Summaries

From different worlds, Ellie and Thuy form a powerful bond that helps Ellie cope with the hardships of adjusting to her new life in the states.

A bittersweet coming-of-age film, Foreign Letters is itself a love letter to the unshakeable bond between friends. Set in the pre-email era of the 1980s, young Ellie, newly arrived to the US from Israel, anxiously waits for letters from her best friend back home. Suffering from homesickness, language difficulties and rejection at school, life brightens when she meets Thuy, a Vietnamese refugee her age. As the two bond and become inseparable, they eventually hurt each other, and Ellie must find a way to restore their trust. Based on director Ela Thier's personal immigration experience, Foreign Letters is a film about poverty, prejudice, shame, and the healing power of friendship.—Anonymous

1982. Preteen Ellie Thir and her family have just moved from their native Israel to suburban Connecticut, largely so that Ellie's father would not have to do the mandatory Israeli military service and thus be able to escape the fighting in Lebanon, where her maternal uncle was recently killed in friendly fire. They have to make the adjustment to life in this new country, where some things which many Americans take for granted are very different than what the Thirs are used to. The adjustment is easier for some than for others within the family. Because of her social isolation not knowing English and looking obviously different than the gentiles that largely populate her school, Ellie is in constant Hebrew correspondence with her "best friend in the entire universe times infinity" Shlomit back in Israel as that continued sense of belonging. Eventually, Ellie reaches out to the only other obviously isolated person in her class, ethnic Vietnamese Thuy Le, who has been in the United States for two years, who has integrated herself as far as being proficient in English and knowing about American culture, and who, like Ellie, left her homeland with her family due to the ravages of the war in Vietnam. Despite Thuy's initial standoffish behavior toward Ellie, they do eventually become best friends. But Ellie will learn that Thuy's life isn't everything that she says that it is and that her isolation is partly self-imposed, those continued secrets which may tear their friendship apart as Ellie tries to assimilate into all that surrounds her in this, her new life.—Huggo

Details

Keywords
  • library
  • barefoot
  • anti semite
  • dirty feet
  • shrinky dink
Genres
  • Comedy
  • Drama
Release date Apr 21, 2012
Motion Picture Rating (MPA) G
Countries of origin United States
Language English Vietnamese Hebrew
Production companies Thier Productions NBTV Studios

Box office

Budget $40000

Tech specs

Runtime 1h 39m
Color Color
Sound mix Mono
Aspect ratio 1.85 : 1

Synopsis

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