Blaumilch Canal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bomba Tzur (Blaumilch) in a German movie poster for Blaumilch Canal
Bomba Tzur (Blaumilch) in a German movie poster for Blaumilch Canal

Blaumilch Canal (international release title: The Big Dig): a 1969 Israeli comedy directed by Ephraim Kishon, which depicts the madness of bureaucracy through a municipality’s reaction to the actions of a lunatic.

[edit] Plot summary

A lunatic (Blaumilch) who had escaped from an asylum steals a compressor and proceeds to open up a main street and traffic artery in Tel Aviv (Allenby Street). Rather than question his actions, the police as well as city officials assume he is operating under the municipality’s orders and aid him as much as they can. Complaints from local residents, whose lives become a living hell due to the noise and traffic jams, lead to infighting between city departments. To hurry up the work before the elections, the city then sends armies of construction workers and heavy equipment to help the lone compressor, turning a mere annoyance into a disaster. When the city realizes that they are destroying a street without any plans or goals it is too late, and the end is chaotic in the extreme.

[edit] Cast:

  • Bomba Tzur as Blaumilch
  • Nissim Azikri as Ziegler
  • Shraga Friedman as Dr. Avigdor Kooiybishevsky
  • Gideon Singer as Police Chief Levkowicz
  • Shaike Ophir as the police officer
  • Mosko Alkalai as Schultheiss
  • Reuven Bar-Yotam as Foreman

[edit] Production notes

Blaumilch Canal was the largest Israeli movie production at the time it was made. Tel Aviv’s Allenby Street was reconstructed in Herzelia Studios, as well as a 100 foot long canal. The cast consisted of some of the most prominent Israeli actors, as well as hundreds of extras.

In other languages