A Journey of Self-Discovery and Artistic Destiny
Woman Alive is a deeply personal and unflinching art-house feature that explores the complexities of identity, motherhood, and artistic calling.
Shlomit's journey is one of profound transformation. As a 30-year-old wife and mother living in Jerusalem, she finds herself suffocating under the weight of expectationsâsocietal, familial, and self-imposed. The life she's built, while outwardly stable, leaves her feeling disconnected from her true self and the artistic passion that once defined her.
In a moment of courage born from desperation, Shlomit leaves the familiar comforts of her Jerusalem home and ventures into the gritty, unvarnished streets of south Tel Aviv. This is not a sanitized journey of self-discovery but a raw, visceral plunge into a world far removed from her previous existence.
Director and writer Macabit Abramsom crafts an intimate portrait of a woman caught between competing identities: mother, wife, and artist. Through Lihi Zemel's powerful performance as Shlomit, we witness the painful shedding of one life to embrace anotherâthe process of becoming fully alive.
The film doesn't offer easy answers or comfortable resolutions. Instead, it presents the messy, complicated reality of choosing oneselfâof daring to pursue artistic authenticity when the cost is extraordinarily high. Set against the backdrop of Tel Aviv's marginalized neighborhoods, Woman Alive is a story about finding your voice in the spaces society overlooks, about rebirth through risk, and about the fierce determination it takes to claim your own destiny.
This is cinema for those interested in personal questsâin the courage it takes to abandon safety for the possibility of becoming who you were always meant to be.