PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,4/10
2,9 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaZhenia, a Russian-speaking immigrant from Ukraine, works as a masseur in Poland and becomes a guru-like figure in a wealthy gated community of his clients.Zhenia, a Russian-speaking immigrant from Ukraine, works as a masseur in Poland and becomes a guru-like figure in a wealthy gated community of his clients.Zhenia, a Russian-speaking immigrant from Ukraine, works as a masseur in Poland and becomes a guru-like figure in a wealthy gated community of his clients.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 3 premios y 23 nominaciones en total
Casper Richard Petersen
- Son of Wiki
- (as Casper Petersen)
Reseñas destacadas
I saw this film in my local cinema during a limited UK theatrical release, and immediately ordered a copy of the Polish import DVD so that I could see it again.
It is a very hypnotic piece of work in which the lead character, a travelling massage therapist called Zhenia (Utgoff), visits the houses of residents in a reasonably well-to-do, gated community - all seemingly dysfunctional people living detatched lives in near-identical detached houses.
Zhenia quietly dispenses therapy and a listening ear, along with occasional hypnosis to supplement the treatment. While his clients experience hypnotic dreams, he enjoys the stillness in their homes and tries to understand what makes them all tick, whilst just about managing to avoid getting too emotionally involved. He too searces his own memories, especially of his mother, who died as a result of radiation exposure in his home town of Pripyat due to the nearby Chernobyl disaster. He remembers the clouds of radioactive debris, which his childhood memories render in his dreams like snow.
But something isn't right, and in the background Zhenia is being stalked by officials, who are aware that his work permit is forged - something we see him achieve in the opening scenes of the film. He finally brings a suitably mystical conclusion to his story with the help of a favour he does for one of his former clients.
Utgoff gives a hypnotic performance, bringing an other-worldly feel to the character, and the supporting cast all create fascinating, rounded characters that inhabit the strange community he works in. The cinematography is excellent, with a chilly, desaturated palette that enhances the unsettling atmosphere of the narrative.
The film has mostly Polish and Russian dialogue, with very clear, subtitles in English in both the UK theatrical release and on the Polish issue DVD.
This is one for film lovers who (like me) enjoy a story that takes its time in the telling, and it will leave you pinching yourself at the end to check that you've not been dreaming.
It is a very hypnotic piece of work in which the lead character, a travelling massage therapist called Zhenia (Utgoff), visits the houses of residents in a reasonably well-to-do, gated community - all seemingly dysfunctional people living detatched lives in near-identical detached houses.
Zhenia quietly dispenses therapy and a listening ear, along with occasional hypnosis to supplement the treatment. While his clients experience hypnotic dreams, he enjoys the stillness in their homes and tries to understand what makes them all tick, whilst just about managing to avoid getting too emotionally involved. He too searces his own memories, especially of his mother, who died as a result of radiation exposure in his home town of Pripyat due to the nearby Chernobyl disaster. He remembers the clouds of radioactive debris, which his childhood memories render in his dreams like snow.
But something isn't right, and in the background Zhenia is being stalked by officials, who are aware that his work permit is forged - something we see him achieve in the opening scenes of the film. He finally brings a suitably mystical conclusion to his story with the help of a favour he does for one of his former clients.
Utgoff gives a hypnotic performance, bringing an other-worldly feel to the character, and the supporting cast all create fascinating, rounded characters that inhabit the strange community he works in. The cinematography is excellent, with a chilly, desaturated palette that enhances the unsettling atmosphere of the narrative.
The film has mostly Polish and Russian dialogue, with very clear, subtitles in English in both the UK theatrical release and on the Polish issue DVD.
This is one for film lovers who (like me) enjoy a story that takes its time in the telling, and it will leave you pinching yourself at the end to check that you've not been dreaming.
Carrying a massage table and wandering out of mysterious woods, our hero, Zhenia, enters a Polish government building, meets an official in a wood-panelled office, renders him unconscious with a massage/hypnosis and signs his own residence permit. The official has a record player in the office and, as Zhenia leaves, the needle drops of its own accord and music starts.
We are surely in the presence of some magical being, here to do great and/or terrible things, right? Well, not really. All he does is become the house masseur for a gated community of McMansions with unusually tasteful interiors. He seems to be good at his job, even very good, but the only time he does actual magic is back at his drab, tower-block bedsit, and all it is is moving a glass across the table with his mind.
The trick is surely a reference to Tarkovsky's Stalker, in which the stalker's child does the same, and perhaps the point is that Chernobyl, where Zhenia grew up, is an awful real-life version of that earlier film's Zone - an area that looks like ordinary countryside, but is under some kind of mysterious, likely sinister enchantment.
It's all very intriguing, the cast of characters is comically and vividly drawn, both in terms of writing and acting, and visually it's a masterclass, every frame an absolute beaut.
But what's it all for? There's a touch, as another reviewer notes, of Pasolini's Teorema, and of the classic old short story The Distributor. But where those are about the interloper in a community determinedly bringing ruin, Zhenia, by comparison, and the film's writers, seem to lack any clear sense of purpose.
The only point seems to be a letdown: Zhenia, unable to save his mother, who appears to have died of cancer after Chernobyl, realises - particularly when one of his clients also dies of cancer - that he's not going to be able to save anyone here either. But it's not like he tried all that hard and why, anyway, did he make his focus this little enclave of privilege in Poland of all places? Sorry, but if the aim is to say something about the horror and tragedy of an event like Chernobyl, this in no way cuts it.
Maybe the point is more to say that, in the face of the world's traumas, and of serious illnesses like cancer, our modern social-media-driven culture of wellness treatments and candy-coated minimalist interiors is, well, a tad pathetic, precious and, at worst, prone to magical thinking. And, if so, well, OK, but the argument seems obvious to the point of being trite, and the consequences of the wrongheadedness don't hit home hard enough to seem to matter much.
I'm thinking it wasn't all completely thought through, and the result is, for all the brilliant detail, this thing drags terribly as it goes on.
You realise seeing stuff like this the greatness of directors like Kubrick, Lynch, Tarkovsky and Fellini, able to do the stunning visuals, but also marry them with a brilliant story. Elsewhere in the lesser reaches of the arthouse universe, the more common reality is as here: a ton of promise, but ultimate disappointment.
We are surely in the presence of some magical being, here to do great and/or terrible things, right? Well, not really. All he does is become the house masseur for a gated community of McMansions with unusually tasteful interiors. He seems to be good at his job, even very good, but the only time he does actual magic is back at his drab, tower-block bedsit, and all it is is moving a glass across the table with his mind.
The trick is surely a reference to Tarkovsky's Stalker, in which the stalker's child does the same, and perhaps the point is that Chernobyl, where Zhenia grew up, is an awful real-life version of that earlier film's Zone - an area that looks like ordinary countryside, but is under some kind of mysterious, likely sinister enchantment.
It's all very intriguing, the cast of characters is comically and vividly drawn, both in terms of writing and acting, and visually it's a masterclass, every frame an absolute beaut.
But what's it all for? There's a touch, as another reviewer notes, of Pasolini's Teorema, and of the classic old short story The Distributor. But where those are about the interloper in a community determinedly bringing ruin, Zhenia, by comparison, and the film's writers, seem to lack any clear sense of purpose.
The only point seems to be a letdown: Zhenia, unable to save his mother, who appears to have died of cancer after Chernobyl, realises - particularly when one of his clients also dies of cancer - that he's not going to be able to save anyone here either. But it's not like he tried all that hard and why, anyway, did he make his focus this little enclave of privilege in Poland of all places? Sorry, but if the aim is to say something about the horror and tragedy of an event like Chernobyl, this in no way cuts it.
Maybe the point is more to say that, in the face of the world's traumas, and of serious illnesses like cancer, our modern social-media-driven culture of wellness treatments and candy-coated minimalist interiors is, well, a tad pathetic, precious and, at worst, prone to magical thinking. And, if so, well, OK, but the argument seems obvious to the point of being trite, and the consequences of the wrongheadedness don't hit home hard enough to seem to matter much.
I'm thinking it wasn't all completely thought through, and the result is, for all the brilliant detail, this thing drags terribly as it goes on.
You realise seeing stuff like this the greatness of directors like Kubrick, Lynch, Tarkovsky and Fellini, able to do the stunning visuals, but also marry them with a brilliant story. Elsewhere in the lesser reaches of the arthouse universe, the more common reality is as here: a ton of promise, but ultimate disappointment.
A fascinating collection of quirky people, intriguing stories, social commentary and a mystery surrounding the masseur and spiritual healer Zenia (Alec Utgoff) who seems to have some special powers after surviving the Chernobyl disaster as a child. The central mystery keeps you intrigued, while the film explores the stories of the wealthy fenced-off neighbourhood (a very good Polish cast). I really liked the fairy-tale feeling of the film and the masterfully done dream-like hypnosis scenes (which looked amazing). The film doesn't feel larger than the sum of it parts though - the individual various elements work very well but in the end you don't necessarily get a satisfying pay-off to it all, it just drifts off like a dream. A worth effort from the Polish cinema.
Poland's submission to the 93 Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film focuses on a Ukrainian masseur working in an affluent area who gains a cult following. Malgorzata Szumowska's "Sniegu juz nigdy nie bedzie" ("Never Gonna Snow Again" in English) addresses the issues of class, the status of guest workers, and the environment (with people concerned that global warming will end frozen precipitation). Usually this is the sort of movie that I would expect to come from the US, Canada or western Europe - I understand that a number of Poles work in the UK - but it appears that even Poland brings in foreigners to do the work that the locals don't want to do; indeed, they mention Pakistanis working in the country.
I don't know that I would call it a great movie, but still worth seeing. A mystifying look at class issues in the former Eastern Bloc, and another movie calling attention to the biggest threat that civilization has ever faced.
I don't know that I would call it a great movie, but still worth seeing. A mystifying look at class issues in the former Eastern Bloc, and another movie calling attention to the biggest threat that civilization has ever faced.
There is a certain sense of strangeness throughout the film, a certain touch of fantasy that reminds us especially of Jonathan Glazer. Not many things are explained about the main character, and especially in the final section the magical elements end up absorbing the traditional narrative, but the film as a whole has a touch of fantastic cinema, of universality in its proposal, which makes it the most affordable than Malgorzata Szumowska has made to date.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesOfficial submission of Poland for the 'Best International Feature Film' category of the 93rd Academy Awards in 2021.
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- How long is Never Gonna Snow Again?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Never Gonna Snow Again
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Walendów, Mazowieckie, Polonia(Ventana housing estate)
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 4.000.000 € (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 15.901 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 2828 US$
- 1 ago 2021
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 167.977 US$
- Duración1 hora 56 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39:1
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