Pavel Lungin

  • Pavel Lungin – Ostrov AKA The Island (2006)

    2001-2010DramaPavel LunginRussia

    Quote:
    The spirit of Tarkovsky is never far from this rebarbative fable of guilt and atonement by Pavel Lounguine.

    A prologue set in 1943 reveals how a young Russian sailor, captured by the Nazis, saved his own life by shooting his captain. Thirty years later the man, Anatoly (Pyotr Mamonov), lives a monkish existence on a remote island in the White Sea, begging God to forgive his “sin” and baffling his fellow monks with his strange behaviour. The film’s austere palette of white, black and icy blues are contrasted with the fiery reds of the furnace Anatoly tends – his personal hellfire or a purifying flame? Nothing much is certain in this bleakly enigmatic tale, which moves at a pace most will find unacceptable. Those who stay the course will perhaps, like the monk himself, want to take a long rest afterwards.Read More »

  • Pavel Lungin – Luna Park (1992)

    1991-2000DramaPavel LunginRussia

    Quote:
    Andrei leads a group of nationalist skinheads. They’ve taken over a Luna Park depot. They indulge in violence and racketeering against Jews, homosexuals and the marginalized.Read More »

  • Pavel Lungin – Taksi-blyuz AKA Taxi Blues (1990)

    Pavel Lungin1981-1990ComedyUSSR

    Shlykov, a hard-working taxi driver and Lyosha, a saxophonist, develop a bizarre love-hate relationship, and despite their prejudices, realize they aren’t so different after all.Read More »

  • Various – À propos de Nice, la suite (1995)

    1991-2000Abbas KiarostamiArthouseCatherine BreillatClaire DenisCosta-GavrasFranceParviz KimiaviPavel LunginRaoul RuizRaymond Depardon

    Quote:
    This French anthology is a tribute to A Propos de Nice (1930), a classic documentary that took a poetic and sometimes satirical look at life in the French Riviera town. This version blends fact and fiction to chronicle life in modern-day Nice and is comprised of seven vignettes, each directed by an internationally renowned filmmaker. Only one of the episodes, “Reperages,” from Iranian directors Abbas Kiarostami and Parviz Kimiavi, stays close to the style of the original film by Jean Vigo as it chronicles the experiences of a filmmaker who came to Nice to do research on Vigo for his upcoming documentary. Read More »

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