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Film Review: Mermaid

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  • Film Review: Mermaid

    Mermaid

    Screendaily
    Dan Fainaru at the Berlin Film Fesitval
    February 8, 2008

    Director: Anna Melikyan. Russia, 2007. 118 minutes.

    Azerbaijani director Anna Melkian's second feature opens Berlin'
    Panorama section with a World Cinema Director's award from Sundance
    and solid box office at home in Russia under its belt (her first,
    Mars, was also shown in Panorama at Berlin).

    A coming-of-age fairytale with dark undertones, Mermaid is delivered
    in a light, bantering tone - a first-person narrative of the life of
    Alissa (played by Donstova as a child and Shalaeva from adolescence
    onwards). With the insouciant approach of a young director who doesn't
    particularly care whether everything in her film makes sense or
    follows the rules, Mermaid looks certain for international festival
    and arthouse acclaim.

    Hailed at home as the Russian Amelie, Mermaid's heroine is Alissa. the
    daughter of a portly, bouncy woman (Sokova) and a passing sailor who
    chanced upon her on a deserted beach, bathing in the nude. The sailor
    is long gone, and Alissa, aged five at the film's onset, lives with
    her mother and senile granny. She wants to be a ballerina and dreams
    of meeting her father but both wishes are denied to her.

    Some of her desires do come true, however - such as her village home
    being destroyed in a hurricane which forces her mother to move to
    Moscow. Whether this, and some other momentuous events in the course
    of the film, are actually Alissa's doing remains an open question
    until the very end.

    Once in Moscow, she carries out a succession of odd jobs (including
    one which involves roaming the streets in a rubber mobile phone) until
    one night she fishes a young man called Sasha (Tsyganov) out of the
    river. He turns out to be an upwardly mobile young businessman,
    successfully selling lots on the moon to people (only the visible
    side, he stresses) in the daytime, getting drunk in the evening, and
    conducting an affair with blonde bombshell Rita (Skrinichenko) in
    between. Alissa falls in love and works some of her (supposed) magic
    to save him several times, with mixed results.

    A lively portrait of the transition from childhood to maturity,
    Mermaid's bemusing, downbeat ending confused many in the Berlin
    audience but seems simply to represent the end of this transition -
    the child disappears, the adolescent is no longer there, adulthood
    sets in.

    Melikyan's own script doesn't quite provide the material for an
    almost-two-hour move and the length is felt by the audience despite
    sterling work from both Dontsova and Shalaeva (in particular).

    Some crazy but efficient supporting performances are delivered by
    Maria Sokova and Yevgenyi Tsyganov (an actor, singer and youth
    idol). Technical credits are solid, and Igor Vdovin's score rounds up
    the fanciful mood.

    Production companies
    Magnum Studios
    Central Partnership
    Worldwide distribution
    Central Partnership 00 7 495 981 8214

    Producers
    Ruben Dishdishian

    Screenplay
    Anna Melikyan

    Director of photography
    Oleg Kirichenko

    Production designer
    Ulyana Ryabova

    Editor
    Aleksandr Andryuschenko
    Karen Oganesyan
    Maksim Smirnov

    Music
    Igor Vdovin
    Main cast:
    Masha Salaeva
    Yevgenyi Tsyganov
    Maria Sokova
    Nastya Dontsova
    Irina Skrinichenko
    Veronica Skugina
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