Dark, Disturbing, and Hypnotic: 'Tropicana' Marks a Bold Cinematic Debut
Omer Tobi's debut film 'Tropicana' delivers a haunting psychological thriller starring Irit Sheleg as a grocery store cashier whose identity begins to unravel in mysterious ways.

With his debut feature film Tropicana, director Omer Tobi delivers a genre-defying cinematic experience that is as unnerving as it is mesmerizing. A psychological thriller infused with horror and gritty peripheral drama, Tropicana refuses to conform to traditional storytelling norms. Instead, it plunges into the fractured inner world of a woman on the edge, using nightmarish imagery not for provocation, but as a mirror of psychological torment.
Tobi brings a distinctive visual language and aesthetic precision to the big screen. In Tropicana, he turns the camera inward for the first time, exploring the invisible life of a woman lost in the margins, not just another “working-class checkout girl,” but a deeply complex psychological portrait of identity, loneliness, and madness.
At the film’s center is Orly Bleich, a grocery store cashier in a remote desert town, portrayed by actress Irit Sheleg in a raw, demanding, and career-defining performance. Orly is over 50 and lives a life split between her job and caring for her bedridden mother (played chillingly by Rivka Bahar). When a fellow cashier dies under mysterious circumstances, Orly inherits not only her position, but seemingly, her identity. What follows is a psychological descent that blurs the lines between self, desire, memory, and delusion.
Visually stunning yet far from decorative, every frame seems carefully constructed to immerse the viewer in the protagonist’s disoriented mind. A power outage in the supermarket becomes a moment of claustrophobic horror, and the arid desert landscape evokes the dread of 1970s Italian horror cinema.
At 66, Sheleg carries the film with astonishing presence. Her casting in a role that includes violence and raw emotional exposure is neither a gimmick nor a bid for shock value. Tobi deliberately chose a mature woman for the lead, one capable of embodying psychological complexity at midlife. It’s a daring, defiant choice that challenges industry norms and expectations.
Tobi crafts a character so layered it evokes empathy, fear, and even momentary revulsion. Tropicana has already screened at international festivals. This is a fully realized film that neither flatters nor panders to its audience. It doesn’t aim to be palatable or “respectably Israeli.” Instead, it is unsettling, haunting, emotionally powerful and, at times, hard to watch. The kind of film that lingers long after the lights come up.
With Tropicana, Omer Tobi carves out a rare cinematic space in the Israeli landscape, one where horror emerges from the personal, and visual beauty is inseparable from psychological depth.