase is Dor, a trained military attack dog. They set out confidently, in the tradition of days gone by, but somehow Amos’s plans for a good time go astray and he finds himself involved in a desperate hunt in which he himself becomes the hunted.

The comedy concludes with a macabre funeral for Dor, the heroic dog, who fell in the line of duty. On his way, he picks up Pierre, a guard at the watchtower overlooking the border, even though he no longer has any idea where the border is exactly. What’s more, he can’t even determine whether Lipman is an enemy soldier or serving in the same army as himself, but in his solitude and anguish, Pierre joins him all the same.

On the way to the desert ceremony, the two gather up all the survivors of this misadventure. It now appears that all the snafus are part of one grand and precise plan. All the invitees ultimately arrive at the gala ceremony, if only to find out that there’s still one final border stone that must be rolled up the mountain once again until there is peace here.

091115-N-2456S-094 ATLANTIC OCEAN (Nov. 15, 2009) -- An MH-60S Seahawk, assigned to the "Nightdippers" of Helicopter Anti-submarine Squadron 5, prepares to deliver supplies aboard USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN 69) during an underway replenishment. Eisenhower is conducting a three-week Composite Training Unit Exercise (COMPTUEX) in preparation for its upcoming 2010 deployment. COMPTUEX, scheduled by Commander, U.S. Second Fleet and conducted by a training team led by Commander, Strike Force Training Atlantic, is a joint/combined exercise conducted from Nov 3-24 off the East Coast of the United States. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class John Suits/RELEASED)

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