The final part of the Israeli marriage trilogy Ronit Elkabetz and Shlomi Elkabetz is titled Get/Gett, 2014. While in Israel there are several options for the settlement of marital relations, there is only one option for religious divorce: “the only authority with authority to deal with divorce cases is the religious court ... all matters relating to marriage and divorce are under the full jurisdiction of the religious authority, if both partners belong to this religion. For Jewish couples, this means that both spouses must consent to divorce. According to the Jewish religion, a husband cannot be forced to divorce his wife. Consequently, many women find themselves trapped in not being able to change their marital status to prevent them from living their lives.” (for those interested, link to article by Israeli lawyer
https://bit.ly/3fLtFbI) That's what Vivian was trapped in. Five years in the process, her husband refused to give her a divorce, held numerous court hearings in the rabbinical court, which takes place all the action of this film. Once the husband had already agreed to give her a divorce letter (get), but before uttering the last sentence changed his mind, and the phrase was supposed to allow her to have another man, which he could not go. In the end, Vivivan had the hope that he would give her a gett when he snatched her promise that she would never have another man.
After the film was released, it was screened in the Knesset to draw attention to the injustice of the religious divorce process, but I don’t know if anything has changed.