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Festivals and Awards 2000
The year is difficult to characterize, and no single trend seems to
emerge. Concerns about freedom in the face of tyranny extend to the
West, with the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia ("Sky Hook," "The
Punishment"). Questions about the direction of the future lead once
again to explorations of the past and all its fictions ("Ordinary
Bolshevism," "A Trial In Prague"), and its tentacles in the
fictional present ("Brother 2"). But the ability of poets to
make living art in the face of dictatorship ("Wojaczek,"
"Abschied") and everyday life ("Otesánek") remains, as
always, the driving force of filmmaking.
Berlin and Los Angeles
The Freedom Film Festival takes place in Los Angeles at the time of the
American Film Market, and the Berlin Freedom Film Showcase takes place
at the same time as the Berlin International Film Festival. These
programs are independent initiatives that take place in cooperation and
coordination with the American Film Market (AFM) and with the Berlin
Festival. This year for the first time our presentation partner in
Berlin is the Akademie der Künste (Academy of Art). The year 2001 was our fourth year in Los Angeles and our third in Berlin.
The Berlin Freedom Film Showcase opening night, featured
Jan Svankmajer's newest full-length film, "Otesánek." The series of film screenings
followed at the Akademie der Künste and the Czech Center. At the
gala closing night ceremony at the historic Berliner Rathaus, Poland?s legendary film director (and 2000 Honorary Oscar
recipient) Andrzej Wajda presented the second annual Andrzej
Wajda Freedom Prize to Jan Svankmajer.
In Los Angeles the opening-night film is "Sky Hook"
(Yugoslavia). A series of films by producer Peter Rommel begins at the
Monica with the ground-breaking comedy set in East-Berlin
"Nightshapes" and continues at the Goethe-Institut Los
Angeles with his documentary about early television in Europe
"TV Is King."
Summer / Fall 2001
At the Moscow International Film Festival, the Karlovy Vary
International Film Festival in the Czech Republic, and the Festival East-West in Baku,
Azerbaijan, the Freedom Film Festival co-presents films in partnership with our sister festivals.
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Freedom Film Festival Poster by
Wiktor Sadowski © American
Cinema Foundation |
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THE HOLLOWAY FILE
Database of Russian and Ex-Soviet Union directors |
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Asthenic Syndrome / Asthenic Syndrom
Russia (1989)
About the film
Vivid fragments of people's modern lives create a mosaic of poetry
and sadness. When her husband dies, Natasha, a doctor, finds she cannot
cope with living alone. Her life is in ruins. Another person who
can't reach out to others is the teacher Nikolai, depressed because
his pupils think so differently from him that there appears to be no
point in even trying to communicate any more. In another vignette, a
mother and son live together, sitting in front of the television like
strangers. An artist attempts to glorify everyday life, but only
succeeds in emphasizing a sense of isolation and aimlessness. One of
the main characters dies a terrifying banal death in the underground.
Meanwhile on the streets, the people queue up for rationed foodstuffs,
still chatting about love and humanism while life goes on.
Winner of the Silver Bear at Berlin International Film Festival,
1990
Director's filmography
Kira Muratova (b. 1934 in Soroki, Romania, now part of Moldova)
is the daughter of a Romanian mother and Russian father (maiden name
Korotkov). She first studied philology at the Moscow University then
directing at the Moscow Film School VGIK. Her films Brief
Encounters (1967) and The Long Goodbye (1971)
were banned until 1986.
Her directing career began with a film which she co-directed with her
husband Alexander Muratov, On the Steep Cliff (1963),
followed by Our Honest Bread (1964). Her solo career
includes Brief Encounters (1967), Getting to Know the
Big Wide World (1979), Among Grey Stones (1983,
which she directed under the pseudonym Ivan Sidarov), Change of
Fortune (1984), A Long Goodbye (produced 1971,
released 1987, was the FIPRESCI Prize winner at the 1987 Locarno
International Film Festival), Aesthenic Syndrome (1989), Sentimental Policeman (1992), Passions (1994, winner of the 1994 Russian Film Academy Nike
Award for Best Director, Best Film), Three Stories (1997,
nominated for the Golden Bear award at the 1997 Berlin International
Film Festival), and her latest film, a 21-minute short entitled A
Letter to America (1999).
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153 min., color and b/w, 35mm
Russian with English subtitles
Director: Kira Muratova
Screenplay: Sergei Popov, Aleksandr Tschernych, Kira
Muratova
Dir. of photography: Vladimir Pankow
Music: Franz Shubert
Editor: Valentina Olejnik
Production: Goskino, Odessa Film Studios
Cast: Sergei Popov, Olga Antonova, Natalja Busko, Galina
Sachurdaewa, Aleksandra Ovenskaja, Pavel Polischnu |
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Checkpoint ( Blokpost)
Russia (1998)
About the film
A Russian "Full Metal Jacket," alternately funny and
frightening, with a sharp visual style and a real sense of the burdens
of empire. Somewhere in the Caucasus, in a place like Chechnya, a
platoon of young Russian soldiers searching a village stumble into an
ambush and gun down a civilian. But instead of being praised for
surviving the ambush, the soldiers are disciplined and then punished by
being posted to a remote checkpoint for thirty days. Ironically, their
gripes echo those of western soldiers, and the main "enemy" in
their eyes are the various women-with-attitude who work for the outside
news media, or for the Russian army’s own atrocities investigations
office. Although they sense a constant dangerparticularly in the
person of an unseen sniper who takes shots at them from time to
timethe soldiers develop a rapport with the local villagers. The
goal is simple survival.
"Bears Rogozhkin’s trademark fast, witty dialogue and
effortlessly light comedic touches."Anna Franklin (Screen
International)
Director's filmography
Alexander Rogozhkin (b. 1949) is one of the most important
Russian directors who belongs to the Leningrad Film School, led by
Alexei Guerman. He studied history and art at Leningrad University, then
worked for Lenfilm as art director. From 1977 to 1981 he took a course
in film directing at VGIK. Ginger, Ginger (1981, Ryzaja,
Ryzaja was his diploma film). He returned to Lenfilm and made For a Couple of Lines (1985, Radi nieskolkih
strochek), A Golden Button (1986, Zolotaya
Pugovitsa) Miss Millionaire (1988, Miss
Milionersha), a shocking story about "slavery" in the
military titled Vigilance (1989, Ostraha), The
Guard (1989, Karaul winner of the FIPRESCI Prize at the
1990 Berlin International Film Festival) The Third Planet (1990, Trettia planeta), a French co-production, a
naturalistic picture of a revolutionary terror security officer
(1991, Chekist), Life With An Idiot (1993, Zhizn s idiotom), and the postmodernistic crime drama The
Act (1993, Akt). He received great acclaim with his
comedy Peculiarities of the National Hunt (1995, Osobennosti nacionalnoy okhoty). In the same comic spirit and
with the same actors he then made Operation "Happy New
Year" (1996, Operatsiya S novym godom for
television) and The Peculiarities of National Fishing (1998, Osobennosti nacionalnoy rybalki).
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85 min., color, 35mm
Russian with English subtitles
Director: Alexander Rogozhkin
Screenplay: Rogozhkin
Dir. of photography: Andrei Zhegalov
Original score: Vladislav Panchenko
Music: Wagner, Haydn, Berlioz, Mendelssohn, Schubert, Mozart,
Moussorgsky
Editor: Julia Rumyanceva
Producer: Konstantin Ernst, Sergei Selyanov
Production: ORT, STW Film Co.
Cast: Roman Romantsou, Kirill Ulianov, Ivan Kuzmin, Denis
Kirillov, Egor Tomoshevsky
Contact: Intercinema Art Agency,
Dryzhinnikovskaya 15
123 242 Moscow, Russia
vox/fax: (7095) 255-90-52
vox/fax: (7095) 255-90-82
email: intercinema@glasnet.ru |
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Cozy Dens ( Pelisky)
Czech Republic (1999)
About the film
This bittersweet comedy of two next-door Prague families begins at
Christmas 1967 and ends August 21, 1968, the day Czechoslovakia was
occupied by the Soviet Army. History is expressed through a typically
Czech coming-of-age story, set at a time when still-novel
western fashions and American-style rock 'n' roll were
casting a spell among the young people of eastern Europe. The Communist
military man's sixteen-year-old son falls hopelessly in love
with his reactionary neighbor's daughter. The adolescents, as in
every age, suffer what they think of as the despotic or just
embarrassing behavior of their parents, but real despotism is always
lurking nearby. As warm and humane as "Pelisky" is, it poses a
serious question with no fixed answer: What is more fundamental, what
you believe in, or the way you act in everyday life?
Director's filmography
Jan Hrebejk (b. 1967) belongs among the most interesting Czech
film directors. He showed his mettle while still studying screenwriting
and script editing at FAMU, Prague, when he directed and produced All
the Things You Want to Know About Sex and Fear to Experience (1988) and 1948 A.D (1989). For television he
then directed his short acted debut Do Nothing Unless You Have a
Serious Reason To Do So (1991). With Petr Jarchovsky he
wrote a script for Ondrej Trojan's generation comedy Let's
Sing a Song (1990). In 1992 he adapted the novel by Egon
Hostovsky Charity Event for television. He made his debut with a
full-length musical Years of the Jackal (1993),
inspired by Petr Sabach's stories, which won high acclaim from film
critics and became a great box office success. In 1996 he made a
television serial for children Where Stars Do Fall and three
stories to his own scripts for the television series Bakalari.
Hrebejk is now preparing a bitter comedy with Jarchovsky, titled We
Must Help Each Other.
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116 min., color, 35 mm
Czech with English subtitles
Director: Jan Hrebejk
Screenplay: Petr Jarchovsky
Dir. of photography: Jan Malir
Music: courtesy of Sony, Music/Bonton
Editor: Vladimir Barak
Producer: Pavel Borovan (Czech TV), Ondrej Trojan
(T.H.A.)
Production: Total HelpArt (T.H.A.) and Czech
Television
Cast: Miroslav Donutil, Jiri Kodet, Emilia Vasaryova, Simona
Stasova,
Boleslav Polivka, Eva Holubova, Jaroslav Dusek, Stella Zazvorkova, Jiri
Krejcik, Michal Beran, Kristyna Novakova
Contact: Czech TV Telexport
Kavci hory, 140 70 Praha 4
Czech Republic
vox: 42.02.612.12.945
fax: 42.02.612.11.354
email: telexport@czechtv.cz |
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Face to Face ( Fata in Fata)
Romania (1998)
About the film
This sharp satire on intrusive TV reporting takes place against the
true-life background of eastern European families torn apart by
revelations of collaboration with the secret police. One morning, famous
poet and political dissident Iona Petroni is confronted with the news
that her husband Victor was an informer for the Securitate. The case
becomes a national sensation, turning the wronged Ioana and the
betraying Victor’s lives into a cross between "Ed TV" and
"Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf." While the rest of Romania
seems to be weighing in with its opinions, the couple struggles to hold
a marriage together and understand how the endless pressures of life in
a dictatorship eventually corrupted them. A black comedy made out of the
cruel truths of a society based on distrust.
Director's filmography
Marius Theodor Barna, (b. 1960). In 1995 graduated from the
Institute for Theatre and Motion Picture Arts in Film and TV Direction.
He is also a prolific and acclaimed writer.
His films include Mail-Life-13’ (1995, short), War In The
Kitchen (Razboi In Bucatarie, 1998), and Face To Face (Fata
in Fata, 1998)
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90 min., color, 35mm
Romanian with English subtitles
Director: Marius Th. Barna
Screenplay: Barna
Dir. of photography: Alex Solomon
Sound: Cristian Tarnovetki, Dumitru Fleancu
Music: Petru Margineanu
Editor: Melania Oproiu
Production: ARTIS/ONC, National Film Office
Cast: Maia Morgenstern, Serban Ionescu, Serban Pavlu, Mircea
Diaconu, Magda Catone, Adrian Titieni
Contact: National Film Office
4-6 Dem Dobrescu Str.
Bucharest 1, Romania
vox: 40.l.310430l
fax: 40.1.3100672
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The Family ( Aila )
Azerbaijan, Russia (1998)
About the film
The directorial debut of Rustam Ibragimbekov, who is best known as a
screenwriter ("Burnt by the Sun", "The Barber of
Siberia") is a warm and sad allegory on the end of the USSR in
1990 and 1991. A large, symbolically multi-national Soviet family
shares a communal apartment in Baku, unwillingly led by Ismail, an old
meritorious communist who finds it hard to come to terms with the new
political climate. (His physical resemblance to Mikhail Gorbachev is
no accident). Keeping the family together is becoming almost
impossible; everyone else wants to split up. Subplots involve petty
corruption, easy morals, and theft of public art, but the family’s main
activity is smuggling an Armenian relative safely out of the country
during the opening months of the Nagorno-Karabakh war. Aila, though
made by Azeri cinema’s best-known artist, treats the civilians
expelled by both sides as innocent victims of changed political
times.
Director's filmography
Rustam Ibragimbekov (b. 1939 in Baku) graduated from the
Institute for Petrochemical Studies, then studied script writing and
film directing at VGIK in Moscow. He has written more than 40 film and
television scripts, numerous plays and pieces of prose. Among his most
noteworthy film work is The White Sun of the Desert (1970,
Bieloye solnce pustyni), Interrogation (1979,
Dopros), Guard Me, My Talisman (1986, Khrani mena, mdl
talisman), The Plainclothes Cop (1957, Filer). Since
1990 he has been collaborating closely as scriptwriter with Nikita
Mikhalkov. Films: Hitch-Hiker (1990, Avtostop)
Urga (1991) Burnt by the Sun (1994,
Utomlyonnye solntsem), The Barber of Siberia (1998,
Sibirski ciryulnik) and East-West (1999).
Ibragimbekov devotes his time to various supra-national activities
for the Union of Filmmakers and he is also a film producer.
Ramiz Hassanoglu Mirzoyev (b. 1946 in Yerevan), cinematographer,
was educated in Leningrad and has made 13 television films.
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95 min., color, 35 mm
Azeri with English subtitles
Director: Rustam Ibragimbekov, Ramiz Hassanoglu
Mirzoev
Screenplay: Ibragimbekov
Dir. of photography: Valery Kerimov, Fikret Askerov
Music: Djafar Aliev
Editor: Nissachanum Gadieva
Producer: Rustam Ibragimbekov, Michail Litvak
Production: Azerkinovideo, Baku and Ibrus Ltd., Moscow
Cast: Gasanaga Turabov, Sijavus Kerimi, Svetlana Metkina,
Rafik Alijev
Contact: Ibrus Ltd.
11, Maly Kozikhinsky per
Moscow 103001, Russia
vox: 7.095.299.70.20
fax: 7.095.299.38.80 |
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Gates of Europe ( Wrota Europy )
Poland (1999)
About the Film
"Gates of Europe," the title, is a metaphor for the timeless,
historically difficult plight of the Poles, who sit athwart the road
that every eastern conqueror must take if they wish to make themselves
masters of Europe. Like Andrzej Wajda's newest film "Pan
Tadeusz," "Gates of Europe" is poetic, visually striking,
and set in a turbulent Polish-governed territory that is dangerously
attractive to invaders. But in this case the time is 1918, the invaders
are Bolsheviks, and the whole cast is barely out of their teens. Three
young, rather naive Polish women, all of them close friends, choose to
become nurses at the war front. Rapid, chaotic shifts in the fortunes of
battle leave their hellish field hospital at the mercy of the enemy.
Each one of the women deals with the situation her own way, with
defiance, horror, or resignation, and has to live with her choice.
Director's Filmography
Jerzy Wojcik is a camera operator and film director. He graduated from
Film School in Lodz (1955). One of the finest camera operators
of "Polish Film School" and an important contributor to its
artistic success. Lecturer on cinematography in Silesian University in
Katowice (1981-82) and in State Academy of Film, Television and
Theatre in Lodz (since 1982). Full professor of film art. Most
important films : Eroica (1958, dir. Andrzej Munk), Ashes and Diamonds (1958, dir. Andrzej Wajda), Cross
of Valour (1959, dir. Kazimierz Kutz), Nobody is
Calling (1960, dir. K. Kutz), Past Tense (1961,
dir. Leonard Buczkowski), Mother Joan of the Angels (dir.
Jerzy Kawalerowicz), Samson (dir. Andrzej Wajda), The Old Guy (1962, dir. Janusz Nasfeter), Decent
Sins (dir. Mieczyslaw Waokowski), Echo (1964,
dir. Stanislaw Rozewicz), To Live Once More (1965, dir.
Janusz Morgenstern), Pharaoh (1966, dir. J.
Kawalerowicz), And Then the Silence Will Come (dir.
Janusz Morgenstern), Westerplatte (1967, dir. S.
Rozewicz), Uzrok smrti ne pominati (1968, dir. Jovan
ivanovia), Face to Face (dir. Krzysztof Zanussi), The Crows (dir. Lubioa Kozomara), Devojka iz
kosmaja (1969, Dragovan Jovanovia), Bloody Tale (1970, dir. Tori Jankovia), The Flood (1973, dir.
Jerzy Hoffman), The Leaves have Fallen Off The Trees (1975, dir. S. Rozewicz, awarded for best cinematography at PFF in
Gdansk 75), Passion (1978, dir. S. Rozewicz), Elegy (1979, dir. Pawel Komorowski), The Lynx (1980, dir. S. Rozewicz), Mrs. Latter's Pension (1981, dir. S. Rozewicz), A Woman In a Hat (1983,
dir. S. Rozewicz), The Devil (1985, dir. S.
Rozewicz), An Angel In the Wardrobe (1987, dir. S.
Rozewicz). Director's filmography: Joan of Arc (1976,
TV); The Report (1977, TV), Medea (1978,
TV), The Complaint (1991, also screenplay).Gates
of Europe is the winner for Director of Photography, and for Costume
Design at the Gdynia Film Festival 1999.
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90 min., color, 35 mm
Polish with English subtitles
Director: Jerzy Wojcik
Screenplay: Jerzy Wojcik, Andrzej Mularczyk, based on the
story by Melchior Wankowicz "Szpital w Cichiniczach"
Dir. of photography: Witold Sobocinski
Music: Zygmunt Konieczny
Editor: Milenia Fiedler
Producer: Henryk Romanowski
Production: Filmcontract Ltd.
Cast: Alicja Bachleda-Curus, Kinga Pries, Agnieszka Sitek,
Andriej Jegorow
Contact: Filmcontract Ltd.
ul. Chelmska 21
00724 Warsaw, Poland
vox: 48.22.840.2278
fax: 48.22.841.6591
fax: 7.095.299.38.80 |
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Khrustalyov, My Car!
(Chrustaljov, macinu!)
Russia (1998)
About the Film
On a snowy Moscow night in the early 1950s, Stalin's secret police
make their rounds. A voiceover begins a story about "the forgotten
people" of that time. A bald, grinning doctor, The General, is head
of a large, manic household. Scenes shift with the disturbing facility
of a dream. A big Soviet hospital seems to be a madhouse without rules.
Why? Russian viewers realize that Klenski, a general in the Red Army,
has been swept up in the "doctors' plot" organized by the
KGB in 1953.
The doctor makes a halfhearted attempt to flee but is gang-raped
in a shockingly brutal scene. Abruptly, his fate shifts yet again. Being
a doctor, he is pulled out of the camp, cleaned up and taken to see the
dying Stalin. Told in a droll, unique poetic voice that could be called
Socialist magic realism, "Khrustyalov, My Car" is waiting for
the re-appraisal that will allow it to find its proper place among
the works of one of cinema's great Russian masters.
"Leningrad director Alexei Guerman, one of the most singular talents
to emerge from the Soviet Union in the 70s, whose 1982 portrayal of the
bleakness of Soviet society, "My Friend Ivan Lapshin," won him a
cult following inside and outside the USSR, returns to the scene after
16 years… After attempting to finance the project for more than a
decade, Guerman seems to explode with long-repressed ideas like a
swollen balloon spewing forth a cacophony of images, characters and
camera pyrotechnics." Deborah Young, Variety
"Years in the making, this alarming phantasmagoria is one of the great
films of the decade: brilliantly directed, unrelentingly grotesque,
savagely bleak... "J. Hoberman, Village Voice
Director's Filmography
Alexei Guerman (b. 1938) graduated from the Leningrad Theatre
institute (1960). After theater practice he started at Lenfilm
in 1964 where he made his debut (co-directed with Gregori
Aronov) The Seventh Fellow-Traveller (1967, Sedmoy
sputnik). He made the following outstanding films in cooperation
with his scriptwriter wife Svetlana Karmalita: Road Checks (1971-1985, Provierka na dorogakh), Twenty Days Without
War (1976, Ovascat dney bez voyny), My Friend Ivan
Lapshin (1982-1984, Moy drug Ivan Lapshin). In 1990 he
established and started heading the SPIEF Studio of First and
Experimental Film. Khrustalyov, My Car! was shown at the
Cannes Film Festival in Competition.
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137 min., b/w, 35mm
Russian with English subtitles
Director: Alexei Guerman
Screenplay: Svetlana Karmalita, Alexei Guerman
Dir. of photography: Vladimir Ilyne
Sound: N. Astrakhov
Music: Andrei Petrov
Editor: Irina Gorochovskaja
Producer: Guy Seligmann (Sodaperaga), Armen
Medvedev, Alexander Golutva (Goskino)
Production: Sodaperaga (Paris) and Goskino
(Moscow) co-production in association with Arte
(formerly La Sept Cinéma and Canal+), Centre National de la
Cinematographie, SPIEF (Lenfilm Experimental Film Studio) VGTRK
(Russian Federation), Petroagroprombank, Société
"Orimi", M. Zlydnikov
Cast: Yuri Tsurilo, Misa Dementiev, Yuri Yarvet, Nina
Ruslanova, Genrietta Yanovskaya, Alexander Bachirov
Contact: Flach Pyramide International
5, rue Richepanse
75008 Paris
vox: 33 1 42 96 0220
fax: 33 1 40 20 0551 |
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Outskirts ( Okraina )
Russia (1998)
About the Film
News spreads in a remote village in the Urals that the land the
villagers are about to till has been sold to an oil magnate by local
officials. A Jim Jarmusch-esque trio of misfits decide to set off in
quest of proletarian justice. As a partisan unit of national avengers
they cross the country demanding retribution, with each victim an upward
step in society, like a deadpan Russian version of an American gangster
picture like "Point Blank." Director Peter Lutsik has a sure
touch for dry satiric humor, ironically evoking traditional
historical-revolutionary epics. When our hapless heroes approach the
metropolis, cross the threshold of one of Stalin's seven
skyscrapers, and enter the magnate's office to administer justice,
peace and harmony return to the Urals, and a satiric vision straight out
of the Soviet screen of the 30s ensues: happy tractor drivers cut
furrows in the endless fields, the women bear children, and a happy
tomorrow beckons us into the sunset.
Winner of the Freedom Award, 1999 at Karlovy Vary for best
work by an emerging director. Winner FIPRESCI Prize 1999 Chicago
International Film Festival.
Director's Filmography
Peter Lutsik (b. 1960) grew up in the village of Berezan in the
Kiev region, then lived in Samarkand and Tashkent (Uzbekistan).
He served as an officer in a tank column of the Red Army. As a talented
mathematician he applied to study a university course on the physical
characteristics of oceans, but finally graduated from the Moscow Steel
and Alloy Institute as a metallurgical physicist (1982). After a
short period at a foundry he became assistant director at the Uzbekfilm
Studios, where he also acted. In 1990 he graduated in script-writing
at the VGIK, Moscow. In 1986-1994 he and his fellow student Alexei
Samorjadov (who met with a tragic death) wrote eight scripts
which gave rise to the most controversial films of the production year: Gongofer (1992 dir. Bachyt Kilibayev), Dyuba-Dyuba (1992, dir. Alexander Khvan), The
Children of Cast-Iron Gods (1993, dir. Tamas Toth), Limita (1994, dir. Denis Yevtigneyev). The young authors
won the prestigious Nike three times, which is awarded by the Academy of
Russian Filmmakers. Before his feature film debut Outskirts,
Lutsik made a short film On the Eve (1989, Kanun).
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98 min, b/w, 35mm
Russian with English subtitles
Director: Peter Lutsik
Screenplay: Peter Lutsik, Alexei Samorjadov
Dir. of photography: Nikolai Ivasiv
Music: Georgi Sviridov, Gavril Popov
Editor: Svetlana Guralskaya
Producer: Peter Lutsik, Lev Kagno (Executive
Producer)
Production: The Morning of the XXI Century, Goskino
Cast: Yuri Dubrovin, Nikolai Olyalin, Alexei Pushkin, Rimma
Markova, Alexei Vanin, Victor Stepanov
Contact: Intercinema Art Agency
Druzhinnikovskaya 15
123242 Moscow, Russia
vox/fax: (095) 255-90-52
vox/fax: (095) 255-90-82
email: intercinema@glasnet.ru |
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Paper Heads (Papierove Hlavy)
Slovakia (1996)
About the Film
Paper Heads refers to a satirical May 1 celebration in which people
parade with paper masks that mock Communist leaders. The movie is a
vivid documentary meditation on the meaning of tyranny in Czechoslovakia
between World War II and the revolution in 1989, interwoven with the
personal experiences of Dusan Hanak, a top Slovak director since the
early 70s. A highly interpretive, passionate, and sometimes savagely
funny documentary, the result is a kind of central European "The
Sorrow and the Pity," using previously unseen archive material to
evoke a vanished era. In the wake of the Velvet Revolution, many bitter
personal stories emerged. Where the issue of freedom is concerned, this
is one of the most emblematic films in the history of the festival.
Director's Filmography
Dusan Hanak, one of the most important Slovak directors, studied in the
sixties at the FAMU in Prague. He made his debut with 322 and has
since realized many short and seven feature films. Filmography: 322
(1969); Pictures of the Old World (1972)
Tinted Dreams (Ruzove sny, 1976) I Love, You Love (Ja milujem, ty milujes, 1980) Silent Pleasure (Ticha
radost, 1985) Private Lives (Sukromne zivoty, 1990)
and Paper Heads (1996), which won a Special Prize of the
Jury at the Karlovy Vary Film Festival and a Golden Spire at the San
Francisco International Film Festival.
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94 min., color, 35mm
Slovak with English subtitles
Director: Dusan Hanak
Screenplay: Dusan Hanak
Dir. of photography: Alojz Hanusek
Sound: Igor Vrabec, Pavol-Jan Jasovsky
Editor: Patrik Pass, Alena Patoprsta
Producer: Marian Urban, Philippe Awril, Maya Simon
Production: Alef Studio
Contact: Alef Film and Media Group
Tekovská 7
821 09 Bratislava, Slovakia
vox: 421 7 4445 85 11
fax: 421 7 4445 85 10
email: unfilm@reinside.sk |
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Paths in the Night (Wege in die Nacht)
Germany (1999)
About the Film
Walter is 55 and unemployed. He is a former factory manager in the old
East German regime who cannot come to terms with the end of his factory
and his own career. While his wife secures their livelihood by working
in a bar, Walter roams the streets at night with two young thugs
imposing vigilante law and order. But society does not need Walter or
his "benevolent" work. And even the love of his good wife cannot
comfort or save him when he decides to impose his fantasies on the real
world. This is no Charles Bronson in "Death Wish" but a serious
artist's view of the costs of urban alienation. Together with the
cameraman Jürgen Jürges, who has played a leading role in German film
since the seventies, director Andreas Kleinert has created memorable
black-and-white images of contemporary Berlin. A young man, he
skillfully depicts the dilemma of many of the older generation affected
by the collapse of the GDR. Lead actor Hilmar Thate (former
Berliner Ensemble regular) has been much praised in the role of
Walter, and together with Cornelia Schmaus (as his wife)
demonstrates Kleinert's sensitive casting.
"Andreas Kleinert's choice to shoot in black and white gives the
picture a distinctive retro feel, though his precision technique and
low-key irony are solidly contemporary."Derek Elley,
Variety
Director's Filmography
Andreas Kleinert, based in Berlin, started as an assistant at
DEFA-Studio in Babelsberg. In 1989 he completed studies in film
direction at the Konrad Wolf School of Film and Television in the GDR
where his dissertation focused on Andrei Tarkovsky. Since 1990 he has
been working as a freelance screenwriter and director. His student
feature film, Farewell, Joseph (Leb' Wohl, Joseph,
1989) was nominated for a Student Academy Award in 1990 and was
shown at the Locarno International Film Festival.
A selection from Kleinert's filmography includes: Neben der
Zeit (Outside Time, 1994/95) which won Best Film and Best
Actress at the 1996 Cairo International Film Festival, Lost
Landscape (Verlorene Landschaft, 1992) No Man's
Land (Niemandsland, 1995, film essay) and In the Name of
Innocence (Im Namen der Unschuld, 1996-97). Paths in
the Night (Wege in die Nacht, 1999) was the opening film at
the 1999 Directors' Fortnight at Cannes. Since then he has directed
several episodes of Victor Klemperer's Diary for television
(Ich möchte Zeugnis ablegen bis zum Letzten-Viktor
Klemperers Tagebucher, 1999). |
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98 min., b/w, 35 mm
German with English subtitles
Director: Andreas Kleinert
Screenplay: Johann Bergk
Dir. of photography: Jürgen Jürges
Sound: Siegfried Busza
Music: Andreas Hoge, Steven Garling
Editor: Gisela Zick
Art director: Gabriele Wolff
Producer: Katrin Schlösser, Frank Löprich,
Ö-film
Production: Ö-film, in co-production with ZDF, and in
co-operation with Studio Babelsberg Independents, Cultural Film
Foundation Mecklenburg-Pomerania and Mitteldeutsche
Medienförderung
Cast: Hilmar Thate, Cornelia Schmaus, Henriette Heinze, Dirk Borchardt,
Ingeborg Westphal, Daniela Hoffmann
Contact: BavariaFilm International
Bavaria Media GmbH
Bavariafilmplatz 8
D-82031 Geiselgasteig
Bavaria Media GmbH
vox: 49 (89) 64 99 2686
fax: 49 (89) 64 99 3720
email: michael.weber@bavaria-film.de
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Totalitarian Romance (Totalitarny Roman)
Russia (1998)
About the Film
In 1968, when the Russian-led armies of the Warsaw Pact put a harsh
end to the Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia, there might have been only
six or seven people in Russia who had the courage to protest. Most
people didn’t know what was going on, and others didn’t care. Young
Muscovite Andrei Sorokin is one of those who makes his voice heard. He
flees Moscow to the Siberian town of Abakan, where his aunt had settled
after many years of imprisonment and exile. Out of sheer boredom, he
goes to the local House of Culture and meets Nadya, a good-looking
propaganda worker. The two very different young people have an affair.
Nadya, approached by the KGB and pressed into collaboration, refuses and
is soon made to suffer for her decision. The filmmaker makes the point
that one can remain a decent human being even in a country with an
indecent regime.
Director's Filmography
Vyacheslav Sorokin (Leningrad, 1944) worked after his technical
study as an engineer in a factory. In 1978 he graduated from the
Leningrad Institute for Theatre, Music and Film. His short films
include What Holds The Globe (1981), Detective
Story (1981), Under One Sky (1981), Original Cocktail (1982), On New Year’s Eve (1982) and Vacations In January (1982). In 1986
he made his first feature, Once Upon A Time There Lived Doctor (Zhil-byl doktor, 1984) which he then followed with several
features in a strong socially critical vein: Traffic Fare (1988) The Temptation (Soblazn, 1987), The
Branded (Mechenye, 1991) On The Bank of the Irtysh (Na Irtyshi, 1992), and Totalitarian Romance (Totalitarny Roman, 1998).
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120 min., color 35 mm
Russian with English subtitles
Director: Vyacheslav Sorokin
Screenplay: Marina Mareeva
Dir. of photography: Sergei Astrakhanov, Valeri Mironov
Music: Vadim Bibergan
Editor: Vyacheslav Sorokin
Producer: Vyacheslav Sorokin
Production: Studio TOO "A.K.V.", Goskino Moscow
Cast: Galina Bokashevskaya, Sergei Yushkevich, Svetlana
Kryutchlova, Olga Volkova
Contact: Intercinema Art Agency
Druzhinnikovskaya 15
123242 Moscow, Russia
vox/fax: (095) 255 90 52
vox/fax: (095) 255 90 82
email: intercinema@glasnet.ru |
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Wheels (Tockovi)
Yugoslavia (1998)
About the Film
This nightmare comedy is a parable about the Balkans and its culture of
violence. Like Quentin Tarantino, but with bigger things in mind,
director Djordje Milosavljevic is thoroughly at home with the moody,
paranoid world of film noir, and is every bit as deft at using its
traditions while sending them up at the same time. Nemanya, a young man
from Belgrade, is trying to get home one stormy night. Not far from home
he is soaked in a biblical downpour that maroons him at a remote little
motel called The Wheel. The people gathered here would give pause to The
Addams Family, and the rainy night changes into a night of horror for
Nemanya. He is falsely accused of a series of murders, and finds that
the gun is the only way out. The accelerating downward momentum of the
formerly innocent Nemanya, and his growing mastery of murder, is black
humor reminiscent of noir novelist Cornell Woolrich at his sardonic
best. Parallels to the situation in the real Yugoslavia are there for
those who care to make them.
Director's Filmography
Djordje Milosavljevic (b. 1969, in Ivanica, Serbia) began as a
film critic, but mainly devoted his time to creating cartoons serials
that ware published in many magazines. Some of them were translated into
Russian, Greek and English. He won a National Prize for the best
Yugoslav comics of 1994. Two of his theatre plays "Saint
Apocalypse" and "Paper Devils"were published in the
prestigious literary monthly "Knizhevna rec." "Naked
Vera" is among the most popular Serbian dramas on the Internet. As
scriptwriter he made his debut with the fiction film Paket
Aranzhman, and he finished his studies at the Faculty of Dramatic
Arts in Belgrade in 1997, graduating with the script for the film
directed by Radivoy Andrich Three Palms for Two Loafers and a
Chick (Tri palme za dye bitange i pticu, 1998) which became
one of the most popular films in the country. Wheels is
Milosavljevic’s directing debut. Since directing it he has also written
the upcoming Sky Hook (Nebeska udica, 1999) |
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93 min., color, 35mm
Serbian with English subtitles
Director: Djordje Milosavljevic
Screenplay: Djordje Milosavljevic
Dir. of photography: Dusan Ivanovic
Music: Laiko Felix
Editor: Branka Ceperac
Producer: Ljubisa Samardzic
Production: Cinema Design in collaboration with the
Ministry of Culture of Serbia, co-production with Bulgarian National
Television
Cast: Dragan Micanovic, Anica Dobra, Nikola Kojo, Ljubisa
Samardzic, Bogdan Diklic
Contact: Cinema Design
Ustanicka 125
Belgrade, Yugoslavia
vox: 38 1 11 488 2377
fax: 38 1 11 488 8011
email: sinema@eunet.yu |
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