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Vodka Lemon: Life and comedy bloom in the ashes

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  • Vodka Lemon: Life and comedy bloom in the ashes

    Los Angeles Times
    November 19, 2004 Friday
    Home Edition

    Movies; REVIEW ;
    Life and comedy bloom in the ashes

    by Kevin Thomas, Times Staff Writer


    Hiner Saleem's droll comedy "Vodka Lemon" reveals a beguiling gift
    for making things happen in a place where nothing much is going on.
    It is set in what looks to be the middle of nowhere -- a tiny village
    in a vast snow-covered valley in rural Armenia. The nearest post
    office is in a town a bus ride away. This scattering of rough-hewn
    roadside cabins in the deep of winter resembles a near-abandoned
    mining town in the Old West.

    In a post-Soviet present as harsh as the climate, the inhabitants in
    fact feel abandoned themselves. One neighbor remarks that democracy
    has given the people freedom, but his friend points out that the
    Communists gave them everything else. Now everyone has to pay for
    gas, electricity and oil while the community hovers near a bare
    subsistence level. Except for a passing shepherd and his flock, no
    one seems to be working, nor do there seem to be any job
    opportunities whatsoever. Clearly, the younger generation is fleeing
    -- and much of it has already fled.

    That includes one of the sons of Hamo Isko (Romen Avinian), who has
    sought a better life in Paris. (Another is off in Samarkand,
    Uzbekistan, and the other stays home and drinks.) Hamo is a striking
    patriarchal figure, a ruggedly handsome, silver-haired, bearded man
    of military bearing; he looks to be a fit 70 or thereabouts. His
    service pension is the equivalent of $7 a month, and some of the
    film's rueful humor derives from him selling by the roadside his
    three absolutely nonessential possessions: a country-style armoire
    with folk art decorations that in many other places would fetch a
    fancy sum but yields only $10 for Hamo; an old TV, which may or may
    not work; and Hamo's military camouflage uniform. (The sale of the
    armoire to a passing couple triggers a comic sequence worthy of the
    classic silent comedians.)

    With nothing much to do, Hamo spends a lot of time visiting the
    cemetery where his recently deceased wife is buried. He notices that
    an attractive woman, Nina (Lala Sarkissian), visits the grave of her
    late husband with much frequency. Gradually they take note of each
    other. The attraction is mutual, but Hamo is beset by the feeling
    that he must be loyal to his wife's memory, and Nina is overcome even
    more strongly by shyness. As Saleem, a long-exiled Iraqi Kurd, wends
    his way through amusing incidents and various subplots, he generates
    hope that romance may find a way to blossom between two people who
    have so little in life outside of, potentially, each other.

    "Vodka Lemon" is an appealingly wry little film that is as appetizing
    as its title, which is the name of a roadside liquor stand where Nina
    works. Saleem, whose fourth film this is, ends on a note of inspired
    whimsy that has aptly been compared to a magical image by Marc
    Chagall.

    *

    'Vodka Lemon'

    MPAA rating: Unrated

    Times guidelines: Suitable for older children

    Romen Avinian...Hamo

    Lala Sarkissian...Nina

    Ivan Franek...Dilovan

    Ruzan Mesropyan...Zine

    A New Yorker Films release. Writer-director Hiner Saleem. Producer
    Fabrice Guez. Executive producer Michel Loro. Cinematographer
    Christophe Pollock. Editor Dora Mantzorou. Music Michel Korb.
    Production designer Albert Hamarsh. In Armenian, Russian and Kurdish,
    with English subtitles.

    Exclusively at the Fairfax Cinemas, 7907 Beverly Blvd. (at Faifax
    Avenue), (323) 655-4010; and the One Colorado, 42 Miller Alley (at
    Colorado Boulevard), Pasadena, (626) 844-6500.

    GRAPHIC: PHOTO: POOR CASH FLOW: Hamo, played by Romen Avinian, tries
    to sell his armoire by the road in his post-Soviet Armenia village.
    PHOTOGRAPHER: New Yorker Films
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