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Film Review: Interpersonal Conflict

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  • Film Review: Interpersonal Conflict

    INTERPERSONAL CONFLICT
    Reviewed by Paul Abelsky

    Russia Profile, Russia
    June 26 2007

    Lighthouse (Mayak)
    Directed by Maria Saakyan
    Featuring Anna Kapaleva, Sofiko Chiaureli, Olga Yakovleva, Mikhail
    Bagdasarov, Anastasiya Grebennikova, Sergei Danielyan
    Russia, Holland (2007)

    The eruption of conflicts across the Caucasus throughout the past
    decade have gradually filtered onto the silver screen, but they
    have not yet received the generous treatment accorded, for example,
    the hostilities that accompanied the breakup of Yugoslavia. The
    imprecision, elusiveness and universal themes of Lighthouse, set
    during a war in some unspecified part of the region, create an abstract
    cinematic outline, a summation of the great calamity that befell the
    Caucasus. For all the variations between the conflicts that ignited
    in the area's different corners, they largely represented a people's
    war, as geopolitical guesswork gave way to untold personal anguish.

    The blazing fault lines that reopened between towns and families are
    in the foreground of this movie. Directed by Maria Saakyan, a native
    of Armenia who has lived in Russia since the early 1990s, the film
    shows Lena (Anna Kapaleva) returning to her village in the Caucasus
    in an effort to convince her grandparents to flee the fighting that
    is enveloping the area. In the film's rendition of the setting, the
    director shows a poetic composite of various locations, visually and
    emotionally reminiscent of Nagorno Karabakh and Abkhazia.

    Straddling cinematic influences from Sergei Paradzhanov to Emir
    Kusturica, the movie presents a rambling and intense personal
    experience which seems tragically preordained. The heroine's
    meanderings are haunted by childhood memories and vain attempts to
    catch a long-delayed train to Moscow. Becoming immersed and trapped
    in the surroundings, Lena will find her resting place there. Her
    rescue mission gradually loses all urgency amidst an understated,
    relentless and almost fatalistic descent into despair. With the
    masterly cinematography that props a fragmented and uneven screenplay,
    the film's economy of means works to a powerful effect, condensing
    the experience in the way more epic war dramas often fail to do.

    http://www.russiaprofile.org/page.php?pageid= Book+Reviews&articleid=a1182859417
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