| Index | 5 reviews in total |
7 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Epic and like a moving tapestry, 12 February 2008
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
While I am a huge fan of Pixar and have complained in a few of my
reviews when I felt some of their shorts were unfairly snubbed by the
Oscars (especially for KNICK KNACK), here I actually think the winning
short for 1998 (Pixar's GERI'S GAME) wasn't nearly as good a film as
Petrov's MERMAID--which was also nominated but somehow came up short.
Russian director Aleksandr Petrov has been nominated for several Oscars
for Best Animated Short Film--such as for THE COW and THE OLD MAN AND
THE SEA. Each features a style totally unlike any other studio, as
Petrov's shorts are like little epic movies and moving tapestries
combined. I am not exaggerating to say that his films are much more
works of art than films--and you could never call them cartoons! I will
try to describe the style, but frankly the only way to really
appreciate them is to see one yourself. The artwork is like a painting
that moves in a very fluid style--like the wind is pushing the scenes.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
If you found the plot hard to follow, here is some help!!!, 26 April 2010
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Author:
Nyssa K from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
A wonderful fantastic animation movie! I read some reviews here that
describe Aleksandr Petrov's films as great on the eyes, but lacking
good plot and being hard to follow. I have to disagree with this
assessment! It's just that Aleksandr Petrov is Russian and in his
animations there are allusions, characters, and motifs that are rooted
in Russian culture and are much more familiar to a Russian person than
a foreigner watching the cartoon. Non-Russians just may need a little
outside help to understand the plot (just like people often read a
libretto before watching an opera to make sure they understand the
action happening on on stage).
!!!A warning that spoilers do follow from this point on!!! (Do not read
beyond this point, if you do not want to read spoilers!) In this story
there are two monks who live by the river. The old monk had sinned in
his youth: he had romance with a young girl, had sex with her, but then
married another woman thereby "dishonoring" the girl who loved him and
trusted him. (We learn this from the flashbacks that the old monk has
and how now he is praying to God and begging him for forgiveness of his
old sins.) The dishonored girl committed suicide by drowning. The young
girl's restless spirit had turned into a mermaid - an evil spirit who
is out to take revenge on the injustice that was done to her in her
life. She takes this revenge by seducing young men with her charms, and
then leading them into the depth of the water and drowning them. (This
kind of wandering evil-spirit of a girl who's life ended before her
time due to cruelty of men is a common character in Russian folklore.
She may appear innocent and charming, but that is just a ploy to trick
the young man into following her.) Naturally, the evil-spirit mermaid
goes after the young monk, who is the apprentice of the old monk (and
is probably like a son to him). Once the old monk realizes what's going
on, he knows that the young monk is about to lose his life to pay for
his (the old monk's) sins. He knows he must protect the young monk. So
he tries to do it through prayer and giving the young monk the cross.
When that doesn't work (the young monk takes a boat out onto the water
to join the mermaid there), the old monk throws himself into a battle
with the mermaid and he dies in the process of that battle, but is able
to save the life of the young monk thereby.
So, as you can probably see, the story and plot of the animation are
quite meaningful, substantial, and even powerful. You just need to be
able to understand it to appreciate it and understand Petrov's work
fully.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Fantasy and memory, 6 October 2008
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Author:
ackstasis from Australia
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I don't think I really need to tell you that 'Mermaid (1997)' is a
visual masterpiece. This is, after all, Aleksandr Petrov, whose
exquisite skill with oil paints on glass is unsurpassed by any animator
ever to have worked in the medium {though I did recently discover a
worthy rival in Alexei Karaev, with ''The Lodgers of an Old House
(1987)'}. The wonderful thing about Petrov's work from 'Cow (1989)'
to 'My Love (2006)' is that sense of timelessness about the
animation, evoking the eternal bliss of our dreams and memories.
However, his films are so focused upon visual storytelling that the
stories themselves are often convoluted beyond comprehensibility, an
issue not aided by Petrov's insistence upon adapting novel-length
literature. The problem with 'Mermaid' is that it only allows itself
ten minutes to develop a complex breadth of ideas, leaving the plot so
vague and ambiguous as to be almost disposable. That said, this is not
a film you're watching for its story, anyway.
An elderly monk, doomed to a life of solidarity after a lost love about
whom he still dreams, is training a young apprentice by the riverside.
This young boy is overjoyed to discover a beautiful mermaid residing
beside his shack, and the pair spend much time playing merrily in the
water. But the old monk senses in this mermaid the spirit of his lost
love, and strictly forbids the friendship. Everything that tales place
after this is a little hazy, but there's an almighty storm, a vicious
swirl of wind and water and a conclusion that sees crude wooden crosses
mournfully lining the shore. 'Mermaid' provided the second of four
Oscar nominations for its famed animator, though it lost this
particular statue to Pixar, whose 'Geri's Game (1997)' is incidentally
my favourite short film from the studio. Petrov would, however, snare
the Oscar a few years later with his masterpiece, 'The Old Man and the
Sea (1999).' However unintelligible the story, this is a marvellous
visual treat that is worth watching at least twice.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Hard to Follow But Darn Pretty, 4 March 2008
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Author:
ShortoftheWeek from United States
The narrative in Mermaid is somewhat muddled. The old monk has what
must be considered a flashback 1/4 of the way through the film and then
a dream 3/4 through, and frankly I'm a bit at a loss to try to explain
either. Generally Petrov's storytelling is considered somewhat
pedantic, despite or perhaps because he works entirely with literary
adaptations, necessitating sometimes difficult omissions. Yet it's his
art that he is famous for, and that is firmly on display in Mermaid. He
is the most accomplished practitioner of a unique medium he animates
using oil paint on glass, using 2-to 3 layers to add depth to the
images, animating new plates as the finished ones dry. It is a
meticulous, yet beautiful technique that has won him much acclaim3
previous Oscar nominations, including the win in 1999 for his
adaptation of Hemingway's Old Man and the Sea. That film was a huge
technical step forward as he adapted his style to the unforgiving IMAX
format with the help of the Canadian production house Pascal Blais.
While Mermaid did not win, it likewise was nominated for the Oscar in
1996. Mermaid is in some ways the perfection of Petrov's original
technique before money, improved technology, and production teams lead
to Old Man and the Sea and My Love. Indeed it was the success of
Mermaid that enabled Petrov to receive the kind of corporate patronage
that allowed those films to happen.
A Movie Acting Like a Spell, 8 April 2011
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Author:
Pierre Radulescu from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This movie is of great beauty, and you can be conquered by the visual
wizardry even if not understanding quite well what's going on there.
The images are oil paintings on glass, witnessing a rare mastership,
and you are like caught by a spell. Yes, it binds its viewers, so
beautiful it is.
Some viewed in this movie only the Christian lesson: the old monk makes
the supreme sacrifice to save the soul of the apprentice, teaching him
(and through the movie also teaching us) the ultimate lesson. I think
there are more valences in this movie, and maybe we should start
methodically, with the title.
Let's try an explanation for what a "rusalka" means. She is a spirit of
the waters; long time ago she committed suicide after being abandoned
by her lover. So a "rusalka" is a drown maiden. She is not properly
dead, rather in an intermediate realm, and she looks for revenge; only
after that she might be fully received in the underworld, to rest for
ever.
Let's now talk about the poem of Pushkin, which this movie is based
upon. It will offer us the clue. Well, it's not that simple: Pushkin
wrote two poems, with the same title, "Rusalka," quite different each
other.
Pushkin created his first "Rusalka" in 1819. It is the story of an old
hermit passing his days in continual prayer, who falls in love for a
"rusalka." The attraction proves fatal: the old friar ends by drowning.
What remains is a gray wet beard flowing over the waters.
In the 1830's Pushkin came back to the subject and started working on a
large dramatic poem that remained unfinished. This second "Rusalka"
would be the inspiration for the opera of Dargomyzhsky. The story is
more elaborated here. A young prince sacrifices the love of a beautiful
maiden in order to make a suitable marriage. The maiden drowns herself
and becomes a "rusalka." Years are passing and the prince will
encounter one day a girl who is the daughter of his long forgotten
love: now herself a little "rusalka." And he realizes that his love
story was the only happy period of his life and nothing else matters
any more. From now on the prince would spend most of his time alone in
the forest of the Dnieper banks.
And we can ask ourselves: is the "rusalka" looking for revenge, or just
for being again together with her lover? It is this ambiguity that
marks the genius of great writers.
The movie of Aleksandr Petrov unifies somehow the stories from the two
poems. The old monk is the prince who in his youth betrayed his love.
He hopes now to find solace through prayers and mortification. The
novice who stays with the hermit will have to learn the way to God
through his own trials and errors.
The story calls in mind somehow the movie of the Korean Kim Ki-Duk,
"Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... Spring." Like there, it is the large
water, and the small shrine, hidden in the woods: an old master, his
novice, the way toward purification going through the sins of the youth
and the remorse and repentance of a whole life. At the end of the movie
we realize that each monk in turn went through the same cycle: sin,
repentance. Time is circular, we are to follow the same cycle of life.
There is no history, just a present that comes again and again, with
each new generation.
There is this circularity of time that marks also the movie of
Aleksandr Petrov. The old monk sees in the novice his own image from
long time ago. He is just entering the cycle of life, this novice, and
the old monk wants to protect him.
So let me give you my understanding of the movie: As the novice starts
his love games with the "rusalka," the hermit has a flashback, the
remembrance of his sins of youth. He realizes that the girl in the
river is his own love that he betrayed long time ago (an interesting
detail: the sledge from today's hut appears also in the flashback; to
say nothing about the fox who runs at the beginning of the movie, a
witness of this circularity of time, of this endless repetition of sin
and repentance).
The monk falls asleep while praying and in his dream he ascends Jacob's
Ladder to find advice from Heaven. The Blessed Virgin is handing him
the Lamb of God, and the monk realizes that he got the Stigmata of
Jesus: the heavenly advice is to offer himself to sacrifice in order to
save the novice. And that's what he's doing: going to the river,
throwing himself inside the waters to save the novice, dying, together
with the "rusalka," who is now revenged. The novice remains alone,
taking care of two graves: monk and "rusalka" have finally found their
solace.
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