Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

DVD: Vodka Lemon

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

  • DVD: Vodka Lemon

    VODKA LEMON

    DVDTimes.co.uk, UK
    Sept 7 2005

    Vodka Lemon takes place in a Kurdish village in Armenia. It's the dead
    of winter, with temperatures twenty below zero and more. Hamo (Romen
    Avinien) is a widower in his sixties, who visits his wife's grave
    and talks to her there. While there he meets Nina (Lala Sarkissian),
    a widow with a daughter, and finds himself drawn to her.

    It's fair to say that examples of Armenian cinema are not thick on the
    ground. In what reaches British release at least, it's represented
    almost entirely by the Canadian-based Atom Egoyan, who in films
    such as Ararat has dealt with his Armenian heritage. Vodka Lemon
    is very different. Hineer Saleem is an Iraqi Kurd based in Paris,
    and as he makes clear in the documentary that accompanies his film,
    Vodka Lemon is as much a Kurdish story. The situation in Iraq made
    filming there impossible, so the story was written about the large
    Kurdish population in Armenia. In terms of inspiration, this is
    a world away from Egoyan's frequently rather cerebral cinema.
    Instead, Saleem aims north, aspiring to the low-key, deadpan
    miserablist humour of Finnish director Aki Kaurasmaki. The result
    is certainly a warm-hearted film, but to me it doesn't equal its
    inspiration. It shares its leisurely pace and poker-faced comedy with
    Kaurismaki's work, but the danger of working in a minor key is that of
    slightness and inconsequentiality. And that's where Vodka Lemon falls
    down. There are certainly consolations, such as the performances and
    the occasional shaft of humour. Christophe Pollock's cinematography
    makes the obviously bitterly cold settings strangely beautiful. And
    the sheer novelty of seeing a film from this part of the world makes
    this worth a look. The title, by the way, comes from an exchange that
    Nina has with a customer at her roadside liquor store. When asked why
    a drink is called vodka lemon when it tastes of almonds, she says:
    "That's Armenia!"

    http://www.dvdtimes.co.uk/content.php?contentid=58436
Working...
X