Zero Motivation

Zero Motivation
Film poster
Directed by Talya Lavie
Written by Talya Lavie
Starring Dana Ivgy
Release date
  • 17 April 2014 (2014-04-17) (Tribeca)
  • 24 June 2014 (2014-06-24) (Israel)
Running time
100 minutes
Country Israel
Language Hebrew
Box office $116,044[1]

Zero Motivation (Hebrew title: אפס ביחסי אנוש, Zero on interpersonal relations) is a 2014 Israeli comedy-drama film directed by Talya Lavie. The film premiered at the 2014 Tribeca Film Festival where it received two awards.[2] It was nominated for twelve Ophir Awards, and won six of them including prizes for writer/director Talya Lavie (although it was not awarded Best Film).[3] It was the most successful Israeli film of 2014, seen by 590,000 people in Israel alone.[4]

Plot

Zohar (Dana Ivgy) and Daffi (Nelly Tagar) are two soldiers trying to serve out their mandatory service with the IDF. On their way back to base after the weekend Daffi bumps into a new girl Tehila and, believing that she is her replacement, takes her under her wing. Daffi and Zohar work menial jobs with Daffi being forced to shred paper. After Daffi trains the new girl she goes to her supervisor Rama and explains that after writing letters to everyone she could trying to get a new position in Tel Aviv they have finally sent a replacement. However Tehila is not a replacement at all but has snuck onto the base to see a boy she slept with and fell in love with. After he rejects her she slits her belly and crawls into bed where she is discovered by the other girls in the morning. Daffi is crushed by her death realizing that she will not be replaced after all. However, when she complains to personnel the officer in charge tells her she herself got transferred by applying to be an officer. Daffi then gets a recommendation from Rama and a boy Zohar has a crush on and is transferred away. She and Zohar part on bad terms.

Left alone, Zohar is teased by the other girls for being a virgin. Irena, one of her co-workers, advises her to sleep with a boy as soon as possible. Zohar takes this advice to heart and flirts with a visiting soldier she meets while guarding the arms, setting up a date with him for the following night. Returning to her dorm room, she climbs into her bunk bed and it breaks. After she refuses to sleep in the only spare bed, where Tehila was found dead, Irena lets her sleep in her bed and sleeps in Tehila's old bed, where she hallucinates in the middle of the night that Tehila is there with her.

The following day Irena behaves bizarrely and the girls begin to believe that there is something wrong with her. Zohar offers to take her to the infirmary but instead prepares for her date with the visiting soldier. However Irena insists on coming on the date and behaves strangely the entire time. When Zohar and her date finally manage to be alone, he aggressively strips off her clothes and when she asks him to be gentle, he tells her she should have gone with a non-combatant. She asks him to stop; he ignores her but is stopped by Irena who pulls his rifle on him and humiliates him before finally letting him go. Once Irena and Zohar return to the office, Rama chastizes them for not going to the infirmary. When Zohar explains that she was almost raped and that Irena saved her, Irena claims to have no idea what she's talking about, and Zohar realizes that Tehila's ghost must have left her. Unimpressed, Rama makes Zohar stay in the office all night cleaning. When she returns in the morning she is impressed that the office is spotless but soon finds that Zohar has shredded every record in the department and stuffed them in Rama's office.

As a result of destroying all the records, Zohar is sent to military prison, and Rama is discharged despite wanting to stay in the army and become a career officer. Meanwhile, Daffi finally graduates from officer training and instead of being placed in Tel-Aviv, receives Rama's old position. Despite trying to make the best of the situation Daffi finds that Zohar is insubordinate and rude. After she tries to punish Zohar, Zohar photocopies the old letters that Daffi wrote to try to get off base and posts them all around the base. Daffi in turn tries to delete all the computer game records that she and Zohar used to play together. The two get in a violent fight with staple guns and Daffi wins. However, instead of the games, Daffi accidentally deletes all the recently digitized staff records.

The two are arrested and when Daffi tries to admit her mistake, Zohar takes the blame for it. She is sentenced to more time in military prison while Daffi is demoted to a cushy office job in Tel Aviv. After she gets out of prison Zohar gives up on Minesweeper and becomes addicted to Freecell. She is transferred to the infirmary where she has sex with the soldier responsible for digitizing the military records, who suffered a nervous breakdown after she deleted them. Her service finally comes to an end, as E-mail replaces paper mail. She leaves the army base, helping Daffi draft another plea.

Cast

The Azrieli Towers are a symbol of big-city life for Daffi.
  • Dana Ivgy as Zohar, a soldier that hopes to end her service time fighting boredom with Minesweeper sessions.
  • Nelly Tagar as Daffi, a spoiled soldier who tries to transfer to HaKirya base, in glamorous Tel Aviv.
  • Shani Klein as Rama, an officer trying to advance her career in spite of her unmotivated crew.
  • Heli Twito as Livnat
  • Meytal Gal as Liat
  • Tamara Klingon as Irena, a soldier of Russian origin.
  • Yonit Tobi as Tehila, a smitten girl passing for a rookie soldier.
  • Moshe Ashkenazi as Eithan, Zohar's date.

Production

The idea for Zero Motivation stems from a 2006 short film project from Lavie entitled The Substitute.[5] Dana Ivgy also appeared in The Substitute.

Critical reception

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film received a 86% approval rating based on 44 critics, with an average rating on 7.3/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Darkly funny and understatedly absurd, Zero Motivation is a refreshing addition to the canon of irreverent war comedies — and an intriguing calling card for writer-director Talya Lavie."[6] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 69 out of 100, based on 18 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[7]

Awards

References

  1. "Zero Motivation". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 13 March 2015.
  2. Cox, Gordon. "Tribeca Film Festival: Israeli Film 'Zero Motivation' Scores Two Awards (Full List)". Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  3. "'Zero Motivation' gets 12 Ophir nods". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 14 August 2014.
  4. "A glowing 2014 for the Israeli film industry". Cineuropa. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  5. Peary, Danny (18 November 2006). "Talya Lavie on Her Short, 'The Substitute'". Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  6. "Zero Motivation review". Roten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Archived from the original on 27 August 2017. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  7. "Zero Motivation Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  8. Jeff Labrecque (25 April 2014). "Israeli comedy, Paul Schneider win top Tribeca prizes". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
  9. "2014 Tribeca Film Festival Announces Award Winners". Tribeca Film Festival (Press release). 24 April 2014.
  10. Winners of Odessa International Film Festival 2015, "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 22 November 2015. Retrieved 22 November 2015.
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