Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

'Vodka Lemon': A Warm Glance at Life on the Rocks

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 'Vodka Lemon': A Warm Glance at Life on the Rocks

    'Vodka Lemon': A Warm Glance at Life on the Rocks
    By Ann Hornaday, Washington Post Staff Writer

    Washington Post
    Dec 24 2004


    If "Vodka Lemon" conjures images of tonic cocktails served against a
    sun-splashed backdrop, think again. This wry romantic comedy from
    writer-director Hiner Saleem is set against a snowscape of such vast
    desolation that it makes Monday's cold snap seem like the doggiest
    days of August.

    Set in post-Soviet Armenia, "Vodka Lemon" dispenses with the usual
    conventions of most holiday films at the multiplex. Indeed, it's
    amusing to imagine how this almost defiantly quirky film might be
    pitched in the bowels of Culver City: "It's a love story about people
    who are poor, disenfranchised and almost completely without hope!
    With a cast of complete unknowns! In Armenian!"



    An old man has a strange way of going to a funeral in Hiner Saleem's
    quirky "Vodka Lemon." (New Yorker Films)

    _____Free E-mail Newsletters_____

    • Today's Headlines & Columnists
    See a Sample | Sign Up Now
    • Breaking News Alerts
    See a Sample | Sign Up Now




    It also works, thanks in large part to those unknowns. Romen Avinian
    plays a sixtyish widower named Hamo who lives in an impoverished
    unnamed village with his alcoholic son and voluptuous granddaughter.
    Playing a man whose haggard sense of defeat belies still robust
    appetites, Avinian provides the ballast in an ensemble cast playing a
    motley crew of characters, villagers whose chronic shifts between
    hope and resignation have congealed into a permanent state of
    suspended animation.

    The good news is that they're free of the Russian boot, which is
    precisely the bad news: Without state subsidies, these scrappy
    survivors must now carve a precarious existence out of anything at
    hand -- selling their own meager belongings on the gray market ("Does
    it work or does it really work?" a buyer asks Hamo about a television
    that really doesn't), or providing the local aperitif of choice at
    the open-air outpost from which the movie takes its title.

    That rickety boite's shy, shivering barkeep would be Nina (Lala
    Sarkissian), a middle-aged beauty whom Hamo meets at the cemetery
    where both come to visit their late spouses' graves. Saleem takes his
    time getting the two together; first he puts them in any number of
    absurdist vignettes designed to convey both the bleakness of the
    Armenians' lot and the tough humor with which they confront it. These
    scenes are sometimes orchestrated with a self-consciousness that's a
    bit too precious (Saleem, an exiled Iraqi Turk, started out as a
    painter and poet, and it shows). But many of them have the
    existential whimsy of Ionesco. (Indeed, one of the film's visual
    leitmotifs recalls Ionesco's play "The Chairs"; this is a village
    where nearly everyone carries his or her own, whether to plop down
    for an impromptu drink or, more likely, wait for a bus that always
    arrives, eventually.)

    The sense of unrequited anticipation is finally resolved in an
    improbably lush love scene set -- where else? -- on that very bus.
    Saleem is too unsentimental to linger there for long; soon Hamo and
    Nina are trudging through those same impenetrable snowdrifts. But
    he's just romantic enough to end "Vodka Lemon" on an impossibly
    hopeful note -- and on the cusp of what looks suspiciously like an
    impending thaw.

    Vodka Lemon (88 minutes, in Armenian, Russian and Kurdish with
    English subtitles, at Landmark's E Street Cinema) is not rated.

    --Boundary_(ID_/N9DoYgDNlsGbHzTmDci+Q)--
Working...
X