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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| ROADS TO KOKTEBEL (KOKTEBEL) (director/writer: Boris Khlebnikov/Aleksei Popogrebsky; cinematographer: Shandor Berkeshi; editor: Ivan Lebedev; music: Lutgardo Labad; cast: Gleb Puskepalis (The Son), Igor Csernyevics (The Father), Evgenii Sytyi (Railway yard worker), Vera Sandrykina (Tanya), Vladimir Kucherenko (Mikhail), Agrippina Steklova (Xenia), Aleksandr Ilyin (Mischa, Truck driver); Runtime: 105; MPAA Rating: NR; Film Movement; 2003-Russia-in Russian with English subtitles) |
| "A
road movie that
plays out
as a restrained human drama, that's mysterious
and keenly observant."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz A road movie that plays out as a restrained human drama, that's mysterious and keenly observant. It explores a fragile father-son relationship, and is filled with long silences, long shots of the bleak Russian landscape and stunning imagery. It's the auspicious feature film debut of the Russian writing/directing team of Boris Khlebnikov and Alexei Popogrebsky. One can compare it favorably to Alexander Sokurov’s exploration of the same father-son bonding theme in his more lyrical Father and Son. The film won the Moscow International Film Festival. A widowed father (Igor Csernyevics) in his late thirties leaves his engineering job and his dark past, and sets off on a country road from Moscow with his 11-year-old son (Gleb Puskepalis), with both wearing backpacks, for his sister's home in Koktebel (its Russian name Planerskoye translates to mean the unusual air currents in the area that deem it ideal for air gliding), a resort town some 200 miles away by the Black Sea in Crimea. It's never explained why someone in Russia would leave such a good job for an uncertain future, but seemingly it's to piece together the father's broken life and for the withdrawn but curious son to come to understand his down-and-out college educated father better. They travel with little money and with no means of transportation. After removed from a freight train by a railroad yard worker but treated humanely, they walk on foot and secure a job repairing a roof on a country cottage for an old retired army officer named Mikhail (Vladimir Kucherenko) with a nasty disposition. After cajoled into a night of drinking with the embittered old Stalinist, the alcoholic father's return to drinking has bad results. The crazed drunken ex-officer won't pay for the roofing job and instead accuses him of stealing his money. It results in the father taking a rifle shot in the shoulder. The pair of unfortunates meet up with a lonely woman doctor Xenia (Agrippina Steklova), who treats the wound and begins a romance with her patient. The kid is upset by this romance and goes on his own to his aunt's house. He gets a ride with a truck driver, who looks like a monster but has a kind heart. Its main problem, at least for me, is that after we
get to
where
we are going, to the mythical sea, we still are left
in the dark about
what it all means except for the obvious: there's hope
in starting over
in new surroundings. Yet there's a raw power to
connecting the harsh
landscape
to the tough lives of the struggling Russian people,
undergoing another
regime change from old guard Communism, as the film
upon closer
examination
might be deeper, more political and even more
mysterious than it first
seems. Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |