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stafbettridge
Writer of one produced screenplay.
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Bolshoy (2017)
A Girls Epic Struggle to be the Best.
I was surprised at how much I loved this film. I didn't know what to expect, but then, that's often one great joy of Russian film. A young Russian girl from a depressed family in a backwater mining town is spared reform school after an aging drunkard ex-ballet-star from the Bolshoi Theatre recognises her rare natural talent purely by chance. He swallows the shame of his own personal failure to pitch her to a training school in Moscow with the hope that after eight years she'll be accepted to the Bolshoi Ballet as a soloist. That's the first five minutes; then the real struggle begins. Julia's journey to stardom is plagued by pain, poverty, loveless isolation, loneliness, betrayal, backstabbing and at times incredible loyalty and sacrifice. To call her story epic would be an understatement. Following the initial set up the story settles into a rhythm of flashback sequences inter cutting fragments of Julia's early hardships with challenges in the present. To tell the story chronologically would be tedious and disconnected; she is nearly ten years older at the end of the film than in the beginning. By establishing the story in the past, moving to the present and then stitching in flashback sequences the hardships of her past are given greater bearing on the challenges facing her in the present. From the opening frames the cinematography is just stunning; the tracking is superb; there is so much elegant movement in this film; it's a dance with the camera. The use of focus-shifts, of depth-of-field to suggest movement is beautiful; small moments speak volumes. The Mise en scene is stunning; whether in the boondocks, on the rooftops, in the snow, or at the dancers barre. One great star of this is Bolshoi Theatre itself with it's majestic scale and gilded presence; Todorovsky had it for one week to complete all interior and dance shots. Remember, this includes two shooting casts; both young Julia and older Julia, with all her contemporary peers. The diegetic sound is superb; the music slips from contemporary score to Tchaikovsky seamlessly. The casting is great; Julia's trainer at the academy is a near forgotten aging star herself, an exceptional performance by Alisa Freyndlikh. The young Julia is breathtaking; and when older so is her chief competitor; Margarita Simonova gives a superb performance too as the mature Julia. Philosophically: Following on from the striking modernism of the post-revolutionary period Soviet film quickly concerned itself with 'Realism' whereby the role of film was to give a true indication of what life is really like. Fabulous examples are Kalatazov "The Cranes Are Flying", Shepitko "The Ascent", Chukrai "Ballad of a Soldier", and even Tarkovsky's "Ivan's Childhood". All are exceptionally moving, fleshing out the tragic lives of ordinary people, but this realism is not unique to Soviet film culture. It manifests deeply in Russian art and culture through a millennia, and continues unabated in recent films such as Konchalovsky's "The Postman's White Nights", Zvyagintsev's "Loveless", Melnik's epic "Territoriya" and as it happens we see it in Todorovsky's "The Bolshoi" too. Julia's story is realist; it is imbued with grace, jealousy, sadness and compassion; even after 132 minutes the end is only a beginning; her struggle will go on. But in that last moment of film we feel great emotion too. There are moments when the film falters. At the three quarter mark something goes amiss; whether it was the shooting schedule, lost shots, illness, or that Todarovsky simply dropped the ball it's impossible to say. But after a few minutes the film recovers; equilibrium is restored. Only one choice really grated with me and that was the choice, toward the conclusion, for the visiting foreign 'star' performer Antoin to speak his lines in what I can only call a very troubling English; it would have been a better and more natural choice to have used French. At a later moment, when they do use French, it is seamless and fitting. A lovely, brilliant film; the end is simply one moment in a long struggle; a realist film, at once both sad and joyful. Very Russian.
Territoriya (2015)
An Epic Film sitting somewhere between 'Dersu Uzala' and 'War and Peace'
This is a truly epic film both in duration, the depth of it's characters and the scale of it's setting. Russian films are often 'Love' stories dealing with different aspects of Eros, Philios, and Agape; so this is an Epic Love Story, about Geologists surveying Siberia (the Territory) in the Soviet 60's. Just as in 'War and Peace' the lives of many people are followed through tragedy and triumph, and all of these individuals are fleshed out in exquisite detail. We see their flaws and strengths tested under the harshest of conditions, and in a spectacular terrain. There is a 'Dersu Uzala' quality to the film; a native hunter, the force of nature, bonding, testing, love, physical tests, the triumph and failures - it's raw and beautiful.
The Cinematography, apart from a couple of rugged drone shots is just breathtaking, especially on a big screen. Casting, Acting, Locations, Sound, Editing are all superb. What the Director/Writer has achieved with the Script is vast in it's scope, hence I describe the film as an 'Epic' for good reason. The film falters only for moments; once it gets it's rhythm up it becomes totally mesmerizing and as for the ending - well, I loved the ending - it's really well written. This is no Hollywood 'Heroes Journey' film - nobody is a 'Handsome Hero' - all are hard, obsessive, damaged, damned, fragile, beautiful manifestations of humanity. And that's what this film has in spades: Humanity. I give it Nine Stars - I rate it higher than 'Dersu Uzala' which is a film that I love dearly. At two and a half hours you'll need patience and a big screen but it won't disappoint. Extremely Russian. Extremely Poetic and philosophical. A Visual feast. Epic. October 2015.