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Movie review: 'Vodka Lemon' serves up yearning and hardship

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  • Movie review: 'Vodka Lemon' serves up yearning and hardship

    Minneapolis Star Tribune , MN
    Feb 24 2005

    Movie review: 'Vodka Lemon' serves up yearning and hardship


    Leisurely to a fault but emotionally generous, "Vodka Lemon" shows us
    a season in the life of an icebound Armenian village and the economic
    and emotional travails of several locals. Objectively, it's a sad
    story of yearning and hardship, but it's structured and performed
    like a comedy. As life is.

    Hamo, a rugged old veteran, puts the best face on events as he talks
    to his late wife's headstone. He's supplementing his skimpy pension
    by selling off their possessions, and there's not much left but the
    wallpaper. Romen Avinian, who plays the part, bears a striking
    resemblance to Omar Sharif and shares that actor's aura of
    unassailable dignity even in advanced age. Iraqi-Kurdish
    director-writer Hiner Saleem uses that quality to stage some physical
    comedy that would otherwise feel cruel.

    A scene from "Vodka Lemon"Minnesota Film ArOn a visit to the
    graveyard, Hamo crosses paths with Nina (Lala Sarkissian), a pretty
    widow who works in the Vodka Lemon liquor store. ("Why is it called
    Vodka Lemon when it tastes like almonds?" a patron asks. "That's
    Armenia," she shrugs.) Nina is a decade younger than the courtly Hamo
    but in equally dire straits. Saleem is in no rush to pair them up,
    and their gradual realization that they might be good company for
    each other proceeds as gradually as winter giving way to spring.


    Vodka Lemon

    *** out of four stars

    Unrated; brief violence and adult themes. In Kurdish, Russian and
    Armenian, subtitled.

    Colin Covert
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