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Slavic/Central/Eastern European Film SeriesAll films have English subtitles. All screenings are free of charge and will take place at FLG 225 at 7.15 p.m. If you have any questions, please contact Dr. Galina Rylkova (grylkova@ufl.edu), the organizer of the Film Series. Cukoo [Kukushka]
“Russian writer/director Alexander Rogozhkin set his idiosyncratic anti-war fable in Scandinavia in 1944, just days before Finland, Germany’s ally during the Second World War, surrenders to the Allies. Three people – a wounded Soviet military officer, a pacifist Finnish soldier and a widowed Laplander peasant – are marooned together on the woman’s reindeer farm. The catch: no one speaks or understands the other’s language, a barrier that has both comic and near-tragic ramifications. The Soviet captain repeatedly tries to kill the peace-loving Finn in the mistaken belief that he is German. Anni, who has been without a man since her husband’s death four years ago, can’t believe she suddenly has two men at her disposal. All three actors are wonderful.”-- Jean Oppenheimer. Pretty Village, Pretty Flame
“The story takes place during the first winter of the Bosnian war, when a group of Serb army fighters are trapped by Bosnian soldiers in a deserted railway tunnel; between outbreaks of fighting, the soldiers inside and outside the tunnel provoke each other by exchanging national insults. The key feature of the narrative, however, is that this stand-off between the two sides involved in the conflict, which lasts for ten days, is presented entirely from the perspective of those inside the tunnel, the Serb fighters […] until the very final denouement.” -- Slavoi Zizek, “Welcome to the Desert of the Real” (2002). Adam's Rib
Four women spanning three generations live in a shoe-box apartment in Moscow. The bedridden grandmother keeps a tireless eye on her daughter Nina, who must in turn look after her own two daughters, Lida and Nastia (both conceived from different fathers). Adam’s Rib is a delight, an insightful film that portrays daily life of Russian women. Kolya
Winner of the 1997 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, this charming Czech drama uses the backdrop of the Russian military occupation in Prague for its funny, sad, and ultimately delightful story of a 55-year-old man's friendship with a 5-year-old boy. It doesn't exactly start out as friendship: Louka is a cellist who lost his symphony job after writing a sarcastic remark on an official form, and although he's struggling financially he still enjoys the company of several young women who find him irresistibly sexy. The last thing he needs is a surrogate child, but that's what he gets when young Kolya is abandoned by his mother, a Russian woman Louka had agreed to marry so she could avoid being sent back to Russia. The mother runs off to her boyfriend in Germany, leaving Louka with a 5-year-old kid who only speaks Russian! --Jeff Shannon The Thief
If you were a widow with a young boy in 1952 Russia, you might take up with a handsome army captain you met on a train. You both would need protection from this post-war world in disarray. And what more solid figure than this officer whose chest proudly displays a tattoo of Stalin? Only the officer is a charismatic but often cruel and despotic thief in disguise named Tolyan (Vladimir Mashkov). And the mother Katia (Ekaterina Rednikova), in love despite herself, and the 6-year-old Sanya (Misha Philipchuk), in wide-eyed adoration and fear, are stuck with a nomadic life that demands they relocate whenever their thief-protector's safety becomes chancy. This is the story as you experience it, told in voiceover years later by the boy, a romantic tale of challenged innocence as revisited by experience. And each frame, hazy and tinted with the erosion of memory, seems permeated with the distance between these two Sanyas. The Thief was a 1998 Academy Award nominee for Best Foreign Language film. --Jim Gay The Double Life of Veronique
I imagine this film is subtly autobiographical because the director
is Polish and yet his films are all made in French. So the two Veroniques
could quite possibly be the twin creative personas or muses of Kieslowski
himself. The one Veronique is Polish and dies singing, the other lives
on in France but with a sense of having missed the one important connection
in her life. So the film feels like an allegory of lives or destinies
unfulfilled and the most obvious destiny that was cut short was Poland's
but this film does not make speeches, it whispers. Father
Ever since the death of his father, young Tako has filled the paternal void with a series of fantasies in which his father is envisioned as a partisan freedom fighter, a cultured world traveler and a decorated hero. When he reaches manhood, Tako struggles to live up to the heroic image he crafted, even as he discovers a world in which valor has little place. But he cannot relinquish the comforting daydreams, and as the fantasies he harbors become more elaborate, the mythic father becomes a heroic protector of the Hungarian Jews during the Nazi occupation. By depicting Tako in the wake of World War II and on the brink of revolution in the 1950s, acclaimed filmmaker Istvan Szabo mirrors the confusion of childhood with the turmoil of political upheaval. The result is a simple ode to the human spirit, and a memorable tribute to those determined to survive in the face of adversity. Peculiarities of the Russian Hunting
Considered by many the best Russian comedy after perestroika. A group of friends load up with guns, ammunition, vodka and take off for the country side. A bear becomes an alcoholic, a cow goes for a ride in a jet, is shot and then revived; and the vodka is exhausted. Not much hunting takes place, the trip is a riot from start to finish, but, surprisingly, not a great contrast to the stylish demeanor of hunters of the Czarist era. – Tony Naldrett
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