Archive for the movie Category

The Italian

Posted in The Italian, kravchuk, movie, spiridonov on September 23, 2007 by accidentalrussophile


The Italian (Итальянец) by director Andrei Kravchuk (Андрей Кравчук) is one of the best and most overlooked Russian films of recent years. Overshadowed by other Russian films of 2005, such as the heavily advertised 9th Company (9 РОТА), this modest movie accomplishes great things through its understated drama, unexpected turns, and sincerity. The film is cited as having been insprired by true events, and Kravchuk takes these factual details and spins a modern-day Dickensian tale. Combined with a brilliant performance by young Kolya Spiridonov (Коля Спиридонов) as Vanya Solntsev, he’s crafted a real gem of a film.

The official website describes the movie as follows:

A childless, affluent couple from Italy comes to a provincial Russian children’s home to find a child for adoption. The orphanage is a harsh place, run by two rival internal factions. Alongside the official, adult administration, Alongside the official, adult administration, run by a corrupt headmaster (played by Yuri Itskov) with the help of greedy adoption broker Madam (Maria Kuznetsova), there is a shadow children’s gang operating out of the institution’s boiler room.

When the Italian couple singles out six-year-old ragamuffin Vanya Solntsev (Kolya Spiridonov) as their prospective choice, the other orphans give Vanya a new nickname: The Italian. They envy Vanya, imagining that he is destined for a life of ease in sunny Italy. But seeing that the older children must resort to stealing or prostitution in order to survive, plucky little Vanya has other plans. He decides to track down his birth mother, teaching himself to read in order to learn her address from his personal file locked in the home’s office. After stealing his records, Vanya sneaks out of the orphanage and boards a commuter train headed for the city, with the orphanage staff and police in close pursuit. Fearing that Vanya will make them lose a very lucrative adoption deal, the orphanage headmaster joins forces with Madam to find the runaway child by any means necessary.

Untold is this synopsis is what I consider one of the films most important moments – why young Vanya decides to find his mother. Perhaps it is every orphans secret hope, that they may be returned to their family, as if their time in an orphanage were all just a bad dream. What raises this possibility in Vanya’s mind is the return of the mother of one of the most recently adopted orphans.

After the young woman is pushed out the door of the orphanage, Vanya walks over to talk with her on a bench while she waits for a bus. She is crying and has questions about her son, the baby she gave up some years before. She says that she knows now that he is all that she had in this life and she never should have given him up, that she made a terrible mistake.

The next day we learn that she was hit by a train, an apparent suicide. This idea, that Vanya’s mother made a mistake, and that she actually might need him changes his course and sets him on determined journey to find her. Along his journey, he faces many obstacles and unexpected help from those who recognize his dream can not be dismissed.

In a sense, The Italian is a patriotic film. It doesn’t depict life in Russia as being easy. In fact, it is dirty, cold, and cruel and the orphans grow up at a remarkably young age. However, it suggests that Russians should take care of their own and that no one can love you more than your own flesh and blood.


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More Movie Geekery

Posted in Eastern Promises, mortensen, movie on September 17, 2007 by accidentalrussophile

As long as I am playing movie geek today, I thought I’d pass along this little tidbit regarding Viggo Mortensen’s work on Eastern Promises (another film that I’m hoping to see).

The 43 tattoos Viggo Mortensen displays on his body in new film “Eastern Promises” were so authentic, Russians really thought he was a Mafia heavyweight. The Lord of The Rings star, who plays a Russian mobster in the new thriller, spent four hours in the make-up chair having the skin art applied and he realised it was worth it when he saw the looks of terror on Soviet youths he met in a London pub.

He recalls, “They were looking at my hands and suddenly stopped talking. “It was right when the (Alexander) Litvinenko (former lieutenant colonel of the Russian Federation’s Federal Security Service) poisoning happened in 2006, and I looked very shady. So I got up and left. They were probably freaked out.” Mortensen reveals he travelled through Russia, met with real gangland bosses and meticulously studied the Mafia’s tattoo art to make sure his latest character was as authentic as possible.


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Cool, But Off Topic

Posted in Iron Man, geek, movie on September 17, 2007 by accidentalrussophile


I am so looking forward to this movie. I was worried that Iron Man was going to be a dog, ala Fantastic Four – but the teaser is very promising.

You can also see the trailer in Russian.

It is true, I am both a movie and comic book geek.
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