This film made by a Palestinian-Israeli collective shows the destruction of the occupied West Bank's Masafer Yatta by Israeli soldiers and the alliance which develops between the Palestinian... Read allThis film made by a Palestinian-Israeli collective shows the destruction of the occupied West Bank's Masafer Yatta by Israeli soldiers and the alliance which develops between the Palestinian activist Basel and Israeli journalist Yuval.This film made by a Palestinian-Israeli collective shows the destruction of the occupied West Bank's Masafer Yatta by Israeli soldiers and the alliance which develops between the Palestinian activist Basel and Israeli journalist Yuval.
- Won 1 Oscar
- 69 wins & 31 nominations total
Summary
Reviewers say 'No Other Land' offers a compelling look at the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through the lens of forced displacement in Masafer Yatta. Themes of oppression, resilience, and human cost are central, with praise for the collaboration between Basel Adra and Yuval Abraham. The film's raw depiction and storytelling are lauded, though some critique its perceived bias and lack of context.
Featured reviews
Academy awards winner documentary, a close documentation from inside of a hateful coward aggression by authoritarian and supremacist state of Israel. Anyone who is not complicit in the genocide of the Palestinian people will feel very outraged by watching the scenes of criminal violence and destruction (besides robbery and even murder) by Israeli Army and their allies, the racist invaders responsible for Zionist ilegal settlements in occupied Palestine. And how amazing is the brave resistance of people in Masafar Yatta! Congratulations for the skilked debuting filmmakers and collective of activists, composed by two Palestinians (Basel Adra and Hamdan Ballal) and two Israeli (Yuval Abraham and Rachel Szor), not engaged in jingoistic fanaticism but in defendending what is the fair and correct.
Incredibly hard to watch, but vital. The viewpoint we in North America are not allowed to see. Documentation of the devastation wrought by modern day colonialism, which needs to remembered, and recognized. History is being made and it the film makers are telling the side of the oppressed, who have been ignored for too long! Please do what you can to see this film. When the powers that be don't want you to see something, you know it is something that needs attention. Beautifully shot, devastating footage of atrocious settler actions, tearing down schools, children crying, violence being committed against villagers, it is incredible how many atrocious acts the filmmakers were able to record.
No Other Land was a quieter kind of angry than I was expecting, but I think that approach is the kind of thing that could well change a person's mind on the whole ordeal if they were to seek this out. I guess with documentaries on subjects like this, getting someone who already feels a certain way to watch this when they might want to otherwise resist an alternate point of view is the difficult part, but there's still a lot of madness in the world, and the approaches that have been taken to sway people haven't really been working.
So it's not that No Other Land reinvents the documentary genre as a whole, but I think it has a distinctive way of presenting its central thesis. It's not peaceful, but there is a quietness to it that will likely lead some people to reflect on what they might've thought about before. Again, if they were to watch No Other Land in the first place. That's a whole other obstacle. But the approach here is more than sound and it's quietly powerful, and I'd hope that's an ultimately effective way to do it.
This did have some slower moments as far as the editing goes, but there were other sequences that had fantastic editing, and there's some striking imagery in here, too. I don't think it's a perfect documentary but it is an important one ("important" is a word I'm sure every review of this has used, oh well). Watch it regardless of how you feel about the conflict in question and I think it will help, so long as you go in open-minded. It's not necessarily subtle (and it shouldn't be), but it isn't aggressive, and if it does change minds - which I hope it can - I think that might be the reason why.
So it's not that No Other Land reinvents the documentary genre as a whole, but I think it has a distinctive way of presenting its central thesis. It's not peaceful, but there is a quietness to it that will likely lead some people to reflect on what they might've thought about before. Again, if they were to watch No Other Land in the first place. That's a whole other obstacle. But the approach here is more than sound and it's quietly powerful, and I'd hope that's an ultimately effective way to do it.
This did have some slower moments as far as the editing goes, but there were other sequences that had fantastic editing, and there's some striking imagery in here, too. I don't think it's a perfect documentary but it is an important one ("important" is a word I'm sure every review of this has used, oh well). Watch it regardless of how you feel about the conflict in question and I think it will help, so long as you go in open-minded. It's not necessarily subtle (and it shouldn't be), but it isn't aggressive, and if it does change minds - which I hope it can - I think that might be the reason why.
I don't know the route to a happy Middle East any more than the next person; that it will never be achieved if Israel continues on its current path seems certain. Defenders of the Israeli state dislike the use of the term "settler-colonialism" to describe what has been happening, but it's hard to find an alternative for the bleak reality shown in this film, a collaboration between a Palestinian facing eviction from the family land in the West Bank and a sympathetic Israeli. That collaboration is perhaps the only heartening thing in an otherwise deeply depressing, but important, film. Tellingly, it was all shot before autumn 2023; it's hard to believe that anything has got better since then.
There is no other land and there should be no need for one.
A tragic story of greed and inhumanity that has been falling on deaf years for decades because one country is powerful and has powerful friends and allies and the other one has nothing to offer, therefore nobody cares what happens to it outside of a few minutes or days of noteworthy news and public outcry, which also tends to die down quickly as people go about their daily business and forget about the sorrows of people in a faraway land whom they'll never meet. That too is a story as old as time and history never seems to teach us much. When the weak become powerful they forget what it was like and they become oppressors without a second thought.
What a tame word "settler" is. It doesn't say anything, when in fact it means occupier.
A tragic story of greed and inhumanity that has been falling on deaf years for decades because one country is powerful and has powerful friends and allies and the other one has nothing to offer, therefore nobody cares what happens to it outside of a few minutes or days of noteworthy news and public outcry, which also tends to die down quickly as people go about their daily business and forget about the sorrows of people in a faraway land whom they'll never meet. That too is a story as old as time and history never seems to teach us much. When the weak become powerful they forget what it was like and they become oppressors without a second thought.
What a tame word "settler" is. It doesn't say anything, when in fact it means occupier.
Did you know
- TriviaDespite being the most awarded and critically-acclaimed documentary film of 2024, nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and picked up for distribution in 24 countries, 'No Other Land (2024)' could not find a U.S. distributor due to its subject matter. However, the film had a limited theatrical release in the U.S. on January 31, 2025 through Cinetic Media, which facilitated bookings via Michael Tuckman Media. Tickets can be purchased on the film's official website.
- Quotes
Basel Adra: You think they'll come to our home?
- ConnectionsFeatured in De sociëteit: Episode #7.3 (2025)
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- La Ard Ukhraa
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $2,506,600
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $26,100
- Feb 2, 2025
- Gross worldwide
- $3,548,577
- Runtime1 hour 32 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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