Film ‘Yossi’ brings sequel of gay tragic romance to the Mayan
Gary M. Kramer is a contributing writer to various alternative…
Ten years ago, Eytan Fox’s film Yossi and Jagger told a heartbreaking queer love story between two male Israeli soldiers. Yossi is Fox’s sequel to his 2002 classic.
Familiarity with the original film is not essential. In this new drama, Yossi (Ohad Knoller, reprising his role), is a cardiologist who jerks off to porn, eats bad takeout and uses old photos of himself to pick up guys on the net. When he is forced by circumstances to take a vacation, Yossi unexpectedly meets Tom (Oz Zehavi), a young, handsome openly-gay soldier. A potential romance develops.
Fox admitted in a phone interview from Israel that he never thought he would make a sequel to Yossi and Jagger” but he’s pleased that he did.
“I’m so proud of this film – it’s so personal, and I feel so close to it,” Fox said. “Part of why I made this was an excuse to explore what happened to Yossi, which is what happened to me, to Israel, and to the gay community over the past ten years.”
The filmmaker said the Israeli army has been more accepting of queer soldiers since Yossi and Jagger. He observed, “When I was in the Israeli army in 1982, the idea of being openly gay was unheard of. All the people I know who were gay in the army were completely closeted. That world has changed.”
Yossi reveals that the main character is stuck in the past with a closeted mindset. When Yossi meets Tom, he slowly begins to understand that there are other ways to live.
“Tom represents the idea that you can be happy with who you are,” Fox said. “You can take your clothes off, stand there naked, and say, ‘This is who I am – love me!’” – which the attractive Zehavi does in one of the film’s key scenes.
That said, Tom is not out to his family, a complexity Fox found interesting about contemporary queer youth in Israel and incorporated in the film.
“Young hipsters and actors tell me that being gay is a non-issue. And I say, ‘OK, I get it. It’s much easier now, that’s true. Tel Aviv and the world are much more accepting,’” Fox said. “But they have problematic relationships with their parents. Telling their parents ‘This is who I am!’ is difficult for them.”
The relationship between the heavyset and heavyhearted Yossi and the younger, cuter Tom forms the film’s romantic second act. Fox said his purpose was “to show the older generation reaching out the younger generation to teach them how to live better.” He continued, indicating his dismay that audiences question – as the bewildered Yossi does – why Tom is attracted to a sad, lonely, older man.
“I’m almost offended that a young beautiful man can’t fall for a somber, sophisticated older guy. That’s the wrong way to see desire. Tom sees that Yossi can offer him more than his fun friends can. He’s a doctor, who is smart and reads literature and needs saving. That’s something Tom wants to do—save someone who is in distress.”
Distress in a relationship is something Fox, Knoller, and the film’s screenwriter Itay Segal knew firsthand. Knoller, who is straight, went through a divorce between “Yossi” films, while Segal, who is gay, broke up with his boyfriend and was mourning his relationship. Fox was having a crisis with his partner of 23 years, Gal Uchovsky. (The pair ended their professional relationship after the 2006 film, The Bubble).
The loneliness Fox faced during this period informed the film. “Living in empty apartment, eating bad takeout food, watching a lot of porn, falling asleep in front of boring TV and waking up to another day of loneliness [as Yossi does] wasn’t difficult for me to relate/connect to,” he confessed.
“Ohad and I spoke a lot about the whole feeling of being alone and the fear and confusion that comes with that, and the questions of what being alone brings to your heart and mind. We shared those feelings—plus Itay and I were exposed to the new gay world of Internet dating.”
In one of the more interesting scenes early in the film, Yossi meets a man online for sex, only to have the encounter go badly because of Yossi’s poor physical image and poorer self-image.
Several of the characters in “Yossi”—from his hospital colleague Moti (Lior Ashkenazi) as well as Tom—suggest that Yossi would feel better if he would just get laid. It’s a facile curative for a depressed man grappling with survivor’s guilt, and being mostly closeted, but the film emphasizes Yossi finding sexual fulfillment as a means to emotional happiness.
“I didn’t think of it that way,” Fox responded to the claim, “But he does need to get laid to feel better about himself and life.”
The filmmaker then emphasized the real point he wanted to make with his film. “I wanted to show a person stuck in a bad place who frees himself. Sometimes it’s connected to moving, going in a new direction, or to new places. Changing new things in your life—the scenery, the city you live in—which for Yossi is claustrophobic—and going to the desert and meeting new people.”
Now the question that arises is, will Fox make a sequel to Yossi in 10 years? The filmmaker laughed and answered, “That might be another exercise—to see what happened to Tom in 10 years!”
Yossi opens March 8 at the Mayan, 110 Broadway. More info here.
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Gary M. Kramer is a contributing writer to various alternative queer news organizations across the country. He covers film for Out Front Colorado.






