Sunday, July 10, 2016

The End of a Great Era (orig. Конец прекрасной эпохи / Konets prekrasnoy epokhi) [2015]

MPAA (UR would be R)  Fr. Dennis (4+ Stars)

IMDb listing
KinoPoisk.ru listing*
Kino-teatr.ru listing*
Megacritic.ru listing*

AFisha.ru (S. Zelvenskiy) review*
RadioVesti.ru (A. Dolin) review*
Rossiyskaya Gazeta (A. Litovchenko) review*
The Hollywood Reporter.ru (Y. Zabalyev) review*
Zavtra.ru (A. Belokurova , I. Malashenkov) review*


The End of a Great Era (orig. Конец прекрасной эпохи / Konets prekrasnoy epokhi) [2015] [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]* (directed and screenplay by Stanislav Govorukhin [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*, based on the novel The Compromise (1981) [GR-ENG] [GR-RUS]*[WCat-ENG] [Amzn-ENG] by Sergei Dovlatov [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] [IMDb] [KP.ru]*) is an excellent four 2016 Nika Award (Russia's closet equivalent to the Oscars) winning film (including for Best Director) that serves as the third stop of my 2016 Russian Film Tour.

A very smartly filmed period-piece / dramedy of sorts, presented (spot-on perfectly for effect) _entirely_ in high-contrast black-and-white, and set in 1969 (significance of the year becoming important for all kinds of reasons as the film progresses), it tells the story of  "a year in the life" of Andrey Lentulov (played by Ivan Kolesnikov [IMDb] [KP.ru]* [KT.ru]*) a still young, 30-something-or-so, Soviet-era journalist, originally from Leningrad (once and again St. Petersburg) yet for reasons not altogether clear (boredom, perceived greater opportunity / freedom, necessity?) taking a job in not altogether far Tallinn, the capital of the (then) Estonian SSR (once and again Estonia).

Why was he (choosing?) to leave Russia's (then the Soviet Union's) _second city_ (with a population of millions and a cultural cache' commensurate to its size / importance) for basically a "provincial capital" of a then fairly nearby "imperial reservation?"   The Imperialism of Russian life in Tallinn is patently clear throughout the film -- Ethnic Russians seem to hold most of the important positions.  Their ethnic Estonian subordinates appear loyal enough BUT when they turn to speaking Estonian to each other the Russians DON'T HAVE A CLUE what they're saying... Such was "life of the British" in India or Kenya / Rhodesia (or IRELAND for that matter ...) "during the Raj" as well ...

That kind of an admission -- that the Russian dominance of Estonia during the Soviet Era was certainly unjust -- is _in itself_ a remarkably mature and perhaps even brave statement.  (I from / live and write from a country, the United States, that doesn't particularly like to admit its mistakes either ... ;-).

But the whole film becomes a _fascinating_ and to CONTEMPORARY RUSSIA _challenging_ exploration of WHY "1969" could truly be understood as "the end of an era" for (then Soviet) Russia.

To understand "what the era was" and "how/WHY it was ending," the film begins with a montage recalling how the 1960s began in Russia -- WITH GAGARIN.  At the beginning of the 1960s Soviet Union quite literally seemed "at the top of the world."  YET, lest one understand that opening montage as simply a celebration of the Great Soviet Achievements of the time (and let's face it, putting the first satellite and then first human being into space were _great achievements_) EVEN THE OPENING MONTAGE _ENDS_ with an thoroughly _uncomprehending_ Krushchev first scandalized by and then _loudly denouncing_ a famous "modern art exhibition" in Moscow.  So the Khrushchev Thaw was already coming to an end UNDER KHRUSHCHEV.

Fast forward then to "the summer of 1969."  Among the first assignments Andrey is given by his boss, Editor in Chief (goes without saying) "Party man" Genrikh Frantsevich Turonok (played by Boris Kamorzin [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) at his new post at the "Estonian Pravda" (pravda in Russian, of course, meaning "truth," but also the infamous name of the then Soviet Union's Communist Party's _authorative_ newspaper in Moscow) is to help write the front page article _not about_ (AMERICAN) Neil Armstrong WALKING ON THE MOON but instead of a thoroughly _random_ "state visit" by the General Secretary of the Polish People's Republic to Moscow ;-).

Now dear Readers understand, the film shows ALL of Andrey's journalist colleagues watching (live?) coverage of  Neil Armstrong walking on the moon, and them toasting the _human_ achievement of man walking on the moon, SOME perhaps disappointed that it wasn't a Russian walking on the moon, BUT STILL ACKNOWLEDGING, indeed TOASTING (it offered an excuse to drink ;-) the "HUMAN ACHIEVEMENT" OF IT ALL ... and they were being asked TO PRETEND that it "really was no big deal" ... that the again THOROUGHLY RANDOM "state visit" of the Polish General Secretary was _somehow_ "more important."

Many of Andrey's other writing assignments for the paper during that year were similarly absurd: He's given a assignment to write a "puff piece" (most familiar with Soviet Era journalism would know that _most_ domestic stories _were_ "puff pieces") about the recent birth of Tallinn's 400,000th citizen.  (Readers here note that Estonia's capital Tallinn, like most cities between Leningrad and Berlin were thoroughly decimated - and in the case of cities of the Baltic States like Tallinn repeatedly, by both sides - with then a huge exodus of those Estonians who _could flee_ doing so as their country was _definitively_ falling once again under (Soviet) Russian control).  Well, as Andrey sets out to research this story which is to "celebrate" Tallinn's reaching this nearly 25 years-after-the-war benchmark of 400,000 residents ... he finds the story to be "far more complicated" than it would have initially seemed ;-).  The city's 400,000th tovarish was born "out of wedlock" and the father was an Ethiopian exchange student (so "black?" asks Andrey. "Chocolate colored" answers the cautious doctor Andrey's interviewing, unsure if this thoroughly random fact was going to _somehow_ get him into trouble.  And indeed, Andrey's Editor of this Russian language daily in Estonia, becomes worried how this story would not play with HIS higher-ups back in Moscow...)

Later, Andrey's boss sends him on another "puff piece" story to interview a particularly productive Estonian milk-make somewhere in Estonian cow country (she seems to milk cows in a statistically faster fashion than most other milk-maids, _not just_ in the venerable Estonian SSR, but across the whole Soviet Union (Yes folks, THESE were the kind of stories that ROUTINELY made "national news" in the Communist world of the time.  Another great film about the absurdity of that time is the recent Polish film One Way Ticket to the Moon (orig. Bilet na Księżyc) [2013], set incidently in 1969 as well ;-).
 
Well, to approach this story, Andrey has to find an Estonian translator, who he does find, out there in the nearest sizable town to the kolkhoz with this statistically-remarkable milk-maid.  That translator, named Evi (played by Kyart Tammyapv) [IMDb] [KP.ru]*) a quite attractive, blonde, ethnic Estonian journalist working for a local "youth" paper, confesses to Andrey, that she'd actually _much rather_ research sex than milkmaids (! ;-), explaining to Andrey (needless to say, intrigued ;-) quite sincerely (though yes, she does like sex) that "sex is important, can make a lot of people happy, and yet, most people do it wrong."  (Anyway, they do have "their encounter" and afterwards the 20-something-lovely-Estonian-translator kindly tells him "what he could do better the next time." ;-).   And then, afterwards ... they go to find the milkmaid ;-)

The milk-maid episode ends with Andrey getting his research together, writing the story, only to be informed by his superior that their higher-ups (presumably in Moscow) "already wrote the story anyway" (presumably _without_ any research or anything).  And Andrey's excursion into Estonian cow-country was pretty much a waste, except for perhaps getting a few tips about how to better please a woman "the next time" by a young attractive Estonian 20-something year-old, who actually would have fit _quite well_ and quite _sincerely well_ with her Swedish, German or even American "sisters" who were starting to ask similar questions as well.  The difference is, of course, that her Western counterparts could do so far far more freely than she back in the Soviet Union of the time.

There are ALL KINDS OF SIMILAR STORIES / INCIDENTS in this film.  What did they add up to?  It would seem clear that the message of the film was that the "Great Era" of the 1960s Soviet Union came to an end because the Soviet Union was simply _too closed_ of a society.  Everything had to be approved, an orthodoxy to maintain.   Indeed, throughout the film, there were numerous reference by Andrey's various "higher ups" about "the lessons of Czechoslovakia" (in 1968 the Soviet Union led a Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia to crush the "Prague Spring" liberalization movement there).  But of course, those "higher ups" were drawing _exactly the wrong lessons_.  They kept maintaining that the "problem" of Czechoslovakia was that there had been "too much freedom there" that "once you lose censorship, then ..."

The message of the current film here was that the opposite was true: The curtailment of freedom actually _killed_ innovation and reduced happiness, bringing what could have been a Great Era to an end.

Again, this film won FOUR Nika Awards (Russia's Equivalent of the Oscars) last year in Russia including best director (Stanislav Govorukhin [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) and "discovery of the year" (actor - Ivan Kolesnikov [IMDb] [KP.ru]* [KT.ru]*).

Is there a statement being made about the "more current affairs"?  ONE WOULD HAVE TO BE AN IDIOT NOT TO SEE IT...

But while my comments above may seem needlessly hard / harsh to some Russian Readers (and would be Russian censors --  I actually may have had some experiences with this recently, with regard to my review of Francofonia [2015]) -- if there EVER WAS A FILM that could PROVE TO WESTERNERS that RUSSIA is _capable_ of both self-criticism and CAN SMILE it is this one.

And remember dear Readers here, that I started my (somewhat obsessive ;-) periodic focus [1] [2] [3] on Russian films here in search of films that prove that RUSSIANS CAN SMILE.  Why?  Because WE (honestly!) _DON'T_ SEE THEM HERE -- IN THE WEST.  And honestly, World Peace / the Fate of the World may depend on us seeing becoming able to see Russians as being capable of smiling, just like us, just like all of us (in spite of often, honestly, a very tragic national history ... which we also need to take into account).

So my hat off to the film-makers here:  Ten, twenty, thirty years from now this film will be remembered, on _numerous levels_, as a _great_ one, perhaps even beginning / re-invigorating a NEW era ;-)  Congratulations!



* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser. 

** To load Websites from South, East and Eurasia in a timely fashion, installation of ad-blocking software is often required.

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Friday, July 8, 2016

The Secret Life of Pets [2016]

MPAA (PG)  CNS/USCCB (A-I)  ChicagoTribune (3 Stars)  RogerEbert.com (3 Stars)  AVClub (B)  Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)

IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB (J. Mulderig) review
ChicagoTribune (S. Cohen - AP) review
RogerEbert.com (B. Tallerico) review
AVClub (K. Rife) review  

The Secret Life of Pets [2016] (directed by Yarrow Cheney and Chris Renaud, screenplay by Cinco Paul, Ken Daurio and Brian Lynch) is a SAFE, FUN, CHILDREN'S ORIENTED MOVIE that _won't_ offend anyone.  Thanks be to God ;-)

Yup regardless of complexion or political orientation, pretty much all of us like our pets.   Yes we may prefer dogs to cats or cats to dogs or birds or hamsters, frogs, turtles, fish even snakes to both.   But generally speaking we like pets.  Indeed, one of the more enjoying things at our Parish has been the Annual Blessing of the Animals around St. Francis' Feast Day ;-)

So it's great to see a film about pets that's just gleefully "about our pets" without any attempt to spin the story in some strange political direction (see what I wrote about Dispicable Me 2 [2013])

To the film ... ;-)

It's gleefully about Max (voiced by Louis C.K.) a terrier mix who had been picked-up when he was a pup by his smiling 20-somthing Manhattan dwelling 20-something human owner Katie (voiced by Ellie Kemper).  And as he would tell it, theirs was a perfect relationship, until ... one day, Katie comes home with a surprise: another, now big shaggy dog named Duke (voiced by Eric Stonestreet) who she picked at the Pound both to save the "big shaggy guy" and actually to give Max "a friend" ...

Well Max didn't necessarily feel that he needed a friend.  He had Katie even though, to him inexplicably, she went to work each day.  "What does she do all day?" he would ask the other pets in the apartment building when she was away ;-).  So now he had to deal with this unwelcome addition.  (Actually anyone who's had a couple of dogs will know that the dogs don't necessarily get along initially until they "sort things out" among themselves).

So, Max and Duke are still "sorting things out" while being walked by a rather clueless "dog walker" when "one thing leads to another" and they find themselves separated from the other dogs being walked by said inattentive ipod-tune-listening "dog walker."  THAT QUICKLY GETS THE TWO INTO TROUBLE with New York's "animal control" authorities ... and the rest of the story ensues ... ;-)

After being caught by the said animal control authorities, they're initially freed by a small guerrilla band of "flushed" (they'd prefer to think of themselves as "self liberated") pets led a rather bitter former magician's "bunny" named Snowball (voiced wonderfully by Kevin Hart).  Led literally "underground" (into the sewers), they realize that they really don't fit in there, and so they break away and seek to find their way home ... on their own.

Back home, actually, a cute as a button, Pommeranian, named Gidget (voiced by Jenny Slate) who has a more or less obvious crush on Max, realizes that "Max is missing," and recruits the other pets of the apartment building to help organize a search party to look for him. 

It's not necessarily easy:  Neighbor cat, Chloe (voiced by Lake Bell), famously "doesn't particularly care (one way or another)" if Max is missing (Why? She's _a cat_ after all ;-).  And even cuter than Gidget, guinea pig Norman (voiced by Chris Renaud) while perhaps with his fast-beating heart in the right place, has himself been _hopelessly lost_ (apparently for three weeks ;-) wandering the ventilation shafts of the building trying find _his_ way home ;-).  Gitget recruits a trained Hawk named Tiberius (voiced wonderfully by Albert Brooks) living in a coop on the roof of the building to fly about to look for Max.  But Tiberius has his own inner conflict: Yes _a part of him_ would really like to be "part of the team" of pets being recruited by Gidget to look for Max.  On the other hand, _another part of him_ would really like _to eat_ "a good part of the team" Max ;-)

In the meantime, in perhaps the closest to "a Pixar moment" in this non-Pixar film, big shaggy Duke confesses to Max that he "can't go back to the pound."  Why?  "I've already been once to the Pound.  If I return there, I'm never coming out."

Again, much happens, and all is truly very, very cute.  Do the two make it home?  (I'm not gonna tell you ... but guess ... :-)

In anycase, good job!  Very, good job! ;-) 



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Thursday, July 7, 2016

Neon Bull (orig. Boi Neon) [2015]

MPAA (UR would be R)  Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)

IMDb listing
AdoroCinema.com listing*

A Folha de São Paulo (S. Martí) review*
Diario de Pernambuco (J. Cavani) review*

APUM.com (V. Blanes) review*
NPR (P. Powers) review
The Hollywood Reporter (B. van Hoeij) review
Way Too Indie (C.J. Prince) review


Neon Bull (orig. Boi Neon) [2015] IMDb] [AC]*(written and directed by Gabriel Mascaro [IMDb] [AC]*) like the director's previous film August Winds (orig. Ventos de Agosto) [2014] (which played here at the Chicago International Film Festival) is about a social contract in Brazil between the nation and its poorer citizens/residents that _ought_ to disturb people.

The contract appears to be this: We won't do much for you.  In exchange, we will let you live lives essentially free of obligations toward others (or honestly toward God / "something" ANYTHING "Higher").  You will probably be poor, but we hope that you will be generally happy, so long as you don't burden yourselves with much thought about the value / meaning of your lives.  Your lives will be essentially like those of the animals: Here for a while, gone sometime after that.  Enjoy, as best you can, your stay...

I do think I know something of this mentality because in my life as a Servite Priest, I did visit the Servite Mission in Acre, Brazil several times, where this same "social contract" is lived-out day-to-day by the rural residents living in little hamlets clustered around little petrol-driven electrical generators spaced at about one kilometer intervals along the rivers of the region.  Those generators are turned-on by the residents for 1-2 hours each evening -- so that the women can watch their telenovelas -- and then presumably when an important soccer match would be played.

Our Servite priests would pass through the various hamlets on "desobriga missions" (for the "unburdening of obligations" -- to allow people to go to Confession, receive Communion, Baptize the recently born, Marry those who need to be Married, etc) at regular intervals so that pretty much every hamlet in this mission territory (about half the size of West Virginia -- 32,000 sq.km) would be visited once every six months.

I remember describing to a cousin of mine the lives of the residents along those rivers -- Pretty much every 14 year old girl would already be (more or less) married and with a child.  Yet pretty much by then, 14-15 years of age, all that one really needed to know, one would already know: He how to fish / raise some corn / beans, she how to cook / tend house.  And it seemed to me that it was still "a more dignified life" living out-there along the rivers than _trying_ to move to the city and ending-up in a favela (slum) at the edge of town raising the same chickens in one's yard and looking (now harder) for a little plot of land to grow one's corn / beans and basic vegetables. -- to which my cousin responded: "But what a tragic waste of human potential."  Basically all those people living along those rivers (and in GABRIEL MASCARO'S FILMS) were being WAREHOUSED: "Left to live out lives without much meaning ... until they would simply die someday."

And so it is then with Mascaro's current film: Viewers follow a random truckload of Brazilian rodeo-workers through the "cow country" of Pernambuco, Brazil:

There's Iremar (played by Juliano Cazarré [IMDb] [AC]*) a stable-hand, who keeps the rodeo's bulls lined-up, in the proper pens at the proper time.  The main competition apparently in the rodeo is simply for a horse mounted rodeo wrangler to simply "take down a running bull by pulling its tail ..."  Iremar's job was simply having those bulls lined-up so that they'd be released, one per rodeo wrangler, at their proper time.  In off hours though, Iremar tinkers around as something of a fashion designer, drawing fairly exotic, form-fitting clothes onto pictures of nude models in porn magazines, and then as he gets the cloth and other materials, he actually sews said clothes for his muse ...

Galega (played by Maeve Jenkins [IMDb] [AC]*) who serves as the group's truck-driver by day, and as something of an exotic dancer (often wearing Iremar's creations) at night.  She has a pubescent girl ...

Cacá (played by Alyne Santana [IMDb] [AC]*) who's become old enough to start "rolling her eyes" at some of her mother's not particularly purpose-filled behavior, but remains still "enough of a kid" to still believe that "all would be fine" if she just "had her own little horse."

Both Iremar and Galega "get distracted' by quite random MOTAS that they meet along their quite random travelings through Pernambuco "cow country."

Now NO ONE is desperately unhappy in this film ... but _more_ than in regards of Mascaro's previous film August Winds (orig. Ventos de Agosto) [2014], ONE CAN NOT BUT WONDER _HERE_ (in the current one) if ALL OF THE CHARACTERS are basically IN A KIND OF PRISON ... FOR "LIFE" ... waiting to just, one day, die.

It's a vision that ought to ... disturb.

Is Life for MANY basically "merda" coming from a "Neon Bull" ...?



* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser. 

** To load Websites from South, East and Eurasia in a timely fashion, installation of ad-blocking software is often required.

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Tuesday, July 5, 2016

He - the Dragon (orig. Он – дракон / On -- Drakon) [2015]

MPAA (UR would be PG-13)  Fr. Dennis (4 Stars)

IMDb listing
KinoPoisk.ru listing*
Kino-teatr.ru listing*
Megacritic.ru listing*

Afischa.ru (A. Dolin) review*
Film.ru (B. Ivanov) review*
FilmPro.ru (S. Sychev) review*
Izvestiya.ru (A. Pogova) review*
KinoAfischa.ru review*
Kino-Teatr.ru (A. Polibentseva) review*
Rossiyskaya Gazeta (A. Litovchenko) review*
Yaroslavl Region (M. Demidova) review*
Zavtra.ru (A. Belokurova) review*

TheHollywoodReporter.ru (D. Ostashevsky) review*

 
He - the Dragon (orig. Он – дракон / On -- drakon) [2015] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]* (directed by Indar Dzhendubaev [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]* screenplay by Marina Dyachenko [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*  and Sergei Dyachenko [IMDb] [KP.ru]* along with Indar Dzhendubaev [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]* and Aleksey Arsenev [IMDb] [KP.ru]* based on the novel The Rite (orig. Ритуал - Ritual) [GR-Ru]*[GR-Pl]*[WCat-Ru]* by RUSSIAN LANGUAGE writing UKRAINIAN fantasy/romance writers Marina and Sergei Dyachenko [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn]) is an often SPECTACULARLY SHOT (and with world-class CGI) "Twilight Saga"-like love story between a Russian princess Miroslava (played wonderfully by Mariya Poezzhaeva [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) and a tortured Dragon (played when in human form by Russian male supermodel Matvey Lykov [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*[fr.wikip]*).

The film, which ranked as the #3 most popular Russian Film of 2015 by Russian Viewers at the MegaCritic.ru* website, serves the first stop of my 2016 Russian Film Tour, which as last year, I undertake in hopes of promoting a better / fuller understanding of peoples, here of Russia and its people, than has been generally been available to us in the West.

To the film ...

The story begins "in the Rus" still long before the Christian era.  We're told that the people of a particular region "of the Rus" were forced "back in those ancient days" to offer-up each year three young maidens to a Dragon.  These young maidens were dressed in their best (wedding or funeral?) garb, laid down in separate small boats and set adrift into a particular bend in a river, whereupon the Dragon would appear from the sky, swoop down and take-away one of the maidens to his far-away lair; the maiden taken away in this way would never be seen or heard from again...

Many years passed, and there came a time in which "The Dragon" _no longer appeared_ (to swoop down take away one said maiden).  What happened?  No one knew.  HOWEVER, _the ritual_ of laying the maiden, dressed in her best in a boat and setting it adrift - IN THE DIRECTION OF HER FUTURE HUSBAND - remained AS SOMETHING OF A WEDDING RITUAL to these people.

Well ... it came to be ... that a young Princess named Miroslava (played wonderfully by Mariya Poezzhaeva [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*), her (quite common / traditional Slavic) name meaning "Lover or Proclaimer of Peace," betrothed to a dashing Prince named Igor (played by Pyotr Romanov [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) is dressed in her wedding garb, set solemnly on the boat and cast-off by her loving Regal/Noble Father (played Stanislav Lyubshin [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) in the direction of her betrothed, WHEN ... to _everyone's horror_ ... the Dragon, all but forgotten, 'cept in fairy tales and "Legends of Old...", REAPPEARS, swoops down and TAKES THE YOUNG PRINCESS MIROSLAVA AWAY ...

The rest of the story ensues ... Who was this Dragon?  Where did he take poor Miroslava?  Why didn't he appear for such a long time until now?  And what to do so that this never happens again?

The story that unfolds is just lovely.  It is based on a novel The Rite (orig. Ритуал - Ritual) [GR-Ru]*[GR-Pl]*[WCat-Ru]* by RUSSIAN LANGUAGE writing UKRAINIAN fantasy/romance writers Marina and Sergei Dyachenko [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn]).  That novel itself is unfortunately currently unavailable in English.  However, a fair number of their other works are [GR] [WCat] [Amzn].  So it'd be worth it for Readers interested in this (Teen-oriented / Fantasy) genre to look-up a book or two of theirs :-).


In any case, EXCELLENT FILM!


* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser. 

** To load Websites from South, East and Eurasia in a timely fashion, installation of ad-blocking software is often required.

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Monday, July 4, 2016

Battle for Sevastopol (orig. Битва за Севастополь - Bitva za Sevastopol) [2015]

MPAA (UR would be PG-13)  Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)

IMDb listing
KinoPoisk.ru listing*
Kino-teatr.ru listing*
Megacritic.ru listing*

Smithsonian.com (G. King) - article about The Friendship between Lyudmila Pavlichenko and Eleanor Roosevelt

KinoUkraine.com (E. Rubashevska) review*

Film.ru (Yevgeny Ukhov) review*
KinoHod.ru (L. Frolova) review*
Nezavicimaya Gazeta (N. Grigorieva) review*
OVideo.ru (M. Malyukov) review*
Postcriticism.ru (V. Gorbenko) review*
The-Village.ru (N. Kurganckaya) review*
TimeOut.ru (D. Serebryanaya) review*
Vechernyaya Moskva (I. Nikolaev) review*
Vedomosti.ru (O. Zintsov) review*
Zavtra (A. Belokurova) review*

Woody Guthrie's song Miss Pavlichenko [YouTube] [Amzn]


Battle for Sevastopol (orig. Битва за Севастополь - Bitva za Sevastopol) [2015] [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]* (directed and cowritten by Sergey Mokritskiy [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]* along with Maksim Budarin [IMDb] [KP.ru]*, Maksim Dankevich [IMDb] [KP.ru]*, Leonid Korin [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]* and Igor Olesov [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) is a recent if somewhat _mistitled_ still RUSSIAN / UKRAINIAN _coproduced_ WORLD WAR II WAR FILM that serves as the second stop on my 2016 Russian Film Tour.

The film which was nominated (but did not win) two 2016 Nika Awards (Russia's closest equivalent to the Oscars) -- for Best Picture and Best Actress -- was noted by several of the Russian reviewers cited above as one of THREE World War II themed films that were released in close succession in Russia in the Spring of 2015 (the others being Batalon [2015] [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*[MC.ru]* and The Dawns Here are Quiet... [2015] [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*[MC.ru]* a remake of the classic Soviet Era WW II film ...The Dawns Here are Quiet [1972] [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*).

What was going on in Russia in the first half of 2015?  The country's attention was focused on events in the Ukraine: (1) the overthrow of Ukraine's notoriously corrupt (if elected, if  questionably so) pro-Russian government and replaced by a pro-Western leaning one (confirmed by a second election which, in turn, was never recognized by Russia), and (2) the subsequent conflicts in the primarily Russian speaking Donetz and Luhansk regions of the Ukraine (which border with Russia), Crimea (of which Sevastopol is its primary city / capital) having voted to break away (in a still controversial referendum) and join itself to the Russian Federation the year before.  So it's not altogether surprising that a fair amount of "war" / "patriotic" films would be coming out in Russia at the time.  What perhaps would be most interesting for Readers to note here is that these "patriotic releases" won _neither_ a lot of awards in Russia _nor_ a lot of popular acclaim among Russian viewers.  (Contrast this honestly with the wild popular acclaim (and especially on the part of the American Right) in the United States of American Sniper [2014])    

The current film, again arguably _mistitled_ (or _retitled_ to call attention to more current events...), tells the story Lyudmila Pavlichenko [wikip] (played excellently in the film by Yuliya Peresild [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) an Ukrainian (Kiev) born Soviet sniper who killed 309 Fascist (German / Romanian) soldiers during the Sieges of Odessa and Sevastopol in 1941-42 and who upon being one of the few evacuated near the end of the latter siege was _sent to the United States_ as part of a Red Army "student" delegation to the United States to encourage support for the (unified) War Effort.

By this point a thoroughly hardened soldier, she apparently deeply impressed (if also worried / disconcerted) Eleanor Roosevelt [wikip] (played in the film by Joan Blackham [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) who invited her to spend some time as a personal guest of hers at the White House.

FOLKS, this is honestly a QUITE FASCINATING FILM because it tries (like Eleanor Roosevelt) to understand this woman, who by the time she arrives in U.S. comes across as a thoroughly efficient killing machine that the American Press nicknamed "Lady Death."  How did she become that way?

Well, _even before the war_ she was a rather serious student / "product of the Soviet State."  Her father (played by Stanislav Boklan [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) was an NKVD agent... (Incidently, the film portrays her as _not particularly liking him_  in good part because of his strictness). Yet, she had friends represented in the film by the the giggly boy-crazy Masha (played by Polina Pakhomova [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) a fiance' named Boris Chopak (played in the film by Nikita Tarasov [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) a soft-spoken doctor from Odessa, would have been fun in-laws (Jewish), parents of Boris (played by Vladimir Kononenko-Zadniprovky [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]* and Lyubov Timoshevskaya [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]* respectively) as well as two battlefield romances one with her sniper instructor Makarov (played by Oleg Vasilkov [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) still defending Odessa and the second with another sniper Leonid Kichenko (played by Yevgeny Tsyganov [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) while fighting in the defense of Sevastopol.  By the time she gets sent to the U.S. as part of the "young soviet" / "student" delegation EVERYONE OF THESE PEOPLE WERE DEAD.

And despite NO ONE being able to accuse her almost frightening single-minded determination to continue to "kill Fascists," IMHO one of the strongest / most honest aspects of the film was the portrayal of the (all but in the White House itself) ever-present "Political Commissar" (played by Gennadiy Chentsov [IMDb] [KP.ru]*[KT.ru]*) accompanying the "student delegation" to the United States, there to keep EVERYBODY, including Lyudmila _in line_. 

So why did Lyudmila seem so driven / cold?  Well, honestly, how could she not be?

Younger western viewers may catch a fascinating (and IMHO _entirely appropriate_) aspect of the sound track in the film.  At various times, the film seems to employ (or certainly mimic) the most haunting strains of the soundtrack to the recent American-made young adult oriented dystopian series The Hunger Games [2012-2015].  I do think that the application was entirely appropriate (though perhaps also double-edged, as Russia would seem at least to an outsider like me to be as one of the most "capital vs the provinces" dominated societies in existence today...).

Still, I think that the current film would help Westerners better appreciate the horrors / sufferings of the 40s Russian / Soviet generation and hopefully help us to better understand, why Russia even today responds to various geopolitical situations the way that it does.

In any case, no could doubt that Lyudmila Pavlichenko [wikip] was one brave, capable and patriotic woman who suffered and overcame an enormous amount.

Excellent film.


* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser. 

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L'Attesa [2015]

MPAA (UR would be R)  Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)

IMDb listing
FilmTV.it listing*
AlloCine.fr listing*

CineBlog.it (A.M. Abate) review*
cinematografo.it (G Arnone) review*
Indie-Eye.it (A. Mastarntonio) review
LaRepublica.it (M. Uzzeo) review

aVoir-aLire.fr (A. Martin) review*
Critikat.fr (N. Brarda) review*
LaCroix.fr (J.C. Raspiengeas) review*

AVclub (M. D'Angelo) review
EyeForFilm.co.uk (J. Kermode) review
Slant Magazine (C. Gray) review


L'Attesa [2015] [IMDb] [FT.it]*[AC.fr]* (directed and cowritten by Piero Messina [IMDb] [FT.it]*[AC.fr]* along with Giacomo Bendotti [IMDb], Ilaria Macchia [IMDb] and Andrea Paolo Massara [IMDb] based on two works by Luigi Pirandello [wikip] [IMDb]) is an ITALIAN / FRENCH COLLABORATION that played recently at the Gene Siskel Film Center here in Chicago.  The film is also available, subtitled, in the United States on various streaming services for a reasonable price.

Heavy on symbolism and playing-out largely at a hill-top estate somewhere in Sicily of today, the story's mainly about two women: Anna (played by Juliette Binoche [IMDb] [FT.it]*[AC.fr]*) middle aged, and Jeanne (played by Lou de Laâge [IMDb] [FT.it]*[AC.fr]*), early 20-something, both French.  Anna had married (and some years back divorced) a Sicilian man, perhaps since deceased, and was living now with the exception of having a few servants in said Sicilian hilltop citadel alone.  Jeanne, the (former?) girlfriend of Anna's beloved son Giuseppe, "comes visiting" around Holy Week (so basically around "Spring / Easter Break"). 

Jeanne's arrival comes as something of a surprise to Anna and the handful of her servants.  She tells them that Giuseppe had invited her to come, ... 'cept Giuseppe's "not around."

So ... the rest of the film (80-90% of it) is about Jeanne _waiting_ for Giuseppe to arrive.  She leaves messages on his cell phone.  He _never_ answers.  Anna, his mother, more or less clearly "in mourning" (though she tells Jeanne it's on account of her (Anna's) brother having recently died), _doesn't say much_.  As the film progresses, it becomes clear that Jeanne and Giuseppe did have "a falling out" ABOUT A YEAR AGO ... so one starts to wonder if Jeanne had really been invited to be there (and yet she _insists_ that she was).

What the heck was going actually on?   With _almost no one talking_ and even when they did talk, saying _very little_ (of pertinence anyway) this becomes a _fascinating_ if _irritating_ "mystery" of sorts.   What happened?  What happened to / where was Giuseppe?  Why doesn't Anna know where her own son is?  What was Jeanne hoping to accomplish by being there (or staying there)?

And with this playing-out in the context of Holy Week, there's _a lot_ of symbolism present as well.

Fascinating / irritating and above all _slow moving_ story ;-)

Honestly, quite a good job! ;-) 


* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser. 

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Saturday, July 2, 2016

The BFG [2016]

MPAA (PG)  CNS/USCCB (A-I)  ChicagoTribune (3 Stars)  RogerEbert.com (3 1/2 Stars)  AVClub (C+)  Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)

IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB (K. Jensen) review
ChicagoTribune (M. Phillips) review
RogerEbert.com (M. Zoller Seitz) review
AVClub (A.A. Dowd) review


The BFG [2016] (directed by Steven Spielberg, screenplay by Melissa Mathison based on the children's book [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] by Roald Dahl [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] [IMDb]) is a truly _excellent_ children's film that many parents / adults may very well enjoy as well.

Further, the reason why many adults may enjoy the film is very nice as well: Unlike many other children's oriented films made these days, it's not as if there's "a second level" in which to understand the film that would be geared more to the adults.  INSTEAD, as Matt Zoller Seitz writes in his review of the film for the website RogerEbert.com, the film invites Viewers to re-experience the world through the eyes of a kid. 

So the film begins with 8 year old orphan named Sophie (played wonderfully by Ruby Tarnhill) who can't seem to sleep one night.  So she's looking out the window of the orphanage in what seems to be 50s era London around three AM and ... to her _enormous surprise_ she spots an "older" 50-60 ft GIANT lumbering down the street. 

Now SHE'S scared because though GIANTS _do exist_ in the world of an eight year old, she _didn't_ really expect to run into one.  Then from the Giant's perspective (played again very, very nicely by Mark Rylance), he didn't expect to be spotted by her either.  Even though he's 50-60 ft tall, he'd only come to London late in the night, and with a very very dark cloak, and a cane that looked kinda like a streetlight, he'd make himself quite invisible to passerbys that encountered (first).  THERE'S A VERY, VERY CUTE / ENJOYABLE SEQUENCE in which we, the Viewers, (along with Sophie) watch this 50-60 ft GIANT quite gracefully avoid being spotted by five or six different passerbys.  The one thing that this kindly GIANT (what's he doing there? well it turns out that he has a fairly important job to do each night... No, I'm not going to tell you here, but it'd make perfect sense to a 5-10 year old) didn't expect was to be spotted / watched by the eight year old Sophie. 

So she's scared and he's scared and he just takes her up then to "Giant Country" where he lives to figure things out.  He may be A BIG GIANT, but not a particularly BRIGHT ONE ;-).  But if not all that bright, he turns to be remarkably kind.  Hence why Sophie comes to call him BFG or "Big Friendly Giant."

Now after Sophie wakes up the next morning up there with her new found friend, BFG, up in Giant Country, she finds that even GIANTS don't have it all that easy.  Indeed, there always seems to be "someone" EVEN BIGGER than they are.  So Sophie / we find that even the BFG finds himself picked-on by EVEN BIGGER GIANTS than he.

And who then better to help him THAN A KID (and even an ORPHAN KID) who knows a bit about being SMALL and yes, often, LONELY / ALONE ...

This is just a wonderful story folks ... and yes, much, much ensues ... ;-)


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Friday, July 1, 2016

The Purge: Election Year [2016]

MPAA (R)  Fr. Dennis (1/2 Star)

IMDb listing


The Purge: Election Year [2016] (written and directed by James DeMonaco), the third in this base franchise is a film that I could not bring myself to watch. 

I did view and review the original film The Purge [2012] in the series.  However, I saw no positive value to viewing / reviewing the sequel that appeared a year later  And despite a certainly having a seductive title (of sorts) playing to frustration (and encouraging cynicism) in our country with the current state of our election process, I similarly could not find positive reason to view / review the current film. 

I do give the film 1/2 Star because I do believe that the franchise does apparently speak to a frustration existing today in society, otherwise I don't believe that the original film and its sequels would have had box office success to justify (financially) the continuation of the series.  I fully expect the current film "to do well" (financially).  I just do hope that the more-or-less inevitable fourth film will prove to be a flop.

Yes, there is frustration in the land.  But do we need to exploit it for monetary gain?  And if we do, does this not approach making a living through blood money?  Call this film (and the films of this series) essentially a kind of porn:  AT BEST these films "dissipate" anger / frustration present in their viewers.  AT WORST they may actually encourage more violent acting out in society and ALMOST CERTAINLY they _further_ degrade our consciences and further numb us to the shock of violence (making violent behavior appear ever more acceptable).

Folks, this is not a good slope to be going down...


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Thursday, June 30, 2016

Legend of Tarzan [2016]

MPAA (PG-13)  Fr. Dennis (0 Stars)

IMDb listing


It's been several years that I've walked out of a movie.  I've done so twice -- Killer Joe [2012] and Sinister [2012].  Now surprisingly, with Legend of Tarzan [2016] (directed by David Yates, story and screenplay by Adam Cozad and Craig Brewer based, sort of, on the Tarzan stories [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] by Edgar Rice Burroughs [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] [IMDb], lead role played by Alexander Skarsgård)

What the...?  Why the...?  Well the chief villain (played by Christoph Waltz) strangled people using his Rosary.  When about 45 minutes into the movie, after already doing so several times, he explains to Jane (played by Margot Robbie) that he got said Rosary from a priest friend when he was nine, she retorts: "You must have been close..."

I stayed dazed in the theater for about 5-10 minutes more and then said, "You know what, I'm done..."

Zero stars.   Indeed, for the second week in a row, as I asked with Independence Day: Resurgence [2016](though for different reasons) yet even more so here, can one give a film negative stars?  Both awful and sad.


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Wednesday, June 29, 2016

The Shallows [2016]

MPAA (PG-13)  CNS/USCCB (A-III)  ChicagoTribune (2 Stars)  RogerEbert.com (3 Stars)  AVClub (C+)  Fr. Dennis (4 Stars)

IMDb listing
CNS/USCCB (K. Jensen) review
ChicagoTribune (M. Phillips) review
RogerEbert.com (M. Zoller-Seitz) review
AVClub (I. Vishnevetsky) review  


The Shallows [2016] (directed by Jaume Collet-Serra, screenplay by Anthony Jaswinski) is ... an EVER ENTERTAINING but ALSO   SURPRISINGLY INTELLIGENT -- "SUMMER SHARK" MOVIE ;-).  

I say EVER ENTERTAINING because I _jumped_ "early and often" during the course of the film that was often spectacularly shot in the "small indie" / "surfing documentary" idiom (honestly, the cinematography alone is worth going to see the film).

And I call this film _surprisingly intelligent_ because though made in said "small indie" rather than "Blockbuster" fashion, (hence for a fraction of the cost of Jaws [1975], the film that one would have thought was "the shark movie to end all shark movies," THE "shark movie" that arguably "jumped its own shark" ;-) ... the current film is arguably MORE INTELLIGENT than Jaws [1975].

Honestly, the current film could be thought of as Steven Spielberg's name-making blockbuster Jaws [1975] meeting a surprising / updated retelling of Ernest Hemingway's classic Old Man and the Sea [wikip] [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] [IMDb], featuring instead of "an old bearded man in a boat trying to reel-in a fish," a bikini clad medical student named Nancy (played honestly magnificently by Blake Lively) trying to take down a shark. 

Indeed the film could be thought of  as "the revenge of the stupid / arguably 'immoral' utterly anonymous woman who gets "munched" in the opening sequence of Jaws (while carelessly going 'skinny dipping', alone, in the sea at the end of some random beach-side party).  In contrast, Blake Lively's late-20 something surfing medical student Nancy is _anything_ but stupid / careless or immoral (indeed, let's just being by saying that SHE'S GIVEN A NAME...)  Yes, she finds herself alone 200 yards out from a secluded ("secret") beach somewhere in Mexico.  However, that's because she wants to take-in "one last wave" before calling it a day.  And she's at the beach to begin with, in good part, to grieve for her mother who had died recently of cancer. 

Blake Lively's Nancy is thus quite similar to Reese Witherspoon's character in Wild [2014] ... trying to "do what she loves" (in this case surf) to get herself out of her grief.  And that she would have gravitated toward a more secluded ("secret") beach to do this, given her circumstances would even make sense ... people generally don't like to grieve "in public" ...

Anyway, while she tries to take-in that "one last wave" on that fateful late afternoon ... she gets "knocked off her surf board" (and even bitten) ... by a (it turns out, one rather "driven" / "single minded") shark ... some 200 yards from shore, and much then ensues over the subsequent several days ...

Honestly, a quite excellent film and on several levels ;-)

Good / great job! ;-)


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Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Invention for Destruction (orig. Vynález Skázy previously released as The Fabulous World of Jules Verne) [1958/2015]

MPAA (UR would be PG)  Fr. Dennis (4+ Stars)

IMDb listing
CSFD listing*
FDb.cz listing*

aVoir-aLire (V. Dumez) review*
Moria Sci-Fi, Horror, Fantasy Review (R. Scheib) review

FilmServer.cz (V. Limberk) review*

Invention for Destruction (orig. Vynález Skázy previously released as The Fabulous World of Jules Verne) [1958 / 2015] [IMDB] [CSFD]*[FDb]* (directed and screenplay cowritten by Karel Zeman [wikip] [IMDb] [CSFD]*[FDb]*, along with František Hrubín [IMDB] [CSFD]* [FDb]* dialogues by Milan Vácha [IMDb] [FDb]* based on the story Facing the Flag (orig. Face au Drapeau) [GR] [WCat] [Amzn] by Jules Vernes [wikip] [GR] [IMDb] [CSFD]* is a TRULY REMARKABLE 1950s-era Czech combined animated / live-action gem that was _solemnly_ re-released digital restored form at the 2015 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival* and has subsequently been made available in said digital restored form on DVD (available on Amazon) for a reasonable price.  The film played recently at the Gene Siskel Film Center here in Chicago as part of the 2016 Czech That Film Tour organized annually by the Czech Ministry of Culture and the Czech Diplomatic Mission to the United States.  Indeed, presenting the film at the Friday 6/24 screening here in Chicago was Ludmila Zeman, the legengary director's daughter.

Often today we tend to think of Science Fiction, especially Sci-Fi film to be almost an exclusive province of the United States.  Films like the current one here are a reminder of the VARIETY of SciFi visions available once one gets past our borders.  And it is a _lovely_ trip.  Over the years, I've reviewed fair amount of foreign SciFi films including Upside Down [2013] from Argentina, Blue Desert (orig. Deserto Azul) [2013] from Brazil, Melancholia [2011] by Denmark's Lars von Trier, the Twilight-Zonish The Similars (orig. Los Parecidos) [2015] by Mexico's Isaac Ezban, and the Russian sci-fi films Calculator (orig. Вычислитель / Vychislitel) [2014]Hard to be a God (orig. Трудно быть Богом) [2013] and  Under Electric Clouds (orig. Под электрическими облаками / Pod elektricheskimi oblakami) [2015].  All these films expand our horizons of what's possible in the genre.

And the current film, black and white, done with a truly marvelous mix of 1950s-era animation and live action, and doing so in a manner that respects, spectacularly, the style of the illustrations in Jules Verne's novels, arguably ANTICIPATES the Ian Flemming inspired James Bond films of the 1960s.

What's the plot of this story?  A scientist, Professor Roch (played by Arnošt Navrátil [IMDb] [CSFD]*[FDb]*) is kidnapped by an evil pirate / capitalist / industrialist Artigas (played by Miloslav Holub [IMDb] [CSFD]* [FDb]*) taking him to a far off island with a giant volcano where he forces the scientist build him a weapon of unimaginable destruction, and it's up to the French Navy to come in to save the Day.  Okay, switch the French Navy to the British Agent 007 and move the story by 75 years or so and this becomes the plot to essentially Ian Flemming's Dr. No [book 1958 , film 1962]].

So yes, this becomes a fascinating film to look-up for _all kinds_ of historical, technical, thematic reasons.  And typical of the era, it's not even too long -- about 78 minutes ;-) -- SO it's not even that big of a risk to take ;-) ... and once it starts, I'm _positive_ that most film lovers will just watch this remarkable film with jaw dropped fascination.

Technically, it really is that good and then when one thinks that thematically this story / film could have ANTICIPATED some of the James Bond novels / films that followed, it just becomes all the more remarkable.

Thanks for making this part of this already quite remarkable Czech That Film Series!



* Foreign language webpages are most easily translated using Google's Chrome Browser. 

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Václav Havel - A Life of Freedom [2014] (Život podle Václava Havla)

MPAA (UR / PG-13)  Fr. Dennis (3 1/2 Stars)

IMDb listing
CSFD.cz listing*
FDB.cz listing*
DocumentaryAlliance listing

Blesk.cz (ČTK) review*
ČeskáTelevize,cz (M. Třešňáková) review*
iDnes (M. Spáčilová) review*
informuji.cz (T. Pavelcová) review*


Václav Havel - A Life for Freedom [2014] (Život podle Václava Havla) [2014] [IMDb] [CSFD]*[FDb]* [DA] (directed by Andrea Sedláčková [IMDb] [CSFD]* [FDB]* [DA]) is a solid CZECH / FRENCH made at least in part "for TV" documentary about the life of Czech playwright, former Czech dissident then Czechoslovak afterwards Czech President and certainly Czech national hero Václav Havel [wikip] [IMDb].  A natural (and naturally _crowd pleasing_) part of the 2016 Czech That Film Tour organized annually by the Czech Ministry of Culture and the Czech Diplomatic Mission to the United States, it played recently at the Gene Siskel Film Center here in Chicago.  Honestly, what would a "Czech Film Tour" without an entry like this?   It's natural, it's honest.  Václav Havel simply means _a lot_ to the Czechs as a sort of literary/dramatic Jackie Robinson [wikip] crossed with Martin Luther King, Jr. [wikip]

So what does this documentary add that hasn't been already said about Václav Havel?   A non-Czech viewer who may not know much about Vaclav Havel would find the documentary blessedly light and hence accessible.  The main points of Havel's life are covered: 

He was born in 1936 to a quite wealthy Czech bourgeois family that was already focused on the arts, and then on specifically the "pop" or "commercial-arts."  In the 1920s, the Havel family built a state-of-the-art cultural complex The Lucerna (Lantern) on Wenceslas Square in Prague (basically Prague's main square and along with Národní Třida its Champs Élysées).  To this day, The Lucerna (Lantern) has remained a frequented cultural center with shops / cafés, a stunning art deco style multiplex movie theater and a state-of-the-art jazz club (I've been to both the beautiful movie theater and to the jazz club more than a few times during my visits to Prague).  The family also built Prague's famous Berrandov Studios in the hills at the south-east end of the city, which have been graced by the likes of Tom Cruise and Matt Damon in the years after the fall of communism as both some of the Mission Impossible and Bourne Identity movies have been filmed there. 

With the coming into power of the Communists in post-WW II Czechoslovakia in their Putsch of 1948, all this was taken from the family and like those of his class, Vaclav was initially _sentenced_ to a life of _programmed_ obscurity.  Denied _as a matter of course_ (regardless of ability or grades) to entry into a University, he was initially put on a track to become a carpenter and when he proved fearful of heights was transferred into a program that would have made him a laboratory technician.  But an artist he was.  So even as a teenager in a vocational program to become said carpenter / later lab technician, he started writing poetry.  Later he got involved in an unofficial drama group.  In the early 1960s, he caught notice of Czech writers and was invited speak at one of their Congresses.  With little to lose, he came to be appreciated at said Congresses for his bravery in saying things that "the official writers" could not.  In the late 1960s (when Czechoslovakia was liberalizing) he had an opportunity to visit the United States (not unlike Chinese dissident Ai WeiWei in the years prior to Tienanmen), came to enjoy the Peace Marches / hippie lifestyle, and returned to Czechoslovakia just in time for the August 1968 Soviet invasion which crushed this all for 20 years in his home country.

In the mid-1970s, he became a prominent defender of what would have otherwise been simply an obscure Czechoslovakian punk-rock band that called itself "The Plastic People of the Universe" but which found itself persecuted by the Communist authorities simply because its music and its musings were so strange.  Out of his and other soon-to-become artist "dissidents" came the famous Charter 1977 where said artists / writers made a written stand in favor of Freedom, above all of simple Freedom of Expression.  That earned Havel various years of prison and house arrest.  Fascinating photos and home movie clips are presented in the current documentary.

Then in 1989, he the leader of the Charistas became the natural leader of the Opposition that brought down the Communist government in Czechoslovakia and was then subsequently elected leader of first post-Communist Czechoslovakia and later when the country broke-up into the Czech and Slovak Republics, was elected repeated the President of the Czech Republic.

Yet an artist (playwright) at heart, his presidency was ever fascinating.  Upon being elected Czechoslovakia's first post-Communist (by the still Communist legislature) after giving the shortest inaugural speech in 40 years (1 1/2 minutes ;-), he simply crossed from the Presidential Palace at Prague's Castle into its main square to go to Prague's St. Vitus Cathedral, where he asked for and received a blessing from Prague's Cardinal Tomášek (Havel was not Catholic, but it seemed to him the right thing to do).   Footage of the Cardinal's blessing is shown in the documentary. 

Then his presidential court was always filled with interesting people.  Among the first dignitaries invited by Havel to Prague in those heady times after the fall of Communism were: (1) The Pope John Paul II, (2) The Dalai Lama and (3) Frank Zappa ;-).  Footage of visits to Havel's residence at Prague's Castle by the Dalai Lama and (separately) the Rolling Stones ;-) was shown in the documentary as well.

The film ended with footage from Vaclav Havel's only stab at making a film (remember he was born into a family that had built and owned Prague's Berrandov Studios), the film leaving Leaving (orig. Odchazeni) [2011] which he made/directed in the last years of his life after leaving the Presidency and in which he has his second wife, actress Dagmar "Dásha" Veškrnová-Havlová ÍMDb] [CSFD]
playing a lead role).  I had seen (and reviewed) the film when it played at the 2012 version of this Czech Film Tour ;-), and it was typical of Havel's and really post-WWII / Cold War era Central European playwriting ;-).  

Vaclav Havel was truly a remarkable man -- yes, an intellectual/dissident, later a President, but also honestly "a fun guy" (and yes, something of a womanizer as well ... which does sort of go hand-in-hand with with "being a fun guy" ... ;-)

Anyway, non-Czechs wanting to know something about Vaclav Havel would probably like this film because it is, in fact, quite light.  It dutifully presents the above biography of the man, but does so lightly and characteristically with some humor.

And many of the Czech critics (listed above) gave the documentary relatively high marks for "blessedly not including a lot of talking heads" ;-).  Again, the film is composed almost entirely of archival footage and photos, with voice-over (subtitled into English) by the director herself.  The advantage of this format (to a Czech audience) was obvious -- to many Czechs, Václav Havel [wikip] [IMDb] is almost like a family member.  Hence there really was no need (for the Czechs anyway) to have "a bunch of talking heads" expounding on his importance (or failings, etc).  We already know him / he's already "family" ;-),  For us, the film's like going through a family album ;-).

Anyway, great job! ;-)


* Reasonably good (sense) translations of non-English webpages can be found by viewing them through Google's Chrome browser. 

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