| Index | 3 reviews in total |
13 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
East-European Magic Realism, 20 August 2002
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Author:
dromasca from Herzlya, Israel
The Slovak movies series on my cable programming brought me the opportunity
to see another more than satisfying film. 'Landscape' (English translation
of the title) is located in an imaginary place in rural Slovakia. It is
built of a series of non-related episodes, each the length of a short
movie.
There is no continuity in the action, but there is a continuity in the the
chronology, as time passes from the period before the 2nd world war until
the contemporary times. The microcosm of the small village is invaded by
war, Fascists and Communists alternate at the rule, new forces destroy
slowly the traditional way of life. Slowly, the series of of short human
stories connect together to make what we may call magic
history.
A very good movie, though the stories in the first half seemed to me more
coherent and interesting. Tens of small roles and different characters
provide more good acting than in one hundred Hollywood movies. I wish this
film would have luck and enjoy an international distribution so that it can
be seen by broader audiences, and I also hope that after it happens the
director will not be invited to the US to direct Mission Impossible 4, and
not even Titanic 2.
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
the dying rural soul of a culture, 1 October 2007
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Author:
oowawa from California
Krajinka, aka "Landscape," consists of 10 separate vignettes, or short
stories, grafted together chronologically. The time span stretches from
pre-WWII Czechoslovakia to the latter half of the 20th century.
Although a couple of characters reappear in episodes, the stories are
mainly independent of each other.
What unites the stories is a rural spirit of life that is ribald,
compassionate, cruel, and above all resilient. The "landscape" shrugs
off Fascists (both Hungarian and German), and subsequent Communists.
Still, there is a feeling that we are witnessing the end of an era, the
gradual demise of a way of life that will never come again. The movie
is a eulogy for this dying culture.
The beauty of the film is in its close attention to details--the
motorcyclist who wears his jacket backwards to keep out the wind; the
nose-wrestling contest; the hapless beggar who hides in the sewage of
an outhouse; the clock museum of a beautiful war widow. There are also
a few brief scenes of animal cruelty that will make many very
uncomfortable--innocent in the context of this country culture, but
nonetheless hard to watch (the scene in the final segment of a fox
writhing in a steel-jawed trap is particularly disturbing).
But the movie is basically full of life, love and soul. A fitting
eulogy for a dying way of life.
3 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Gritty Charm and Heart, 28 August 2002
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Author:
Pedro from Melbourne, Australia
I recently saw this wonderful film on Australia's multi-cultural network, SBS Televsion. Martin Sulik - a comparatively young film artist - Directs his film with assurance and gentle humour. Krajinka' ('Landscape') is constructed around a narrative suite, with each story building to reveal a potted history of Slovenia. These are ironic and tragic stories seen through the eyes and lives of Sulik's down-to-earth characters. Each story has its genuinely moving momments, but the film never stoops to sentimentality.
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