I don’t know what is so subversive about “Broken Lullaby”

drrt

Jewel Robbery

But I understand what it is for “Jewel Robbery”, which is comparable (actually inferior) to “Trouble in Paradise” on so many levels, but when it comes to the pre-Code controversy, I’d agree that it’s definitely more shocking than Lubitsch’s masterpiece. I have to say that I pretty much completely agree with Jonathan Rosenbaum’s comments on the film. I know that I might be overreacting to Roger Ebert’s almost mainstreamishly bad research these days, but I cannot say often enough how much I appreciate Jonathan Rosenbaum’s knowledge on films. I might have a hard time following his ideas because he cross-references too many films I have never seen, but he never pretends to know more than he does.

Apart from what Jonathan Rosenbaum has detailed out with many words, I personally think that no good review can possibly replace seeing. It reminds me of German novels. I noticed that in a lot of these novels, characters are described in great detail – how their eyes and ears are shaped, what kind of posture they take when they are sitting, but for some reason it’s never possible to have a clear image despite the seemingly accurate description. In the same way, JR’s article tells you many things, but there are so many more levels and aspects to a film which go beyond what you can say in a review or an essay, just like any description of a face cannot capture it in its complexity.

My favorite detail in “Jewel Robbery” was Kay Francis’s finger movement when her lover walked in and kissed her hand. She was coquetting with him (and literally everybody else there), making a “come here” move with one finger. It was quite splendid to look at, and I think I have never quite seen anything like that before. Everything else about the film was mostly raunchy fun (more than any graphic sex scene could do) and lots of marijuana. In that respect, it was quite special, but in most aspects, I’d say I totally prefer “Trouble in Paradise”, and I am fascinated by these pre-Code films. Is there any way a woman can look more sexy than this?

My desire for more jewel thief stories is now fulfilled, but I’ll gladly see another one if it falls into my hands.

Not every movie is good, sadly

drrt

Save the Green Planet

I think it’s been almost a year since I started seeing this film, but I just couldn’t get through it. There are some films I have blogged about but have not seen in total, like “Salò”, but I still feel like I have seen enough to say something about it. It’s not like I am being Roger Ebert saying something like “I don’t think you need to see Tropa de Elite, I assume it’s the same thing as Tropa de Elite 2” – oh gosh.

However, I have a certain inexplicable fascination with “Salò”, like everybody does I suppose, but much less so with “Save the Green Planet”. Let me mention its good points first: I thought it was incredibly well-done, well-crafted, well-acted – everything about the film screams high quality to you, even though it was apparently also done on the cheap. I thought this is quite impressive considering the high amount of decent-looking CG and post-processing. I thought all the actors in the film were splendid, especially Shin Ha-kyun who is one of the reasons why I watched the film in the first place.

Sadly, that is it. The film was a recommendation from quite a bunch of people from the Korean Blogathon back then, and now I have to question these people’s tastes quite seriously. Or rather, I don’t know who they are and now I am even less inclined to find out. “Save the Green Planet” is advertised as a black comedy, or must at least have some comical elements in it. I thought “The Host” was funny, even though it wasn’t quite advertised as a comedy, but this film is practically the opposite. It’s downright painful. Everything about the film is excruciatingly sad, I thought it was so unbearable I stopped watching. Later on, I wanted to know what it was all about, skimmed through the middle part and watched the end… The film brought out literally every single cliché about evil humans, from starving African kids to concentration camps. It’s even claiming that only humans are cruel animals out there, in how they kill each other and oppress others for their own benefit. I am pretty sure that quite a lot of animals do exactly the same thing, if not even “worse”. Bottom line: The plot of the film is rather stupid, amazingly sad and seems to have no value whatsoever.

Next time, please somebody recommend a good Korean movie to me. Thanks.

Ingrid Bergman is Hollywood’s ice queen indeed

drrt

Spellbound

Today, Loris has complained a little bit about how I have not updated my blog in awhile. I have been busy. Now, truth to be told, I wasn’t technically busy (though I am indeed behind with some of my work), it’s rather that I have not been in the mood of writing blog postings. At the same time, of course, the clock is ticking, and I feel like I have already forgotten half of “Spellbound” already, so I should better say what I remember about it.

Writing a blog post late has the benefit that by this time, I have typically figured out what I truly found memorable about a film. It’s just like listening to an album a second time – most often the experience is entirely different. I rarely re-watch a film, but I do think about films differently when it’s been a week or so. For example, I almost fell asleep back when I saw “Menschen am Sonntag”, but somehow elements of the film still remain fresh in my memory, and I have a tender fascination for it. “Spellbound” is also perhaps one of Hitchcock’s more memorable films, especially for the dream sequence.

In fact, I saw the dream sequences several times in museums, whenever there was some Dalí exhibition around, and now I finally got around to see it in the context of the original movie. Considering that everything in the dreams are ultimately explained by the story, I have to admit that the mystery and ambiguity that comes with most of Dalí’s work has gotten destroyed a little. Being able to understand our dreams fully is mere wishful thinking, and only a Hitchcock movie allows you to do that without being completely ridiculous. As a storytelling device, I thought the dreams were quite lovely and almost felt a little short. I totally wanted to see more of it.

Apart from the dream sequence, the film was typical Hitchcock – a suspenseful thriller and a nice revelation at the end. The other truly enticing element about “Spellbound” was actually the combination of Gregory Peck and Ingrid Bergman. I am a fan of both actors, albeit without a good reason – the former for “Roman Holiday” and the latter for literally everything else she has done except “Casablanca”. I think they look lovely together, and “Spellbound” is perhaps the most romantic Hitchcock I have seen so far. A lot of attention has been given to the blossoming love between these characters, which goes beyond your usual Hitchcock which is pretty much just “man with shallow blonde”. (“Vertigo” is the big exception in this case, it still qualifies as “man with blonde”, but it’s a complicated obsession.)

I will definitely see “Notorious” and “Psycho” some day, but wow I am running out of Hitchcocks to see, aren’t I?

This year’s “12 Days of Christmas”

As you might remember, every once in awhile, I would set up a “one movie per day” goal for a specific amount of days. This year, my last day of “work” is on December 20, making it exactly 12 days all the way up to December 31. Perfect!

Now that Gorp also has published his tentative 2011 ranking, I figured that it would be interesting to see some 2011 (or at least recent films) for these 12 days.

So far I am considering these, in no particular order:
– Another Earth
– Film Socialisme
– The Ides of March
– Copie conforme
– Blue Valentine

– Pina
– Never let me go
– Mildred Pierce

– Melancholia
– Le Havre
– My week with Marilyn
– The King’s Speech
– The day he arrives
– To Die Like a Man
– Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
– Heartbeats
– Drive
– Meek’s Cutoff
– Winter’s Bone

Other things I have planned for Christmas break:
– Finish Dexter season 5
– Finish ME’s outfit of the day
– Finish watching all the movies I have started but never finished
– Get up-to-date running anime, and finish a few old ones
– Learn to take better pictures
– Lose a good chunk of weight
– Go through the rest of “Roly Poly”
– Make a realistic math books reading plan
– Start and potentially finish a new, simple sewing project

I should take a “final break” again

drrt

The Guard

Time for more rantings: I am not particularly efficient these days. I should work on my take-home final and I need to make some more progress on research. Feeling guilty for watching too many movies, I have now stopped doing that, but now there’s a compulsion to compensate for that which has now officially kicked in: I plan to go to school on Sunday just to get Starbucks mugs for cheaper (and hope that they will be there!), I am meeting with people for lunch today and Saturday, and I prefer thinking about things I want to buy rather than things I want to do. (Going on a trip on Christmas is the big exception here. But then again, that is also an extremely money-consuming endeavor which will serve my desire to escape the stressful world of work at the moment.) I totally am aware that

But then there are these movies which fall out of the scheme. I am not watching such films to escape anything, I am watching them because I really, really want to. Pixelmatsch ranked it second in his Berlinale 2011 list (I think that is only because he is biased towards “Come rain, come sunshine”) and later on, Loris and other people heartily recommended it to me. It was a film I had extremely high expectations for, I was excited almost to a physical level when I finally could watch the film.

“The Guard” did not disappoint. It had great actors and a very fluid, suspenseful storytelling. I absolutely loved the way the film was referencing other genres (haha Western shootout!) but I could not help but constantly compare it both to “Memories of Murder”, with which it shares the theme and the scenery, and “In Bruges” with which is shares Brendan Gleeson and almost everything else – atmosphere, human interaction, silly philosophical villains, a relatively weak female character, the ending. The McDonaugh brothers are geniuses, and while I still think that “In Bruges” is the greater film, “The Guard” has its own merits. Hopelessly funny and with some sweet surprises here and there, it focuses very closely on Brendan Gleeson’s character and develops it better. Unlike “In Bruges”, he is a little bit of a representation for the sloppy, proud and openly racist Irishman. The racism is a prime example for why he’s a complicated character – the black FBI he befriends says he cannot figure out whether he is really smart or really dumb. I’d say you cannot quite figure out anything about him. But no matter how he really is, whether he is good or bad – all these things we see about him make this character unusually likable.

As with “In Bruges”, the end makes you ponder. When I see a film like this with an open end, I prefer to think of them as such but with the strong possibility that the person survived. I am optimistic like that. In both films, it is as if the entire story was designed to let the character who might have survived live at the end. In the case of “In Bruges”, Gleeson’s character practically sacrificed himself for the other; in the case of “The Guard”, the open end fits the character, but it also makes a lot of sense. He needs to escape the bigger bosses who are pulling the strings behind the drug business, and faking his death even if it is to his closest friends is the safest way to achieve that. If he is smart, which I’d expect given his great reasonings throughout the film, then this is almost the obvious course of action. In that respect, I am quite happy to see a film that is so consistent in its writing and makes so much sense.

Here’s hoping that “The Guard” will achieve the success it deserves. If you didn’t like “In Bruges” (how can you not?!) you will most likely also not like this one. But if you do, “The Guard” is a must see as it was perhaps one of the most enjoyable films I have seen this year.

In retrospect, the title is really well-chosen

drrt

La Grande Illusion

I finished 5 paper reviews today, most of which I am rather unsatisfied with, but then again there is no good reason to spend an incredible amount of time on paper reviews. They were mostly bad papers and the really good paper was interesting but I would prefer to read the paper version of it, because the 4-page-version doesn’t really give you enough information. Or maybe I am really too dense to understand the paper but I choose not to believe that. On top of all that, The Big Boss sent me an e-mail this evening, making me feel really really guilty for not having worked hard enough. With that said, I decided to write this posting first and then write the one for “The Guard” later, although I saw it earlier.

On another completely unrelated side note, I wonder if you can get “Dial M for Murder” somewhere in its 3D version and then use some 3D glasses to watch it. But I guess the technology must be different and so I have no idea how that is supposed to work.

After digressing so much, I should probably say something about the film itself. But I will do so by digressing more. I was recently told that I like “Big Bang Theory” because I am as nerdy as the guys. That is a valid point but not entirely true. Certainly I am nerdy but I have almost no interest in physics whatsoever. I always thought I did, but learning more and more about it, I came to the conclusion that physics doesn’t excite me as much as it does for many of my friends, and that there are a lot of aspects of it that I just am unable to buy. On the other hand, I like to dance, I am into buying clothes, jewelry and shoes (although not as much as a certain other person) – technically I am like Penny and the guys at the same time. There is another similar example: I recently had a discussion on how boring I think biomedical engineering is. I called it the uncanny valley of the world of science and engineering – if something is close enough to what I do I find it interesting, if something is far away, there is a good chance I find it fascinating. If you tell me that you think about biomed before you go to sleep and you are not doing that because you are going to make tons of money in the industry, I am probably going to declare you crazy and lose interest in befriending you. I am into the extremes, no matter what it is. However, if you are into anything in the humanities or arts, there is a high chance I would find it interesting too. In the same way, there is the category “cerebral movies that I don’t watch”, even though I normally like them. I should have added “La Grande Illusion” to this category.

Actually the film not really that cerebral and the sophisticated aspects of the film actually help. I liked the topics the film addressed. The decline of the Ancien Régime, the differences between classes, human friendships overcoming national borders – all of these are really beautifully and carefully treated throughout the film. All in all, it was a well-written film which was suspenseful (but much less so than other French films such as “Le salaire de la peur” or “Le Trou”), had some lovely characters and really awesome actors supporting them. Boeldieu and Rauffenberg were perfectly cast, I think there are no two other actors who could possibly have pulled that off. But I guess that concludes it. Despite all that, I think the film is simplistic and portrays a world which simply has never existed. To me the film merely represents wishful thinking, something like Renoir’s personal utopia in which a German woman would fall in love with a Frenchman during the WWI, and in which every major character is exceedingly good. The film is the French “Casablanca”, though of course it’s not as bad. It’s one of these films which looks almost targeted at the American audience which loves these fairytales praising human goodness. Of course the French hated the film for portraying likable Germans and the Germans hated it because the most likable character in the film was the Jew. (This fact actually makes me like the film more.)

All in all, “La Grande Illusion” has drowned dead in its politics and I had some seriously issues with its optimism. If a movie shall be judged by how realistic its characters are, this is probably the worst film of all times. Nothing about it particularly stood out and even though I think it’s good I saw it, I find it totally overrated for being such a highly acclaimed film. But who knows, maybe there is some irony here which I am unable to see.

I have no idea which movie to watch next

drrt

Friends with Benefits

After seeing “No Strings Attached”, it was clear that this film must be watched as well, and if it’s just for comparison’s sake. I had a feeling that “Friends with Benefits” would be the better film because it garnered much better reviews, and so it had to come second.

Well, the comparison is awfully easy. “No Strings Attached” was stupid and conservative to the point of being almost infuriating, whereas “Friends with Benefits” might be a little simple but certainly didn’t have this touch of conservativeness to it – thankfully nobody marries in it at least. While “No Strings Attached” is a rom-com (this somewhat pejorative abbreviation for “romantic comedy” totally fits its description), “Friends with Benefits” is much more like a modern screwball comedy: People fast-talk throughout the funniest scenes, and the unusual, hilarious, beautifully shot beginning captures silly break-ups so well that I immediately got a good start into the film. “This is a movie I want to see more of”, I thought. Furthermore, sex scenes are shot with a pleasant easiness. Unlike in “No Strings Attached” (which tries to be raunchy and ‘exciting’), the actors simply stay in the bedroom, but they display the actual convenience of being in a non-emotional relationship: You can say openly what you want without having to feel embarrassed about it.

Certainly the film has a few weaknesses. Somebody is trying to play Woody Allen by putting a lot of New York love into this, the film was way too short (I think there are a lot of scenes especially with the mother and the gay friend which got cut out) and the film becomes a little emo after the amusing sex part is over. The characters’ confident and funny front is obviously only a mask to hide their lack of self-esteem, but all of that felt really lovely because it pretty much makes sense.

If you want to watch only one of these two sex friends movies, I’d definitely say you should go for this one. Justin Timberlake is a million times funnier than Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis owns Natalie Portman by a million. Here’s hoping that she will become a big star like she deserves.

She was actually 15 during filming

drrt

The Crush

Two blog posts, two e-mails, and a whole lot of work. That is pretty much what my life is looking like right now, and since I feel like I have not slept enough yesterday, I begin with these blog posts which I’ve been meaning to write before Thanksgiving weekend. Thanksgiving was a disaster, and I vow to never celebrate anything else besides Christmas and birthdays unless it’s really necessary.

Currently I really like watching these movies which have practically nothing to do with my life, and I am strangely coming to appreciate these teenage cult movies like “Heather” or, well, this film. It’s really not a good movie, and for the majority of the film, I felt not at ease with the characterization of Darian. Turning a 14-year old into this terrifying monster, while the main character being practically innocent, feels a little strange. I am pretty convinced such crazy children do not exist, and that this is probably some very strange form of male fantasy, considering that said 14-year old monster comes in the form of Alicia Silverstone.

Nevertheless, the non-chemistry between Alicia Silverstone and Cary Elwes makes the film worthwhile, the former perhaps the most beautiful woman in this world, the latter surprisingly cute. Considering that the story was suspenseful but ultimately straightforward and a little bit pointless, the entire weight of the film is carried by the protagonists’ performance. Alicia Silverstone is amazingly sexy and scary, and Cary Elwes looks amazingly scared, so all is well. Ultimately, I think I practically watched the film just for her, because I love seeing my favorite actors’ early performances (Jean-Pierre Léaud!) and because in the particular case of Alicia Silverstone, she totally has not been given enough good roles. Perhaps Darian Forrester is even her greatest role for lack of others.

I saw this movie pretty randomly on a blog post which was mostly a musing on the word “crush”. The mentioning of an Alicia Silverstone film with that title sounded extremely intriguing, so here I am. Apart from that, however, there aren’t any particularly good reasons to see the film unless you have a sudden desire for something deliciously 90s and would like something else than a high school flick.

I really like the word “garçonne”

drrt

Le Roi de Coeur

Today is one of these days where I am amazingly tired. I want to go to sleep early and have time to kill, because I don’t think I can do anything productive. The things I could do are: Watch a movie and blog about it, write e-mails to friends, read newspaper articles, clean up my apartment and wash dishes, do actual work. Thinking about it, when I am home, these are the only things I do. I started cleaning up my apartment but it’s boring and tedious. I am interested in von Randow’s analysis of Sarkozy, but my brain does not compute enough to handle such articles articles and for the same reason, I feel like I should not write e-mails when the result might be bad. The people I have to write to deserve better than that. Now, I watched a movie and am worried that my blog post will succumb to the same fate, but then I realized that “Le roi de coeur” actually stirred up emotions which I thought were interesting.

At first, “Le roi de coeur” seemed unlike any other French film. Just by glancing at it, it looks dated, very much unlike the timeless style of the Nouvelle Vague. The clothes here belong into a theatre, not into a movie. Since the storyline also seems fairly chaotic throughout the whole film, I wasn’t really sure what to make out of it at first. But as expected, I came to understand the eccentricities of the film very quickly. They just dress like that, they are crazy but actually not crazy at all. When I got that the film has to be understood as a fairy-tale, that unlike most other films about crazy people, this film is not supposed to be realistic by representing actual mental people at all, I felt different about it. In fact, above the superficial and silly side, I thought the film was actually extremely subtle and deep. The film goes very closely into the direction of theatre and the members of the mental institutions are a slightly modernized version of the fool from the Middle Ages. They can say all these things that “normal people” would never say; by presenting you with their own logic, they make you realize that not everything we do makes sense at all. Certainly soldiers won’t just kill each other at sight like they do in the film, but as an allegory there is some truth to it – soldiers in war are the craziest thing, and that was just a humorous way of showing it.

“Le roi de coeur” is a little bit like “Turandot” – very poetic, very symbolic and it follows its own rules. Despite the lack of realistic characters and obvious humor (it’s not a ha-ha-ha kind of film but the humor is more subtle), the film showed an amazing humanity. These crazy characters are so fascinating and enthusiastic and likable. They wear their hearts on their sleeves, and that generated a few immensely touching scenes especially towards the end. I was much more moved by this humanity than I ever would be by listening to Shostakovich’s “Leningrad”.

I heard that the film was not popular in France, but very much more so in the U.S. Well, truth to be told the Frenchness of the film does indeed look… odd. It might also not help for the French that French people speak French, Germans speak German and the Scottish speak English here. Plus the Scottish kilts are funny to the point of being almost sexy but they might offend your average French machismo. Considering that the film has a plethora of continuity errors and totally a confusing plot, I am also not surprised that it became something like a cult film. It’s also much closer to the American image of France with all their brothels and silly costumes, but I like that. I am happy to see a French film that is neither Nouvelle Vague nor overly intellectual (I do count “Les Valseuses” or “Themroc” as intellectual film).

You must be wondering why I watched the film in the first place. Indeed, none of my usual sources of films (recommendations from any of you guys or lists of best films or certain websites like “They shoot movies don’t they?”) would actually contain this film, and even if it did it probably wouldn’t have caught my eye. The solution to the mystery is the following: I got a recommendation for this film from the category “professors I had a crush on” (as Loris would have put it). I come to the realization that I really have a certain for life in other epochs and was quite fascinated by the fact that grew up with all these movies that we watch today because we are culturally interested people. Of course I asked him if he watched a lot of western too, and he said he prefers Italian over American western films.

If you feel like watching something different, which is so entirely different from anything you have seen before, go and see “Le roi de coeur”. It is special in so many senses.

I’m pouring my heart out here

drrt

Onegin

On an episode of “The Big Bang Theory” I recently watched, the term “Weltschmerz” came up. Leonard’s crisis was probably something different from what I think Weltschmerz is (specifically, it was way too comical to be seriously qualified as such), but the term hits this version of Onegin pretty well.

To some degree, I am feeling some sort of Weltschmerz today, but strangely, just stating the problem exactly, as in admitting precisely what it is, was enough to realize how much these are bogus problems, ephemeral moods, no more. It did not really help much that I also watched a Eugene Onegin adaptation. There are some stories that I would watch over and over, starting with Shakespeare plays (specifically the Midsummer Night’s Dream, Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet and Macbeth), and whose stories I know by heart. I could even cite from some of them, and especially after this film, I am pretty sure I can cite some of the most memorable and dramatic lines from Eugene Onegin as well.

I have an obsession with the Midsummer Night’s Dream, but Eugene Onegin tops it all. I don’t think there is any story out there which I feel more empathic towards than this one. The most important elements here are the fact that Tatiana declared her love and that, at the end, she rejects him even though she loved him. Let’s start with the first, easier part. I do not know another woman besides myself who would declare her love for a man, let along write such a declaration of love – which, for me, is even stronger because if it is written down, you can never take it back. In today’s society, there is some female emancipation out there, but when it comes to this detail, women let men take over too often. In my experience, the first moments of a love story are crucial, and Onegin makes no difference in it. It is important that both Onegin and Tatiana fall in love with each other at first sight – this interpretation makes the failure of their love story so much more tragic. If we assume that there is honesty both in Tatiana and Onegin – that she didn’t fall in love with him because he was rich, exciting and new in town, and that he didn’t fall in love with her because she turned into an elegant princess – then the two of them exemplify the saddest “it could have worked out” type love story ever.
The end is even more exciting than that. To me, it always looked incredibly grand what she is doing. Continuing the assumption that she truly loved Onegin, but even if she didn’t, she manages to do something which a similarly passionate, loving person could probably never do – let go of the person you love, even though the feeling is mutual, no matter whether it is out of respect for a husband or for the sake of petty social norms. One might construe this as a weakness, the inability to step over the social bounds and morals that you were brought up with, but knowing how hard this is, I cannot help but view it as grandeur instead.
Onegin could be interpreted in a similar way. On the assumption that he loved Tatiana ever since the beginning, even if this love started off as something different than hers, he was indeed merely honest. He knew of his incapability to commit, so instead of compromising her honor and hurting her feelings by playing around with her and then leave her, he chooses not to take advantage of her feelings because they were deeper than his.

What I really liked about the film was how it emphasized on the duality between the main characters. Both Tatiana and Onegin say at some point in the film that their lives is hollow and empty, to be exact, Onegin does so at the beginning of the story and Tatiana does at the end. They are unable to act against what their torn society made them to be – Onegin is forced into the duel with Lenski and Tatiana is forced to marry another man and stay faithful to him. Both could have potentially said no at some point, but neither is capable to do so. In the film, their letters to each other are being shown almost one after another, showing how similar they are. Certainly Onegin’s letter is more verbose and more beautifully written, while Tatiana’s feels much more honest and truthful. But both show that they have a similar concept of love. They are both calling out for the other’s to respond favorably; they are both ashamed and in fear that the endeavor will be unsuccessful; both are aware that their letters are inappropriate, Onegin’s because he is writing to a married woman and Tatiana’s because she is a woman. Both declare that they cannot be without the other and in both cases it becomes clear that their lives will indeed remain empty throughout their lives, making them unrealistic novel characters as opposed to, say, Tatiana’s family.

At the end of the day, I watched the film partially because I also watched Tcherniakov’s production of Tchaikovsky’s opera, and I wanted to talk about it. The opera was great, in every sense, but I suppose what I wanted to talk about the most was the story itself. The biggest difference between the opera and the film is that Onegin’s declaration of love in the opera seems silly and superficial and puts him into a horrible light, whereas Tatiana’s passionate love letter takes up 1/4 of the whole opera. (Perhaps I am exaggerating but it certainly feels that way.) Liv Tyler’s Tatiana seems much, much less passionate, but feels more like the ice beauty who deeply suffers from the inside. Ralph Fiennes… I couldn’t quite care for him, though he made Onegin a much more likable person than the opera version. Liv Tyler did her role so much better than Ralph Fiennes, though their chemistry together was good, so I am not complaining.

There are many things I watch as a die-hard fan, and the Onegin film is definitely one of them. I love the story and it is very pleasant to see it in the context of these wonderfully pastel-colored, almost Sofia Coppola-like backgrounds. Everything – costumes, cinematography, lighting – I thought the film was a visual feast and transports its message quite well. The movie just looks awfully un-Russian and very, very British in its coldness, which is why I would absolutely discourage anybody of you to watch it, if you are not as much of a fan of the Onegin story as I am.