#Ruti Asarsai
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15 Years (2019)
Director: Yuval Hadadi
Stars: Oded Leopold, Udi Persi, Ruti Asarsai...
Yoav's demons start haunting him after his best friend becomes pregnant without telling him, and after his boyfriend of 15 years starts talking about children too. His life unravels, and self-destruction seems inevitable.
I really enjoyed this movie even though nothing special happens in it. I didn’t really sympathize with Yoav because I don’t like how badly he treats those around him that care about him. I know he is troubled, but we are left in the dark as to what are the roots of his troubles. I guess it has something to do with his childhood, but much has been left unsaid as to whether there was a trauma of any kind there. The relationship with his father is also pretty mysterious.
I think his partner Dan has nerves of steel to be dealing with his demons for so long and I think he made a mistake when he accepted him back after Yoav first left him. I think he should’ve just moved on because that Evyatar guy was really cute and a great match for him. I think they could’ve had a better future for them than Dan has had with the destructive Yoav.
Rating: 4/5
#15 years#yuval hadadi#israel#drama#4#gay#lgbt#gay movies#lgbt movies#udi persi#oded leopold#ruti asarsai#movie reviews#gay movie#15 years 2019
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Photo
Ruti Asarsai
Facts
September 16, 1982
Isreali actress
Filmography
Minister of Environmental Protection [Spyders: 2020-2021]
Tami [Metumtemet: 2016-2017]
Alma [15 Years:2019]
Bosna [Alim adumim:2014]
Appearance
Brunette
Curls
Brown eyes
Roleplay
Playable: adult
#Ruti Asarsai#fem 80s#fem isreali#80s fem isreali#spyders#metzmtemet#15 years#alim adumim#brunette fem adult#80s fem brunette#curls fem adult#80s fem curls#brown eyes fem adult#80s fem brown eyes#adult female
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OY GAY!: My Review of 15 YEARS (2 Stars)
The beautiful thing about pop culture is that everyone has their opinions and everyone is right. I think Forrest Gump is the worst Best Picture Oscar winner of all time, whereas you may love its celebration of lowered standards! See? We’re both right! I say this to prepare you for my review of 15 Years, the feature debut of Israeli writer/director Yuval Hadadi. I hated it with every fiber of my being. It triggered me. I may have rolled my eyes a few dozen times. I lost count. I may have temporarily died, but since I’m home alone, nobody can disprove it. Regardless, I was in pain watching this movie. Yet, it’s very handsomely made and features very handsome stars. So please, take my opinions here with a grain or two of salt. You may love it, you Forrest Gump-worshipping fool!
Yoav (OdedLeopold), a successful architect in his early 40s, lives with his late 30s lawyer partner Dan (Udi Persi) in their gorgeous Tel Aviv apartment. With its kitchen island and immaculate, dust-free sheen, I felt like I had popped into a gay Nancy Meyers movie. As their 15th anniversary approaches, their artist friend Alma (Ruti Asarsai) announces she’s pregnant. Yoav reacts badly to the news, while it starts Dan down a path of maybe wanting a child of his own.
Yoav has a lot of baggage which gets revealed slowly throughout the course of the film. He feels gay people who want kids are simply jumping on a trend. He deflects love from anyone who gets too close, and for some reason, his Belgian clients annoy the hell out of him. What some may describe as brooding and sexy, I found entitled, annoying, and spoiled. I mean, he has everything. A ton of friends who love him, a show-palace of a condo, a smoking hot boyfriend who wants to have sex all the time well past the usual expiration date, and for crying out loud, Yoav fills out a pair of work pants better than anyone since Daniel Craig sauntered around that casino in his James Bond debut. What’s Yoav’s problem?
While we eventually come to understand that, a more apt question would be what’s my problem? Ok, fine. I let this movie get to me. I’m single and have a very tough time getting someone to even show up for a date, let alone commit to a relationship. As hard as I work and save, I still live in a fairly dumpy apartment with no room for a kitchen island. Nobody has ever said they wanted to have a baby with me. Nobody ever flirted with me in bars. I may be suffering from HOMO FOMO and I’ll readily admit to it. When you’re as dead inside as I am, you just don’t care about the problems of the rich and gorgeous. I mean, he may have some deep-seated daddy issues, but is your BFFs pregnancy and your long term partner’s wanting to raise a family such a terrible thing?
Additionally, every single person in this film is gorgeous; the best friend, the new, young love interest, the trick, the happy couples at Yoav and Dan’s dinner party. Apparently in Yoav’s world, you can only be fat if you’re pregnant, and even then, he’s not gonna celebrate. With such an awful guy at the center of the film, it’s difficult to empathize. Maybe the bubble of living in Tel Aviv really does make one blind to the more pressing issues facing the LGBTQ+ community in the Middle East.
Having said that, Hadadi and his cinematographer Yaniv Linton have taken a limited budget and produced a gorgeously shot film. It glides by, however tepidly, on a whoosh of stunningly framed images. All of the performances have bite and specificity, with Leopold carving out a striking presence with his bruised boxer look. Although it has an unexpected ending, the whole film has a dull, melodramatic tone to it which makes it feel heavier than the material deserves. But what do it know? If you also want for nothing, are surrounded by the most beautiful people on the planet, and can make a pair of khakis look sexy, then 15 Years is your jam. Remember, my opinion is right and so is yours…but mine may be just a little bit more right. Right? Of course right!
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15 Years DVD review
15 Years DVD review
Celebrating 15 years together Yoav (Oded Leopold) and his husband Dan (Udi Persi) seemingly have a perfect relationship. One night they attend an event at a gallery operated by their close friend Alma (Ruti Asarsai) and she announces that she’s pregnant. That revelation throws a spanner into the middle of Yoav and Dan’s relationship as Dan is keen for them to start a family of their own but Yoav…
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