Documentaries have, not surprisingly, become a hearts-and-minds front in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, with filmmakers from all sides trying to get their stories out that bring into particular focus a destructive warโs realities. And needless to say, in our current information ecosystem, context still means everything.
Canadian documentarian Barry Avrich may have believed that his new film โThe Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescueโ โ detailing a retired Israeli Defense Force generalโs incredible effort to save his family from a besieged kibbutz during the Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023 โ was straightforward enough to avoid an uproar. But Avrich got one anyway when this yearโs Toronto International Film Festival scheduled his film, then disinvited it (footage clearance rights were cited), only to put it back in the lineup after widespread criticism โ and not just from Jewish groups. It went on to win the festivalโs Peopleโs Choice award.
However, in the wake of Israelโs relentless pummeling of Gaza, Avrichโs film wonโt be to every personโs taste. Its intended audience will see a propulsive narrative of disciplined heroism, the kind of situation usually hatched by screenwriters hoping to attract Liam Neesonโs particular set of skills. And in spotlighting grandfather Noam Tibonโs self-appointed mission to reach his loved ones, Avrich grasps that too, offering up โThe Road Between Usโ as an immersive action-thriller. It interweaves detail-driven interviews, including Tibonโs own guided tour of his route that day, with footage from Hamas bodycams, security cameras and dashcams.
On the morning of the attacks, Amir Tibon, his wife, Miri, and their two children were at home in the Nahal Oz kibbutz, close to the Gaza border. Retreating to their safe room after hearing gunfire just outside their walls, Amir texted his dad, Noam, in Tel Aviv. From there, the rangy, focused Noamโs steady first-person account takes center stage. He says his first instinct was to make his way south to the kibbutz, a journey down roads he would soon see littered with bodies, wrecked cars and terrified people seeking shelter. But also, initially, to his surprise, empty of a military presence.
A common refrain among the interviewees โ including Noamโs wife, Gali, who accompanied him for part of that day โ is shock at the delayed response of their countryโs vaunted security forces. It sounds like something that a movie digging into a tragic day of sustained violence might want to explore, but Avrichโs dedication to his Rambo narrative of survival means these comments lie there, suspended between condemnation and explanation. When Gali, toward the end, links Israelโs failures that day to a subsequent response that smacks of โrevenge,โ the movie feels close to addressing the unspoken. Then it doesnโt, and weโre left trying to reconcile a legitimately gripping tale of one familyโs ordeal with what we know about the suffering thatโs occurred during the two years of war since.
The movie ultimately treats us like adrenaline junkies, assuming we lack curiosity. Avrich has said the movie isnโt a political statement, despite such unexamined specifics as the kibbutzโs need for safe rooms in every home or prison-like fencing. What emerges, then, is a story without history, within simplified parameters, meant to convey an embattled neighborhood without mentioning certain neighbors, free of any inconvenient perspectives. We should always remember Oct. 7, โThe Road Between Usโ justifiably articulates. Compartmentalizing the tale, however, feels like a disservice to a much broader tragedy.
‘The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue’
Rated: R, for some violent content
Running time: 1 hour, 35 minutes
Playing: In limited release Friday, Oct. 3