Tags
Language
Tags
May 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
28 29 30 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 1

Freeze, Die, Come to Life! (1990) Zamri, umri, voskresni!

Posted By: MirrorsMaker
SD / DVDRip IMDb
Freeze, Die, Come to Life! (1990) Zamri, umri, voskresni!

Freeze, Die, Come to Life! (1990)
DVDRip | MKV | 718x574 | x264 @ 1800 Kbps | 99 min | 1,38 Gb
Audio: Русский AC3 5.1 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: English (embedded)
Genre: Drama

Director: Vitali Kanevsky
Writer: Vitali Kanevsky
Stars: Dinara Drukarova, Pavel Nazarov, Elena Popova

Two children living in a remote mining town in the distant wastes of Siberia in 1947 survive poverty and hardship through the warmth of their friendship and a shared sense of humour.

IMDB - 7 wins

Freeze, Die, Come to Life is the harrowing story of two adolescents, Velarka (Pavel Nazarov) and Galicia (Dinara Drukarova) attempt to cope with poverty and an unstable home life in a Soviet mining town in Siberia near the close of World War II. This was the first film by Russian director, Vitaly Kanevsky, who served eight years in a Soviet labor camp.

Though the title is the name of a Russian children's game, the children here are not playing any games; the stakes are too high. Velarka's mother is a prostitute and the family is poor. Both he and Galicia must sell tea to workers, convicts, and local Japanese POWs in order to survive. Their relationship starts out as antagonistic but they slowly develop a friendship and grudging admiration for each other.

Left to fend for himself, Valerka gets into serious misadventures such as putting yeast in a school sewer causing an overflow onto the city streets, derailing a train, and helping to rob a jewelry store. He must keep running to avoid the police and pursuing jewel thieves. Though the film is bleak, the sensitive relationship of the children and the courage they display is what will stay with you. The ending is grisly but (anticipating Kiarostami's Taste of Cherry by eight years) the cameraman giving directions to the actors reminds us that "it's also a movie".

Freeze, Die, Come to Life was turned down by Russian censors and had to be edited several times before it was approved, giving it a somewhat disjointed feeling. In its final version, however, it won the 1990 Cannes Film Festival's prize for Best First Film. Unfortunately, it received scant distribution in the West and has become an overlooked gem.
(click to enlarge)
Freeze, Die, Come to Life! (1990) Zamri, umri, voskresni!

More in My Blog