Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli film ‘Image of Victory’ to be released on Netflix

It was based in part on a story by Liraz Brosh and Ehud Bleiberg, and stars a number of actors who appeared in the Netflix hit series “Fauda.”

A scene from “Image of Victory,” a 2021 Israeli film to be released on Netflix on July 15, 2022. Credit: Courtesy.
A scene from “Image of Victory,” a 2021 Israeli film to be released on Netflix on July 15, 2022. Credit: Courtesy.

Inspired by true events in 1948, Hassanin, an Egyptian filmmaker, is tasked with documenting a raid on the isolated kibbutz Nitzanim on the Israeli-Egyptian border. When the kibbutz learns of the impending army raid, a number of parents, including Mira, a young but valiant mother, are forced to reckon with the cost of war and make an impossible choice. Hassanin’s values are also tested as he becomes an eye-witness to a massacre.

That is the synopsis of the 2021 Israeli feature film “Image of Victory,” to be released on Netflix on July 15. It’s based on a story by Liraz Brosh and Ehud Bleiberg, and stars a number of actors who appeared in the Netflix hit Israeli series “Fauda.”

The movie is directed by Avi Nesher and produced by Ehud Bleiberg, known for the 2007 comedy-drama “The Band’s Visit,” which performed well in the United States and was later made into a theatrical production.

“Image of Victory” won three Ophir Awards, colloquially known as the Israeli Oscars or the Israeli Academy Awards.

It made the rounds of U.S. Jewish and Israeli film festivals in the past year, receiving strong reviews.

“Image of Victory,” a 2021 Israeli film to be released on Netflix on July 15, 2022. Credit: Courtesy.
“Image of Victory,” a 2021 Israeli film to be released on Netflix on July 15, 2022. Credit: Courtesy.

“The defendant is a hate-mongering menace, who intended to hurt and kill children in the Jewish community and in other minority communities in New York City,” stated the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York.
The U.S. Justice Department said the man moved Iranian nationals through Turkey and Mexico into the U.S., including one who admitted to working for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Talking to Michal Herzog at the President’s Conference in Jerusalem, the famous actress shares that being Israeli abroad has become “very complicated.”
“It’s both a Jewish story and an American story at the same time,” a curator at the Washington, D.C., museum told JNS of a series by Mitch Epstein.
The two met as the ceasefire has run up against Hamas’s refusal to disarm.
“Advancing religious freedom protects a fundamental human right that underpins a nation’s security, economic prosperity and stability,” said the chair of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.