The unique and emotionally-charged story of the director’s family. She was raised by her grandparents and by her parents, both of whom have disabilities. Documenting dramatic scenes in her family life, she weaves them together with home movies filmed by her grandfather. The result is a moving story, suffused with almost impossible moral dilemmas.
Guy (21), a bulimic homosexual, decides to leave his parent’s home and set out on a new journey in Tel Aviv but becomes enslaved to his eating disorder.
A group of youngsters gather at a kiosk belonging to one of the small town elders. There is a rumor that an Arab has raped the group leader’s aunt, and they start investigating. Soon matters get out of hand.
My Family tries to leave the mentality of the Ma’abara (Transit Camp). We all live in the same apartment building in Haifa and are captives to my 87 year old grandma, who yells her marching orders from the upstairs balcony.
Eitan works security in the Dead Sea Works factory. On his way to a night shift he has violent sex with the bus driver and goes on a dream-like journey on the silent beaches of the Dead Sea.
Zohar needs more photographs for her exhibition and asks her ex, Ella, to recreate things that happened before the breakup so that she can photograph them. One love, two girls, with all the past laid out in front of them.
Omri, a reservist, goes home on Memorial Day eve to go to his uncle memorial. Absorbed in thought, he misses the memorial, and for the first time chooses not to belong.
Nahar is obsessive about his ex-girlfriend. For his stalking he uses his younger sister, Na’ama, her best friend.
Itamar, a social activist, goes on a desperate journey in Jerusalem in order to end his life, and meets Katyusha.
Sarit brings her husband Avaraham home from a mental institution. She’s pregnant and hopes they’re starting a new leaf. The next day, Avraham and Ayelet his daughter disappear, and Sarit goes on a journey to save them.