Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Bittersweet Cocktail

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

  • Bittersweet Cocktail

    Moscow Times, Russia
    March 4 2005

    Bittersweet Cocktail

    Desolate Armenian landscapes provide the backdrop for a touching love
    story in "Vodka Lemon," the latest film by Kurdish director Hiner
    Saleem.

    By Tom Birchenough
    Published: March 4, 2005

    Viewers expecting to enjoy the luscious landscapes of the Caucasus in
    Hiner Saleem's "Vodka Lemon" will be disappointed. However, the new
    film (shot partly in Russian) from the Kurdish director, long based
    in Paris, creates some unforgettable visual moments, centered on the
    bleak winter landscape of a remote Armenian village. And there's much
    to relish in the film's sense of place, as well as in its main
    characters.

    The film's central location, which captures the sheer remoteness, and
    the timelessness, of a certain kind of post-Soviet desolation, is the
    village cemetery. Saleem's opening scene is impressive, mixing
    elements of surreal comedy with a sense of reality that has led
    critics to compare "Vodka Lemon" to the films of Georgian director
    Otar Iosseliani (who is also based in Paris, where he has been for
    more than two decades).


    In the opening scene, a funeral is underway, and a bedridden old man
    wishes to attend it. This poses no problem, however, as the other
    mourners haul him to the cemetery on his bed, which is hitched behind
    a truck. Once he gets there, he removes his false teeth and
    accompanies the musicians on his duduk, a traditional Armenian
    instrument, as they play their parting tribute. The periodic
    appearance throughout the film of a lone horseman galloping through
    the village -- for no explained reason -- is another surreal visual
    touch of which Iosseliani would surely be proud.

    In the film's main development, however, the cemetery becomes the
    scene for a more subtle, less extravagant interaction between the two
    main characters. Hamo (Romik Avinian), who comes there regularly to
    visit the grave of his late wife, meets Nina (Lala Sarkissian), who
    pays similar respect to her deceased husband. Moving between the
    tombstones, whose engraved faces carry their own eloquent messages,
    they gradually interact, bonding further as they travel home on a
    run-down bus.

    This marks the start of an affecting relationship, which recalls
    Saleem's first film "Vive la mariee ... et la liberation du
    Kurdistan." In that 1997 film, a Parisian Kurd bows to pressure from
    his family to choose a mail-order bride from home, only to discover
    that his order has been mixed up. He receives the wrong bride, but
    they cope with the consequences in a very human way.

    In "Vodka Lemon" there is a similar balance between comedy and
    compassion. Hamo expects his three sons to support him in his old
    age, but to no avail. One has stayed in the village, but he is an
    unemployed drunk, and the support, if anything, goes in the opposite
    direction; the second is far away in Central Asia; and the third is
    in France, which motivates the film's rare excursions to an urban
    environment. In these scenes, Hamo goes to Yerevan hoping to receive
    a cash remittance from his son. Ultimately, however, his missions end
    in vain.

    Meanwhile, Nina is working at the roadside bar that gives the film
    its title. Although it is the place where locals congregate (for lack
    of anywhere else to go), business is bad and closure is very much on
    the horizon. The villagers only survive by selling whatever
    possessions they have left -- including, in a memorable final scene
    with the two leads, a piano that they struggle to move to the
    roadside, only to change their minds in the episode's poignant
    conclusion.

    In the hands of another director, "Vodka Lemon" could have emphasized
    social commentary. Saleem, however, avoids that direction, though
    there are moments that reflect the difficult circumstances of
    everyday life. "Before the Russians left we didn't have our freedom,
    but we had everything else," says one character succinctly, referring
    to the post-Soviet shortages of water and electricity, as well as
    their spiraling cost.

    The Armenian element in the film is dominant -- certainly in terms of
    casting -- although its financing came mainly from France,
    Switzerland and Italy. This international support has led to
    international recognition: "Vodka Lemon" was Armenia's nomination
    last year for the Best Foreign Film Oscar, and it was screened in a
    supporting program at the 2003 Venice Film Festival.

    The European contribution is most evident on the technical front,
    especially in Christophe Pollock's cinematography, which beautifully
    captures both the environment and the individuals who eke out their
    existence within it. The score by Michel Korb and Roustam Sadoyan is
    no less evocative.

    Saleem's major achievement in "Vodka Lemon" is that he creates and
    controls an extremely sensitive emotional narrative out of the
    bleakest subject matter. It makes his newest project, titled
    "Kilometer Zero," seem all the more intriguing -- the director was
    set to return to his native Kurdistan to film a similarly human
    story, in what his producers touted as the first feature film to be
    shot in Iraq after the U.S.-led

    invasion. However, circumstances appear to have delayed the project.

    "Vodka Lemon" (Vodka-Limon) is playing in Russian at Fitil.
Working...
X