Distributor: Deckert Distribution GMBH, info@deckert-distribution.com
Seventy
years after his grandfather escapes from Nazi Germany to Palestine,
Israeli documentary director Tomer Heymann returns to the country of his
ancestors to present his film “Paper Dolls” at the Berlin International
Film Festival, and there meets a man who will change his life. This
48-hour love affair, originating in Berghain Panorama Bar, develops
into a significant relationship between Tomer and Andreas Merk, a German
dancer. When Andreas decides to move to Tel-Aviv, he not only has to
cope with a new partner, but to manage the complex realities of life in
Israel and his personal connection to it as a German citizen. Tomer’s
mother, descendent of German immigrants was born and lived all her life
in a small Israeli village, where she raised five sons. One by one, she
watches her children leave the country she and her family helped to
build, and now cannot help but try to influence the life of Tomer, the
one son who remains. “I
shot my love” tells a personal but universal love story and follows the
triangular relationship between Tomer, his German boyfriend, and his
intensely Israeli mother.
Tomer Heymann
Tomer
Heymann was born in Kfar Yedidia in Israel in 1970 and has directed
many documentary films and series in the past ten years, most of them
long-term follow-ups and personal documentations. His films won major
awards at different prestigious film festivals including his first film
“It Kinda Scares Me”. “Paper Dolls” won three awards at the 2006 Berlin
Film Festival and the audience’s award at the Los Angeles Festival. The
film and TV series “Bridge over the Wadi”, directed with his brother
Barak, won the Israeli Documentary Film competition, participated in
IDFA Festival’s prestigious competition and won many awards around the
world.