There’s only one spot on the island where you can get cell service, and the guys tend to crowd around the sole phone booth, which is perched beside a lonely lamppost. The entirely disarming opening presents a collection of all-male refugees attending a kind of cultural awareness 101 session about strict dos and don’ts on the dance floor from an instructor (a wonderful Sidse Babet Knudsen) who’s perfected ways to keep horny newcomers to the West in line. Rockwell Discuss 'A Thousand And One', And Talk About Growing Up In New York City At The Height Of Gentrification Both the failure of adults to resolve things satisfactorily and a haunting epilogue, suggests that, in the end, it's not the teenagers' actions that Hant is really scrutinising, so much as the society that shaped both Sasha and Danny and the triggered the circumstances they find themselves in.Scene 2 Seen Podcast: Teyana Taylor And A.V. Hant's general playfulness in the pair's initial exploits, bounced along by upbeat music choices, helps to get us onside and their naivety keeps us there, as we realise before they do the degree to which they're playing with fire. We're not talking about natural born outlaws here, just a couple of kids who are sick of their current lives and who immerse themselves so far in the dream of rebellion they find it increasingly hard to return to the harder reality. Later, things become more serious, as the world they've created for themselves increasingly rubs up against the conventional place everyone else inhabits in dangerous ways. Their energy initially fills the bubble, as they raise their voices in a primal scream against the world and pull off petty crime. Hant isn't afraid to mix his tone to reflect this newly created world of the pair. The performances from Vinogradova and Ivanov are also carefully calibrated to reflect this shifting dynamic, Sasha's confidence starting to flicker with uncertainty and unease as Danny becomes increasingly confrontational. It's Sasha's idea, of course, the meeker Danny initially seen trailing in her wake, although Hant finds interesting ebbs and flows in the power balance between them, particularly once a gun and a car become involved. What else to do then, but run away from all this tyranny? Sasha, on the other hand, may have staged her own mini bedroom revolution but she's about to be confined to quarters over her latest escapade as her parents threaten her with homeschooling. In Danny's case, it's a gilded one, where he is stifled by his overprotective mother (Janna Pugacheva), who has smothered their apartment in flower print in the same way she drowns him with concern. Home for both teens is less a refuge than a cage. ![]() They're interrupted, however, when Sasha's mother (Olga Sakhanova) and policeman stepfather (Konstantin Gatsalov) arrive to cart her off home. It's in the limbo of a party, when both Sasha (Jenia Vinogradova) and Danny (Igor Ivanov) are sitting with their backs against opposite walls gazing into space that these two souls meet and quickly get down to physical business, sex perhaps offering the fast-track potential of 'adulthood'. Adding to the sense this taking place in the real world - something that operates along very different rules than the personal universe two teenagers will soon create - is an apparent documentary element, used occasionally, through the story, in which people share their thoughts on life directly camera. Limbo spaces are present from the start, physical places, like walls in between the brutalist blocks, where faded posters and wanted ads flutter or graffiti captures half-finished thoughts, and emotional no-man's lands that have opened up between parents and children at the same time as the yawning gap of adolescence appears between child- and adulthood. Both films, however, have in common the rebellious energy of youth, an unconventional road trip and the disconnect between the different generations. ![]() From Russia, with young love, comes this anthem for doomed youth from Aleksandr Hant, which, presumably because he took on writing duties himself this time (with Vladislav Malakhov), has a considerably more serious tone than his blackly comic debut How Viktor "The Garlic" Took Alexey The Stud To The Nursing Home.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |