Joan Baker interviews the Directors of the 1st Israeli Slasher Film

Joan Baker InterviewCheck out Joan Baker’s Interview with first time directors Aharon Keshales and Navot Papushado. Their film “Rabies” made its American debut at The Tribeca Film Festival 2011 to laughter and wild applause. It is the first slasher film out of Israel.
Aharon Keshales was born in Jaffa, Israel and graduated from the film department at Tel Aviv University. He produced the film Zeitgeist and also works as a critic and lecturer. Rabies is Aharon’s first feature film.
Navot Papushado was born in Haifa and also graduated from Tel Aviv University. He directed the short films New Born and Zeitgeist, which have screened at Cannes, Moscow, and Rome. Rabies is Navot’s first feature film.
Here’s the movie synopsis from the Tribeca Film Festival site:
A psychotic serial killer on the loose in the woods crosses paths with a group of unsuspecting teenagers, and soon people are dying one by one. It’s a popular horror premise, but mobilized in a refreshingly novel iteration by first-time filmmakers Aharon Keshales and Navot Papushado. Among a brother and sister with a dark secret, a kindly forest ranger and his old dog, and four tennis players waylaid by a pair of unhinged local cops, misunderstandings and fear pull Rabies‘ protagonists inexorably deeper into the infectious, indiscriminate violence foreshadowed in the film’s title. Subverting genre conventions with a smart script and plenty of unexpected scares, Rabies‘ careful escalation draws viewers and protagonists alike convincingly into the film’s snowballing cycles of violence and fear, grounding its grisly content and high-concept premise in an uncommonly believable world rarely seen within the horror formula. Rabies is a surprising debut starring some of Israel’s biggest young actors, and worthy of its mantle as Israel’s first-ever horror film.
Watch the Trailer.