RUSSIAN FILM
FESTIVAL (Film descriptions are taken from "Facets Catalog.") |
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A tightly executed moral drama of love and war, Sergei Bodrov’s Academy Award-nominated film is based on Tolstoy’s classic tale and set in the remote, austerely beautiful Caucasus mountains. A dashing soldier (Russian heartthrob Oleg Menshikov, Burnt by the Sun), and a young recruit (Sergei Bodrov, Jr.) are captured by a Chechen father who holds them hostage in his village home. The father attempts a prisoner exchange for his son, who is held by the Russian army, but is defeated by the lackadaisical and inept bureaucracy of the military. |
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7:00 p.m.
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Circus Grigori Alexandrov’s daring attempt to import the American musical
comedy form into the Soviet Union was conceived by its director as “an
eccentric comedy...a real side-splitter.” Its star is an American
circus artiste who has a black baby — a daring conceit for 1936! The
only way she can find happiness is among the Soviet people. |
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7:00 p.m.
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One of the most celebrated Soviet films. In 1967, a Soviet filmmaker
told a tale of Jewish life, suffering, bravery and fatalism in a movie
about a Red Army commissar who finds herself living with a small-town
Jewish family while civil war rages around them. The film, an indictment
of anti-Semitism, was Askoldov’s first and last feature film. Shortly
after its completion, Askoldov was fired and the film locked away. Now
finally released, the film’s “artistic and emotional impact
is formidable…Askoldov has mastered a poetic style” (Sight
and Sound). |
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7:00 p.m.
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Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears Vladimir Menshov’s melodrama about the cruel anonymity of city life is structured in two parts. The first half is set in 1958, as Menshov charts the interlocking romantic fates of three Russian girls shunned to a workers’ dormitory. Tonya (Raisa Ryazanova) finds grace and happiness; Ludmila (Irina Muraveva) is trapped in an unhealthy and oppressive marriage; Katerina (Vera Alentova) is cruelly abandoned when her lover discovers she’s pregnant. The second half resumes their stories and lives 20 years later. Winner of the 1980 Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. |
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7:00 p.m.
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A new print of the first feature film directed by the great Andrei Tarkovsky.
This beautiful work, filled with poetic flourishes and an overriding
sense of melancholy, immediately placed him in a position of leadership
among the young Soviet filmmakers of his era. Set during WW II, it is
the story of a young boy who is deprived of his childhood and struggles
with the brutal realities of war. The film contains many images that
would later become Tarkovsky’s trademark, and is a brutally poetic
evocation of innocence lost in the face of war. |
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7:00 p.m.
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Window To Paris This wonderfully inventive, wildly hilarious comedy from Yuri Mamin starts in St. Petersburg, where an impoverished music teacher finds that the closet door of his new one-room apartment opens onto a window on the other side of which lies…Paris! Soon the denizens of the Russian flat are busy transporting themselves (and all the goods they can find) over the Paris rooftops into their St. Petersburg apartment. Window to Paris is a sharp, witty, and totally original satire. |
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7:00 p.m.
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The Cranes Are Flying A film that marked a radical opening for Soviet cinema. The romantic,
lyrical story concerns a beautiful young girl (Tatiana Samoilova) caught
up in the horrors of war. When her fiance (Alexei Batalov) goes off to
war, she marries a man whom she does not love and who raped her, is evacuated
to Siberia and, after the war, learns of her fiance's death. But she
refuses to believe it and waits for his return. A great international
success, which won the Palme d'Or and Best Director and Best Actress
honors at Cannes. |
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7:00 p.m.
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This Academy Award-winning feature (Best Foreign Language Film) is a wonderfully intimate, Chekhovian idyll set in Stalinist Russia, which, at its conclusion, packs an explosive political climax. Director Nikita Mikhalkov plays a legendary revolutionary hero living in a dacha outside Moscow with family and friends. Most of the film’s complex relationships are seen through the innocent eyes of Mikhalkov’s (and the hero’s) beautiful daughter in a film that gently reveals the tragedy of living under Stalinism. |
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7:00 p.m.
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Alexander Nevsky With its magnificently realized battle sequences (including the famed “Battle
on the Ice” climax) and Sergei Prokofiev’s masterful score,
Eisenstein's Alexander Nevsky remains a classic of epic filmmaking, one
the true masterpieces from one of the most important filmmakers in history. |
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7:00 p.m.
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Brother A simple man returns from his army service, coming home to St. Petersburg, where he finds his brother is now a contract killer for the Russian mob. Soon, both brothers are in the service of organized crime and they team up to kill a Chechen mafia boss. This riveting crime film addresses the social breakdown and accepted grimness of city life in the former Soviet Union. Lead actor Sergei Bodrov Jr.’s superb performance won him well-deserved honors around the world, including the award for Best Actor at the 1997 Chicago International Film Festival. “A wonderfully mordant excursion through the new Russian thugocracy...the best Russian movie I've seen in years” (J. Hoberman, The Village Voice). |
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