The Road Between us: The Ultimate Rescue
(10/10)
by Tony Medley
94 minutes.
R.
The film starts with the morning of October 7, 2023
in the kibbutz of Nahal Oz, about 800 meters from the Gaza border. What
seemed like an ordinary day suddenly turned into hell on earth as
monsters from Hamas descended from the sky and started annihilating the
residents with heretofore unmatched brutality, even to beheading
infants.
Retired Israeli General Noam Tibon, living in Tel
Aviv, received a text from his son, Amir Tibon, who lived in Nahal Oz,
65 miles away, saying. “They are shooting at us” 7:17 am, and that he
and his wife and two small daughters had barricaded themselves in their
safe room to protect themselves from this terrible attack.
Most residents had a safe room in the event of an
attack from Hamas. But these were not just ordinary rooms. This is how
they are described by Perplexity, the safe rooms “are reinforced,
iron-enforced rooms integrated into each home, intended to protect
residents during missile or rocket attacks from Gaza. These rooms are
built to strict security standards: they have thick, blast-resistant
walls and heavy, solid doors, and they often double as bedrooms or home
offices in daily use. Given the proximity of Nahal Oz to the Gaza
border, residents have only a few seconds to reach their safe rooms when
a rocket siren sounds, making instant accessibility critical.”news.sky+1
However, Avir apparently had not stocked their safe
room with essential survival necessities like water, food, toilet
facilities, anything. From what I gleaned from the movie, it was just an
empty room without electricity, so they were trapped, locked in
darkness, the only light coming from their cell phones whose batteries
were deteriorating. They couldn’t even check what was going on in their
house because if they opened the door, the terrorists would kill them if
they were present. And they had to keep their two small daughters, 3 ˝
and 1 ˝ years old, quiet because if there were terrorists in the house,
they didn’t know for sure that Avir and his family were in the safe
room.
Noam and his wife, Gall, immediately set out for
the kibbutz, plunging into battle where others were fleeing. Gall said
she should come with him because he needed someone to handle the phone
and other things, and he agreed immediately. They tried to keep in
contact with Avir through texts.
Noam says, “I was afraid to think about what would
happen if I would come and they are not alive…How can I continue my life
if they are not alive. I was willing to do everything in order to save
my family.”
As they approached the kibbutz, the roads were
empty. 62-year-old Noam says, “I’m trying to call everyone who I know,
from the military. All my contacts. Nobody responds. We are alone in the
world. This is what I felt. Going into the unknown.”
Written and directed by Barry Avrich, this combines
recreations of their trip with actual Hamas invasion footage taken by
body cams of the terrorists, showing the terrible, blood thirsty
killing. Throughout the film there is the commentary by both Noam and
Gall as they tell their thrilling, chilling story of how they rescued
their family.
This is a traumatic true story that emulates modern
thrillers that populate today’s novels and movies. The only difference
is that this actually happened, and this film shows it in a frightening,
but spellbinding way. It shows the horror of October 7 through the
selfless heroism of Noam and Gall that news stories and TV reports
cannot do. This is a film of compelling, selfless heroism that will keep
you glued to your seats.
|