海角大神

海角大神 / Text

鈥榃orking Woman鈥 brings serious, #MeToo lens to office stories

Director Michal Aviad adds a nuanced view on office sexual harassment to the genre.

By Peter Rainer , Film critic

鈥淲orking Woman鈥 dramatizes a situation both timely and, alas, timeless.聽

Orna (Liron Ben-Shlush) is the mother of three children and wife to Ofer (Oshri Cohen), who is struggling to manage his new restaurant in Tel Aviv, Israel. To earn vital money for the family, Orna takes a job as the assistant to Benny (Menashe Noy), a real estate magnate with a military background who specializes in high-end properties. Despite her newness to the job, she proves highly skilled, and Benny, who first knew Orna when she served in the army, takes a personal interest in her career advancement.聽

That鈥檚 not all he takes a personal interest in. Shortly after Orna is hired he suggests she wear her hair down and wear a skirt, supposedly to impress clients. Not long after, in close quarters, Benny pushes in for a kiss. Orna鈥檚 dazed rejection 鈥 she points out that she is married, as is he 鈥 is met by his profuse apologies and a promise this will not happen again. Of course, we know otherwise.聽

Movies about beleaguered women in the workplace have generally been spoofs, like 鈥9 to 5,鈥 or feature tyrannical female bosses, like 鈥淲orking Girl鈥 or 鈥淭he Devil Wears Prada.鈥 The distinction of 鈥淲orking Woman鈥 鈥 which was directed by Michal Aviad from a script she co-wrote with Sharon Azulay Eyal and Michal Vinik 鈥 is that it doesn鈥檛 gussy up, or melodramatize, the story. It鈥檚 a steadfast piece of work, shot mostly in long, hand-held takes, and this approach reinforces the inescapability of Orna鈥檚 plight. In some ways, 鈥淲orking Woman鈥 is a species of horror film.

Except that Benny, in a fine performance by Noy, is no two-dimensional Hollywood goblin. If he were, it might be easier to dismiss him as an aberration. It is his very humanness that is his most chilling aspect. Unlike the actions of a cardboard bad guy, Benny鈥檚 depredations are not, at least upon a first encounter, easy to predict. One of the more poignant aspects of 鈥淲orking Woman鈥 is the way Orna, in the early going, attempts to move beyond Benny鈥檚 initial come-on and make a career for herself. It is not only that her family really needs the money. We see enough scenes of her with her congenial but not overly empathic husband to realize that she welcomes her job as a breath of fresh air.聽

Orna鈥檚 increasing isolation adds to the film鈥檚 ominousness. She chooses not to tell her husband what is going on, and apparently has no friends to confide in. When she lets on about Benny to her mother (Irit Sheleg), the response is disappointing. Orna doesn鈥檛 want to see herself as a victim, and yet this is the role in which she is cast. When Ofer finally hears from her about Benny, his first, furious comeback is to ask why she didn鈥檛 say something before. It鈥檚 a reasonable question but is followed closely by the accusation that she must have wanted things to unfold with Benny the way they did.聽

I wish Ben-Shlush, who somewhat resembles an Israeli Juliette Binoche, were a bit more expressive in the part. And the film鈥檚 narrative is too diagrammatic; all the accusatory pieces fit too neatly into place. Because what came before is so starkly believable, the film鈥檚 quick fix denouement diminishes both the severity of what we have been witnessing and what surely must follow.聽

Still, this is one of the few films about sexual harassment in the workplace that has the feel of authenticity. With quiet, incremental force, it brings home the helplessness and terrors of being trapped.聽Grade: B+ (Not rated. In Hebrew, French, and English, with subtitles.)