Trevor "Minsky" La Pay lives in Albuquerque, NM, with his wife, dog, and cat. He writes DVD Reviews for CHUD. Reach him at: trevorlapay@hotmail.com


The Humans
Iad, Ibrahim, Ahmed, Amged, Akram, Baha, Bilal, Gihad, Jafer, Wasphi, Zoher, Ziad, Zidan, Zecharya, Halil, Taha, Yusef, Malek, Mudi, Morad, Muchamad, Machmud, Nazmi, Nidal, Salech, Abas, Otman, Aish, Imad, Issa, Ali, Farid, Raja, Ra'ad, Riad, Muchamad Razmi, Shchada, Shafik, Taufik et. al.

For a hill with a maximum capacity of 40 persons,
the guys were really pushing the limits of hill safety.
The Nutshell
Modi'in, an Israeli city near Tel Aviv with a population of 65,000, was created in 1993. It's a sprawling, modern, highly planned city, with lush greenspaces and an underground transit system.
Every day, thousands of Palestinian laborers illegally cross the border into Modi'in to work on the many new construction projects in the city. If they're caught by the police, they are arrested and sent back home. 9 Star Hotel follows Ahmed and Muchamad, two young Palestinian laborers, as they load themselves up with supplies, cross rivers, dodge traffic, avoid the omnipresent border police, and escape to the hills of the Modi'in countryside where they set up a secret camp with a group of workers.
The Lowdown
Whenever I'm watching a raw, minimalist documentary like 9 Star Hotel, I'm reminded of the Observer Effect, which refers to the inevitable changes to an observed phenomenon caused by the act of observing. It's all too often confused with Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle, but that's neither here nor there. Blame Jurassic Park: Lost World and its poorly researched dialogue for that.
Throughout Hotel, the Observer Effect runs rampant. There isn't any sense of narrative cohesion or guiding voice. It's simply a video log of a group of Palestinian laborers who struggle to survive in an unfriendly environment, and despite the fact that it feels like the subjects are keenly aware that they're being watched, Hotel is a highly effective and touching drama. The film finds its two charismatic leads in Muchamad and Ahmed as we follow their attempts to survive in Modi'in. Muchamad, an experienced worker in his late twenties, is Ahmed's surrogate father figure, but both ultimately rely on each other for support. They join a makeshift camp in the hills surrounding Modi'in (the eponymous 9 Star Hotel) which is populated with a cast of fascinating characters who gladly mug for the camera and share stories and anecdotes about life as a Palestinian.
Immediately, American viewers can draw parallels to their own immigration and border control situation. It's unavoidable to make comparisons, since both situations are so similar; there's even a river crossing, with a constant stream of vigilant Humvees tracking the shore for potential laborers. It's a familiar scene, especially for anyone who lives in the Southwest. Since the language and cultures involved in the Palestine/Israel situation are naturally estranging to most American viewers, it provides a unique insight into our own dilemma, as we're able to set aside our own set of prejudices to assess this particular set of stories. I won't attempt to make any kind of judgment about immigrant laborers in the U.S., although I personally find anti-immigrant sentiments xenophobic at best and racist at worst. I can say that while Hotel probably won't change anyone's mind about "BorderControl™!", it's a thought provoking window into a different world with a similar problem.


