In the summer of 2002, during the Second Intifada, (Israeli) Eyal Sivan and (Palestinian) Michel Khleifi embarked on a road trip through their common territory - setting off from Gaza, in the south of Israel, up into Galilee, in the north of the country - along the borders outlined in Resolution 181, which, when adopted by the United Nations in 1947, divided Palestine into two states. Rather than making a film that would simply retrace the history of this (ongoing) separation, they decided instead to talk to the different people encountered along the way and thus give them a voice - a diverse assortment of people from all backgrounds, of all ages, genders, nationalities and religions, with varying political views. Conversations emerge from the sudden arrival in their lives of these two filmmakers who are each from one “side” of the borderline, and who are on a quest to investigate the arbitrary and temporary nature of a politically established demarcation (which is become more and more visible within the landscape), as well as its devastating effects on its inhabitants and their descendants. They all talk about peace, but from very divergent and seemingly irreconcilable standpoints. (Vanina Vignal)