Skip to main content
Donate to the 95 years appeal
Mirren Mirren, on the war
MARIA DUARTE respects an extraordinary performance by Helen Mirren in a highly partisan account of the Golda Meir premiership
NO PALESTINIANS VISIBLE: Helen Mirren as Golda Meir

Golda (12A)
Directed by Guy Nattiv 



 
ON the 50th anniversary of the Yom Kippur War comes a film which explores the conflict through the eyes of Israel’s first and only female Prime Minister to date, Golda Meir, and the high stakes decisions that she faced.  
 
It opens with Meir attending an inquiry where she is forced to explain how and why on October 6 1973 Israel was caught by complete surprise when Egyptian and Syrian forces launched a joint attack on the Sinai peninsula and the Golan Heights, which Israel had illegally occupied since 1967. This gripping drama puts you in the smoke-filled rooms with Golda and her all-male cabinet and gives you a front-row seat to all the nail-biting political and military action, without showing you any bloodshed.
 
Directed by Israeli filmmaker Guy Nattiv and written by Nicholas Martin it is driven by a powerhouse performance by Helen Mirren who is unrecognisable as the chain smoking, smart, no-nonsense premier, courtesy of hair and makeup designer Karen Hartley-Thomas who did an extraordinary job. 
 
Mirren, who received a major backlash for not being Jewish, was Gideon Meir’s first choice to play his grandmother. 
 
The film aims to get under Golda’s skin showing you what she was going through mentally and physically. She was the only grown up in charge in a war room full of dysfunctional military commanders who were losing it as she held her nerve, while secretly battling cancer which only her personal assistant Lou Kaddar (Camille Cottin) knew about. 
 
The image of her smoking as she is about to undergo radiation treatment speaks volumes. 
 
Dubbed the Iron Lady of Israel she was tough and strong outwardly and knew how to handle the likes of Henry Kissinger (Liev Schreiber), but behind closed doors she struggled with all the deaths and war losses. And all the time writing down the numbers in a small notebook. 
 
Golda fails to convey all the complexities of Israeli politics at this time, ignoring the Palestinians altogether. However it shows the flawed Meir, the war and her legacy in a new light.   

Out in cinemas today

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
fotw
Film of the week / 5 June 2025
5 June 2025

MARIA DUARTE recommends an exposure of the state violence used against pro-Palestine protests in the US

round up
Cinema / 29 May 2025
29 May 2025

The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Along Came Love, The Ballad of Wallis Island, The Ritual, and Karate Kid: Legends

fotw
Film of the Week / 29 May 2025
29 May 2025

MARIA DUARTE recommends the powerful dramatisation of the true story of a husband and wife made homeless

IMPECCABLE: Benicio Del Toro as  Zsa-zsa Korda and Mia Threapleton as his daughter Liesl in The Phoenician Scheme
Film of the week / 22 May 2025
22 May 2025

MARIA DUARTE is in two minds about a peculiar latest offering from Wes Anderson

Similar stories
(L) Barry Keoghan and Christopher Abbot in Bring Them Down;
Cinema / 7 February 2025
7 February 2025
The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews September 5, The Fire Inside, Bring Them Down, and Love Hurts
AI AI AI WHATS GOING ON HERE? Sophie Thatcher in Companion
Cinema / 30 January 2025
30 January 2025
The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Companion, Saturday Night, The Tasting, and The Colours Within
Daniel Craig and Drew Starkey in Queer
Cinema / 12 December 2024
12 December 2024
Hallucinogenic homosexuality, a quantum thriller, airport shenanigans and feminist Tolkein: MARIA DUARTE reviews Queer, The Universal Theory, Carry On and Lord of the Rings: The War of The Rohirrim
(L) Nightbitch; (R) Porcelain War
Cinema / 5 December 2024
5 December 2024
Horror for young mothers and Western presidents, a one-legged wrestler and weaponised art; the Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Nightbitch, Rumours, Unstoppable and Porcelain War