Walking on Water: Film Interpretation
The protagonist Eyal of the film Walking on Water (2004) is a member of Israel's secret service organization, the Mossad. This is communicated in the first scene of the film, which depicts an apparently ordinary family in a boat. Suddenly, Eyal kills the father of the family with a lethal injection. The audience is immediately predisposed not to like Eyal, until they discover that he is actually fighting for the forces of 'good.' Or, at least the forces deemed to be 'good' in Israeli society, given the profound ambiguity with which Eyal regards his role.
In the next scene, the viewer learns that Eyal is considering leaving the secret service. This is revealed when he is seen getting his next assignment: to kill an aged Nazi war criminal who is still on the loose. Eyal knows that many of his ancestors died in the Holocaust. However, he is uncomfortable with the idea of enforcing justice in such a manner, even when he learns that the Nazi's grandchildren are in Israel. However, after Eyal learns that his wife has committed suicide, he throws himself into his mission as a way of dealing with his personal demons. By juxtaposing the suicide with the new assignment to track the Nazi, director Eytan Fox suggests that there is a suicidal aspect to Eyal's enforced mission of revenge. It also suggests that motivations to dredge up the past are never pure, even when in pursuit of representatives of pure evil. But Meacham, Eyal's boss, stresses to the conflicted agent his responsibility on behalf of all Jews...
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