july rain
pirosmani
sayat nova / the color of pomegranates
photo courtesy kino international
goodbye boys, goodbye
debut
|
|
THE FIRST TEACHER / PERVYI UCHITEL'
Andrei Konchalovsky, Kirghizfilm-Mosfilm, 1965; 102m
Based, like Larisa Shepitko’s HEAT, on a story by Chingiz Aitmatov,
Konchalovsky’s directing debut similarly recasts frontier drama for
Soviet Asia – which once again proves a fertile soil for such
transplants (by the time the smash action-comedy White Sun of the Desert
came out in 1970, Soviet critics have embraced "the Eastern" as a
legitimate genre term). The story takes place in 1923 and begins with a
Communist teacher’s attempts to set up a school in a Kirghiz village,
soon enough acquiring a forbidden-love subplot. THE FIRST TEACHER has
brought Kirghiz actress Natalya Arinbasarova the Volpi Cup for Best
Actress at the Venice Film Festival, and Konchalovsky a Golden Lion nomination.
Tue Nov 21: 1 Thurs Nov 23: 8
JULY RAIN / IUL'SKII DOZHD'
Marlen Khutsiev, Mosfilm, 1966; 103m
A romantic New Wave affair in which a love story is flanked by
documentary street sequences, Khutsiev’s film is an engaging portrait of
mid-1960s Moscow youth. Popular singer-songwriter ("bard") Yuri Vizbor,
in a bold casting decision, plays one of the main parts; his sad and
fanciful folk songs, as well as those by the even more celebrated bard
Bulat Okudjava, provide the film’s soundtrack. Aleksandr Mitta, another
principal, is better known as the director of the Soviet Union’s only
all-out disaster movie, The Crew.
Tue Nov 21: 3 Wed Nov 22: 2:45 & 6:45
PIROSMANI
Georgy Shagelaya, Gruziafilm, 1968; 86m
The life of Pirosmani, a Georgian primitivist folk painter, is explored
in dreamlike detail by his compatriot Georgy Shagelaya. The film’s
curious sepia color scheme pays a subtle tribute to Pirosmani’s own
artwork, which ranges from folk whimsy to unfettered drama.
Wed Nov 22: 1, 5 & 9
SAYAT NOVA / THE COLOR OF POMEGRANATES
Sergei Paradjanov, Armenfilm, 1969; 75m
Paradjanov’s second feature takes even more creative chances than his
debut, SHADOWS OF FORGOTTEN ANCESTORS. The film is a surrealist tribute
to the history of the Armenian art. The Color of Pomegranates, its
alternate title, sums up the sensuousness that permeates the picture;
it’s "subversive solely in its beauty," wrote A. Ter Minassian in 1978
in Jeune Cinema. Paradjanov was thrown in jail on trumped-up sodomy
charges soon after the film’s completion.
Thurs Nov 23: 3:45 & 10 Thurs Nov 30: 5
GOODBYE, BOYS / DO SVIDANYA, MAL'CHIKI
Mikhail Kalik, Moldovafilm, 1964; 97m
Kalik’s adaptation of Boris Balter’s novel, then a bestseller, is a
wistful evocation of lazy teenage summer days cut short by the
encroaching military draft. GOODBYE, BOYS was as noted for its sensual
undercurrents as it was revered for the lyrical cinematography: in its
definitive shot, scattered raindrops hit a beach, wet sand hardening
into tiny medallions. Thirty years later, Kalik was to make And The Wind
Returns – an intriguing postmodernist pastiche of this film and his own
biography that mixes visual self-quotes, bits of the actual GOODBYE, BOYS footage and studio-lot recreations (where he’s played by an actor).
Thurs Nov 23: 6 Sat Nov 25: 4 Sun Nov 26: 4:15 Tue Nov 28: 3
DEBUT / NACHALO
Gleb Panfilov, Lenfilm, 1970; 91m
Inna Churikova virtually reprises her NO FORD IN THE FIRE part – a
plain, naïve and excitable girl handed a Big Chance – but in a
contemporary setting and in a slightly more light-hearted project. This
time, her heroine is a factory worker who gets to play Joan of Arc (in
the movies, no less) with only a community-theater part of Baba Yaga to
her previous credit. The last touch is an industry goof on Churikova’s
earliest parts; the director/husband Gleb Panfilov’s self-awareness is
quite in evidence here, from the way in which the character’s ascent is
shaped to mirror the actress’s, to the film’s set of a film set. In
1971, DEBUT won the Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival.
Sun Nov 26: 6:15 Tue Nov 28: 1 Wed Nov 29: 3
NO FORD IN THE FIRE / V OGNE BRODA NET
Gleb Panfilov, Lenfilm, 1967; 95m
An episodic melodrama set in the violent wake of the October Revolution,
about a country girl who briefly manages to express herself through
direct and furious artwork. The drawings themselves, quite
Pirosmani-like, serve as chapter dividers. Apart from Alexei
Solonitsyn’s role as a petulant Commissar (he’d had his own chance to
paint in Tarkovsky’s Andrei Rublev), NO FORD IN THE FIRE contains a
truly star-making turn by Inna Churikova. Cast for her "plain" looks,
Churikova is in fact astoundingly beautiful – in a way that the cinema
only began to embrace much later. Her wildly inventive, frequently comic
and subtly eroticized acting amounts to one of the greatest performances
in all of Russian film.
Fri Nov 10: 5 Sun Nov 26: 8:15 Thurs Nov 30: 1 & 9:15
TRIAL ON THE ROAD / PROVERKA NA DOROGAH
Alexei German, 1971; 97m
This uncompromising war movie was banned for 15 years. Finding himself a
POW during WWII, an apparently German soldier (Vladimir Zamansky) tries
to convince his Russian captors that he’s actually one of them, a
sergeant in the Russian army forced by the Nazis to serve in the enemy
ranks. After a sympathetic officer (Fyodor Odinokov) prevents his being
shot, Lazarev proves himself a hero on the battlefield — despite the
constant attempts of Major Petushkov (Anatoly Solonitskin) to undercut
his character. Filmed in gritty black and white, TRIAL stands as an
especially auspicious directorial debut.
Wed Nov 29: 1 Thurs Nov 30: 3 & 7:15
|