She is determined to improve her inferior social status, so she hooks up with her new school's coolest guy, Tomer (Roy Nik).
[1] Official cast:[1] After 3 years of writing, Six Acts was presented at the Jerusalem Film Festival Pitch Point 2010, where it won a Jury's special mention.
These locations are considered the fancy suburbs of Tel Aviv, and their appearance in the film plays a role of its own: "In this world of swimming pools, iPhones, glossy houses and daddy’s cars - this is Ramat Hasharon, but could be Malibu, Sydney, the South of France" (Screen International).
[2] In an Interview, director Jonathan Gurfinkel and screenwriter Rona Segal said they chose Nouveau riche surroundings in order to resonate the extensive Neo-liberal process Israel has gone through in the last few decades.
[11] Isaac Zablocki Huffington Post wrote: "Six Acts is both stylistically innovative as it captures a realism and represents a new lost generation similarly to Larry Clark's Kids.