film

A Summer Film

July 20, 2011

And by “Summer Film” I don’t mean a blockbuster with special-effects, but a languorous film about summer, filled with that particular blend of ennui, humor, carefully written dialog and profound insight into human nature that was typical of Anton Pavlovich Chekhov.

This week, the 2009 film The Duel, directed by Dover Koshashvili, final migrated to the top of my Netflix list. Admittedly, I had expected another lackluster adaptation of Russian literature. Happily, this expectation was upset.

The cinematography and on location filming in Croatia is brilliant – there is a lightness and airiness to every scene that evokes June and the sea. The casting selections of the virtually unknown British actors were inspired (though the director would have been well to spend a bit on a dialog coach to teach them how to say “Nadezhda Fyodorovna” properly – it was like hearing Hilary Clinton trying to pronounce “Medvedev”), and the writing and staging is simply beautiful. While the visuals did seem a bit immaculate versus what one envisions of 19th century life in the Caucasus, this did help keep the focus on the actors, where it should be with Chekhov.

Andrew Scott is perfect as Laevsky, the slovenly layabout who shacks up with another man’s wife, but who doesn’t want to commit to her after he finds out her husband has died (something he learns before she does and withholds from her). And Fiona Gascott (Nadya, Laevsky’s married mistress) manages to be both pitiful and alluring all at once, as rudderless and lacking in moral compass as Laevsky, yet completely sympathetic. The principled zoologist Von Koren, played by Tobias Menzies, could easily have come across as a two-dimensional comic book character, but Menzies shows perfect restraint and we are never sure whether to admire him or condemn him as a self-satisfied prig. And the secondary characters, such as the police chief, the priest and the debutante are memorably drawn (the episode where Laevsky spies a beautiful woman with a lapdog walking by is a nice touch). The film builds nicely to the climactic duel between Laevsky and Von Koren, which even if you know the surprising outcome is wonderfully tense.

In short, there is all the Chekhovian uncertainty here, the complexity of personality and moral equivocation that makes his works such vivid reflections of real life. And it is wrapped in a beautiful cinematic package that makes you long for summer, even in July.

There seem to be few instances when Russian literature has been done justice by a screen adaptation, This is certainly one of them.

Review: My Perestroika

March 2, 2011

My Perestroika by Robin Hessman (Red Square Productions) Robin Hessman’s documentary film offers a remarkably intimate look into the lives of five intelligent, average Russians, considering the changes they have lived through over the past 20 years, and how each has all adapted. Her subjects are members of the last generation to grow up under [...]

Read the full article →

Review: Russian Lessons

January 9, 2011

Russian Lessons By Olga Konskaya & Andrei Nekrasov When it comes to the tortured relations between Russia and Georgia – an undeclared war that has killed thousands since the breakup of the USSR – the truth did not even stick around to be the first casualty. One year after the 2008 war in South Ossetia, [...]

Read the full article →

Review Mania!

October 24, 2010

We always get plenty more books to review in Russian Life than we have space for. This fall the flood was so great that I was overcome by publisher guilt, knowing what it takes to produce and flog a book. So, in a fit of review mania, I hunkered down for a week and reviewed [...]

Read the full article →

Notable New Film: The Concert

July 15, 2010

A new movie opens July 30 starring Mélanie Laurent and Alexei Guskov and it sounds like a fun summer diversion for Russophiles. We’re waiting for our review copy to deliver a judgement, but here is a synopsis from the production company’s website, with an embed of the trailer below: Andreï Filipov was a prodigy—the celebrated conductor [...]

Read the full article →

Must See Films… Must Read Fiction…

May 5, 2009

In our 100th issue, we have a long feature, “100 Things Everyone Should Know About Russia,” with loads of factoids, notes, lists and essays. We figured our list of the “must read” fiction and “must see” movies would be a bit contentious (and certainly foreshortened). So we are posting the lists here for reader comment [...]

Read the full article →

Two Films

September 20, 2007

So last night I watched two films. The first was The Color of Pomegranates, by director Sergei Paradjanov. I picked it up from Netflix, intrigued by the blurb: Paradjanov’s acclaimed poetic masterpiece was banned by Soviet censors who feared it was a nationalist parable.The story depicts the life and spiritual odyssey of the medieval Armenian [...]

Read the full article →