Official Russian entry for Best Foreign Language Film for
2006 Academy Awards
WINNER: Grand Prix -Best Feature at the 2005 Berlin International
Children’s Film Festival
Official Selection 2006 Telluride Film Festival
Official
Selection 2006 Toronto International Film Festival
In Russian with English Subtitles
Genre: Drama
Director: Andrei Kravchuk
Cast: Kolya Spiridonov, Maria Kuznetsova, Darya
Lesnikova, Yuri Itskov, Nikolai Reutov, Tatiana Zakharova ,
Irina Osnovina , Elena Malinovskaya , Andrei Dezhonov, Vladimir
Kosmidailo, Anatoly Agroskin
RunTime: 1 hr 39 mins
Released By: Archer Entertainment APPL &
The Picturehouse
Rating: PG
Official Website: www.archerentasia.com/theitalian
Opening Day: 4 October (exclusive: The Picturehouse)
Synopsis:
In his feature directorial debut, director Andrei Kravchuk
addresses with intelligence and poignancy the urgent issue
of illegal adoption in Russia, which has become a well-documented
international crisis. THE ITALIAN is based on the true story
of a small Russian boy abandoned in an orphanage who goes
in search of his birth mother.
A
childless, affluent couple from Italy comes to a provincial
Russian children’s home to find a child for adoption.
The orphanage is a harsh place, run by two rival internal
factions. Alongside the official, adult administration, run
by a corrupt headmaster (played by Yuri Itskov) with the help
of greedy adoption broker Madam (Maria Kuznetsova), there
is a shadow children’s gang operating out of the institution’s
boiler room.
When
the Italian couple singles out six-year-old ragamuffin Vanya
Solntsev (Kolya Spiridonov) as their prospective choice, the
other orphans give Vanya a new nickname: The Italian. They
envy Vanya, imagining that he is destined for a life of ease
in sunny Italy. But seeing that the older children must resort
to stealing or prostitution in order to survive, plucky little
Vanya has other plans. He decides to track down his birth
mother, teaching himself to read in order to learn her address
from his personal file locked in the home’s office.
After stealing his records, Vanya sneaks out of the orphanage
and boards a commuter train headed for the city, with the
orphanage staff and police in close pursuit. Fearing that
Vanya will make them lose a very lucrative adoption deal,
the orphanage headmaster joins forces with Madam to find the
runaway child by any means necessary.
Movie Review:
In 6 year-old Vanya’s (Kolya Spiridonov) Russia, children
are considered lucky just to know the names of their parents.
As the intrepid runaway in Andrei Kravchuk's bittersweet drama
“The Italian”, Vanya marches to the beat of his
own brass band. The death of a young mother looking for a
son she abandoned years ago at Vanya’s dilapidated orphan-emporium
is the catalyst for a road trip on his lonesome to look for
a mother he’s never known. Director Kravchuk consciously
weaves urgent post-Soviet rhetoric and themes of individual
identity owing to Ann Holm’s WWII novella, “I
Am David”, into a watered down borsch of dramatic and
emotional compromise. The film is both comic and tragic, and
in a consistently plaintive world of insights and allusions
that considers the very serious proposition of child trafficking
and Russia’s underclass.
Eluding
both the spiritual richness of “I Am David” and
the childlike perspectives of “Viva Cuba”, Kravchuk
gazes upon his subject with a measure of detached sensitivity
and depressive realism that never coddles its precocious and
cherubic lead, avoiding the ingratiating manner of a Roberto
Benigni film. But it also never truly invests much in him
by way of personal danger and coats his eventual struggle
with an almost divine sense of security. By engaging in a
subject matter as heinous as the economy of young lives and
then bogging it down with familiar levity, it never acknowledges
the film for what it is and perhaps what it could have been.
Vanya’s
nondescript background becomes a synthesis of the disturbingly
harsh portrait of ingrained subsistence that Vanya and his
cadre of car washers, thieves, prostitutes and various other
guttersnipes who live and work; pulling their earnings into
a coffer for the good of their collective and keeping the
spirit of socialism alive. They situate themselves in and
around the commune surrounding the orphanage run by the pragmatic
and cynical Madam (Maria Kuznetsova) and the effete but sympathetic
louse of a headmaster (Yuri Itskov). Intriguingly, the final
half of the film – as its inevitable road trip begins
– segues Vanya as an affront to the fatalism that infects
the rest of Russia’s vastly underprivileged youth as
he proves himself to be more resilient and self-sufficient.
Kravchuk
find a way to the heart en route to the mind. He envelops
an air of protective affection for his characters, including
those who hinder our enterprising young hero’s quest
for maternal solicitude, an instinct made memorable by the
film’s assertion that a nurturing Russia can be cultivated
by putting the onus of that responsibility on the country’s
women. For all its discursiveness, its final shot obliterates
the acquired bleakness and severity of the film and leaves
us in its afterglow of hope and grace.
Movie Rating:
((Reductive in its more urgent subject matter but Vanya’s
journey is richly compassionate and disarmingly hopeful)
Review by Justin Deimen
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