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| Index | 64 reviews in total |
42 out of 49 people found the following review useful:
Beautiful, tragic, stunning., 21 February 2000
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Author:
contronatura (contronatura@aol.com) from Los Angeles, CA
The very structure of this film perfectly describes its philosophy - a never ending circle. And it's the structure that makes this film work so powerfully. From the shattering opening section, to the startling second part, to the third story that brings it all together, this is a great film. It's been overlooked for some reason, mentioned rarely in film magazines and in best of the decade lists. But it's a phenomenal work, one that needs to be seen.
38 out of 47 people found the following review useful:
One of the best movies I've ever seen, 11 September 2003
Author:
peter_olsson_1 from Höör, Sweden
Beautiful, hard hitting, but still both simple and realistic. One of the
most
beautiful movies I've ever seen. I saw it the first time in 1997 I think
and
I've seen
it at least twenty times so far and it grows bigger every time. I love
this
movie
and can't give any bad comments about it. Some amy say there are some
beautiful scenes here and some ugly scenes there, but I love it just like
it
is and
it's hard to change that.
Firs, the the acting is excellent and the main character Rade Serbedzija
does a
wonderful work as a cynical, down-to-earth photographer, who knows he
can't
escape his destiny and identity, Katrin Cartlidge does an equally
impressive
job,
as well as a lot o the Macedonian bad and good guys of the
film.
Secondly, the cinematography wonderfully depicts the harsh Macedonian
landscapes and sceneries, as well as the torn souls of the land. The music
has
the same impact and feels so natural with the cinematography.
Finally, I could never complaint about the directors excellent work. This
was his
debut if I'm not wrong and that was very promising, but I suppose this was
his
"Citizen Kane" and it'll probably be impossible to make anything
similar.
One rarely sees anything from Macedonia.But this is not only good for
Macedonian cinema, it should have won the Oscar that year.
32 out of 38 people found the following review useful:
Thank you Mr. Manchevski, 5 November 2004
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Author:
GoranToo from Florida
This movie is absolute perfection. I can't believe it took me 10 years
to bump into it by accident. I was surprised to see it was made in 1994
when the entire time I watched it as a reflection rather than prophecy
of the civil war that followed.
The fluency of picture, music, and the story is perfect as viewer is
taken from dramatic landscapes and slow paced life of orthodox priests
to fast paced London streets and offices. Parallel stories in London
fasten the pace even more.
The movie shows we are all connected not only in time (past and future)
but space (geography) as well. War and suffering in one part of the
world affect lives of people in quaint London restaurant. The circle of
human tragedy connects almost every character in the movie. But circle
is imperfect. If the circle were perfect the tragedy would stop when
circle completes. Alas, the tragedy spirals in time and space.
Acting is very real. Time is not wasted overbuilding any character. The
way soundtrack blends with the movie is pure art. Thank you for this
movie Mr. Manchovski. As powerful as the movie is, it's unfortunate it
didn't help prevent the civil war in Macedonia. When hate wins,
innocence looses.
28 out of 32 people found the following review useful:
Time is not a Circle, but War is, 2 December 2001
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Author:
HanYan (daf17@yahoo.com) from Hong Kong/ Ohio, USA
A poignant tragedy about hatred, war, love and taking sides.
Time is not linear in the movie, but the director blatantly tells us that
time is not a circle, so what is? The story is, and perhaps war
is.
The story is told in three parts, with highly ironic titles: Words, Faces,
and Pictures. Each story has meticulously planned, but highly disturbing
parallels.
The story-telling of the movie requires diligent planning, down to every
single detail, exceptional creativity, and extraordinary persistence.
Perhaps that's why the director Milcho Manchevski was fired by both
commercial producers Warner Brothers and 20th Century Fox for "creative
differences"
Before the Rain talks about hate, and how the power of hate can rise above
love. It talks about taking sides, the central character in each section
tries not to take sides, but circumstances often prove such efforts futile.
As with Kiril and Aleksander.
In the film, all events happened before the rain, this sense of urgency,
this beautiful sadness, and this inevitable tragedy.
Before the Rain is my all time favourite movie.
28 out of 39 people found the following review useful:
Perfect Definition & Explanation of the Macedonian Problem, 11 February 2004
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Author:
viktor83 from Berlin, Germany
This film by Milcho Manchevski is the ideal when talking about explaining
and defining the Macedonian problem. I am Macedonian but I live in
Germany.
So I think I have an overview so that I am able to criticize.
The problem between the ethnic groups in Macedonia go around in circles.
But
in the end it turns out that the circle goes round like a ferry wheel.
Everything is happening again and again. The circle is not round though.
In
every end there is a change. A change which always makes the new beginning
worse. In a way it is like a spiral.
And Manchevski is smartly telling three stories. They are not linear, but
in
a way they come close to what the problem really is like. With the last
episode he connects the three stories, and you can feel the message - his
message.
Unfortunately this film was quite popular only in Europe and I think even
in
the US, but in Macedonia it was rarely seen by the people.
I think if every single Macedonian Citizen had seen and understood this
movie, it would be much easier to solve the Macedonian problem
today.
Because what it says is that we ourselves kill each other. Because of
hatred
and ethnic principles we force ourselves to fight against each other. And
that is exactly why it is leading to nowhere. Because it is a circle...and
the circle is not round. And one day, when the spiral is at its end, it's
going to be too late.
22 out of 30 people found the following review useful:
unforgettable and illuminating, 7 May 1999
Author:
Ben Zelkowicz from calarts, CA
i saw this film last year and for the rest of the day could not shake the emotional response it had provoked within me. totally original in its construction, it makes the "inventive" timelines of tarantino's work look childish and simplistic. this film tells so many stories and helped me understand the balkan conflict in a new light-- i can't reccomend it highly enough. one of the greatest in recent memory. absolutely beautiful photography. repeat viewings don't diminish its impact-- a rare achievement, especially for a film that is built on what could have easily been a formal 'gimmick'-- but the semi-cyclic form serves the film and heightens the impact and the meaning.
14 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
From Macedonia With Love, 1 February 2000
Author:
Kirill Galetski (kirill@sptimes.ru) from St. Petersburg, Russia
The wars in former Yugoslavia have resounded in every corner of that region,
and have ignited all manner of subsequent ethnic and religious conflicts
within the newly-formed republics. Focusing world attention upon the region
through the media has occasionally had the positive effect of raising
awareness of the conflicts through art. The work of artists from former
Yugoslavia has found an appreciation that has never really existed before,
partly due to the fact that they are the most fit to interpret the events
there.
The republic of Macedonia is certainly experiencing its share of strife.
Nestled in between the countries of Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece, and Albania,
it is surrounded by strained relations on all sides, countries that have
refused to recognize its autonomy for a long time. A significant Albanian
Moslem minority feuds with the dominant Orthodox Christian Slav population.
Hardly a week passes without a new arms network running from Alabania to
Macedonia being discovered. Despite the presence of U.N. peacekeeping
forces, armed skirmishes ravage the countryside.
Milcho Manchevski left his native Macedonia to pursue a college education in
the U.S. He studied film at Southern Illinois University. Upon graduating,
he moved to New York and began working on commercial, experimental films,
and music videos. BEFORE THE RAIN is his first full-length feature, for
which he returned to his native country to make. He was able to secure
British and French financing with his creative, authoritative and topical
screenplay. An inspiring tale about the senselessness of war and the
fragility of humans and their loves, the film is, despite some minute flaws,
one of the most passionate and sublime cinematic statements of the
'90s.
It has an intriguing, if not wholly original non-linear narrative structure.
Through three episodes titled, "Words," "Faces," and "Pictures,"
respectively, the viewer is introduced to three characters whose lives
interconnect from minute to strongly significant ways.
Kiril (Gregoire Collin, of OLIVIER, OLIVIER) is a young novice in an
Orthodox monastery who cannot help but hide Zamira (Labina Mitevska), a
fugitive Albanian girl, from the villagers who want to execute her for
murdering a shepherd. He does it out of the goodness of his heart, but
perhaps also out of the beginnings of a lustful affection for her. They flee
north in an attempt to find Kiril's uncle in Skopje, and meet with dire
hardship and tragedy.
Meanwhile, in England, Anne (Katrin Kartlidge, most familiar as the lisping
goth girl from Mike Leigh's film NAKED), a photo editor is in the midst of a
personal crisis. She is becoming more and more disaffected with her husband
Nick (Jay Villiers) while experiencing a difficult, confused relationship
with her lover, Aleksandar (Rade Serbedzija), an award-winning native
Macedonian photographer. Unsure of what to do, she distances herself from
both men, but cannot stem the tide of the turbulent events all around her.
The story dispenses with her husband in somewhat contrived way, and she ends
up trying to find Aleksandar, who has since left for Macedonia.
Aleksandar returns to his native village, only to find that the overall
climate has radically changed, and the simple life he tries to rediscover
has since been made more complex by the feuds with the Albanians. His return
is met with mixed reactions from warm welcomes from his close friends, to
cold-shouldering by the newly-armed local anti-Albanian faction, to outright
hatred from some of the Albanians. When his childhood love from a
neighboring village seeks his aid to help protect her daughter, Aleksandar
is thrust into the heart of the conflict, and his refusal to takes sides has
tragic repercussions.
Serbedzija interprets the role with a noble, morally centered sense of
confidence. One of former Yugoslavia's most well known and respected actors
Serbedzija found his role to be a way of protesting the conflicts in his
region-"As an artist, as someone well-known, I had to speak out against
nationalism and war. As Aleksandar was presumed to take sides, so was I.
It's my story. What ends up happening to Aleksandar, when cousins take arms
against cousins, has happened to many in former Yugoslavia and it could
happen to me."
With its non-linear structure, the time-line of the film is somewhat
incoherent, and there are some plot developments in the middle segment,
occurring in England, which are a bit too pat. These are balanced by the
striking, somewhat exotic visuals and original, exhilarating neo-ethnic
music by a group called Anastasia, fine acting (especially by Collin and
Serbedzija), and an overall poignant sense of the waste of war, even a war
in its beginnings.
Manchevski illuminates his use of the film's title-"There was this sense of
something heavy beginning to happen, something looming in the air. At the
same time life was continuing as before. This story doesn't deal with the
political aspects of how wars start. It's about human passion and how it can
lead one in different, unexpected directions. It's about how a war somewhere
in the world might get started and how that can affect your life regardless
of where you are. Ultimately, it's about taking sides."
7 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
masterful plot and execution, 10 May 1999
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Author:
James Stauffer from California
This for my money is one of the best films of the last ten years. The plot does a wonderful job of starting and ending in the same place, a device Pulp Fiction stole and did less well. Essential for anyone who wants to understand the conflict between Orthodox and Muslim cultures in the Balkans and anyone who simply enjoys a finely crafted film.
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Thought provoking, 21 January 2003
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Author:
occtipus from Muskegon, Michigan, USA
I was forced to watch this movie for a college class, and it instantly became one of my favorite movies of all time. The story is exceptional, and the directorial brilliance of its creators brings the tragedy of an entire country to life. It contrasts the folly of war and hatred with beautiful images of the people and places that they destroy.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Really impressive, a mind-changing masterpiece, 20 November 2002
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Author:
Adriano_Lessa from São Paulo, Brazil
This movie is by far, the most touching movie i've ever seen. I think it impressed me just the same as "Merry Christmas Mr.Lawrence", though "Before the Rain" is a much more beautiful movie. It's a raw depicture of the Balkans conflict, but also a beautiful one. One with loads of violence but growing from this violence, there's love and compassion.The most touching movie i've ever seen.
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