http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2005/apr/15/1
6/4/2013 8:56pm
Return of the cold war
Russian cinema is going through a revolution - and wants to take on Hollywood.
Nick Paton Walsh reports
Friday April 15, 2005
The Guardian
Once upon a time, not so long ago, there were two sides: the warriors of
light, and the warriors of dark. They battled endlessly, until one day
deciding upon a truce lest they wipe each other out. The forces of good
were regulated during the day by the forces of evil's day watch, and the
forces of evil kept in check by their competitor's night watch. But,
despite this deal, good must still fight the forces of evil at night,
who roam our cities sucking the blood from innocent citizens.
The anecdote may sound like a Soviet relic's take on capitalism
triumphing over communism, but it is in fact the premise for Nochnoi
Dozor, or Night Watch, one of a new wave of homegrown blockbusters
sweeping Russian cinemas. Dozor took £2.8m at Russian box offices in its
first week, and grossed £9m in 2004 - the highest ever for a
post-Soviet Russian film.
Its success is being touted as proof that Russian film can make money domestically and perhaps abroad. Persistent
rumours tip Brad Pitt to star in a Hollywood prequel or sequel to
Nochnoi Dozor, and the film's author, former psychologist Sergei
Lukyanenko, has reportedly been asked to write a script by Fox
Searchlight, who have acquired the film for autumn release in the US.
The film's runaway success has also fuelled a coup for Russian cinema.
As talk of a new cold war-esque relationship between an interventionist
Washington and non-democratic Moscow grows, Russian films have begun to
dent the market share of its traditional Hollywood foe. In 2001, for
example, Russian cinemas took £34.4m, according to Alexander Semionov,
editor of Russian Cinema Business Today, only 3% of which was from
Russian films. In 2004, however, the box office take had rocketed to
£74.5m, of which Russian films - mostly Nochnoi Dozor - accounted for
12%. The industry is experiencing a commercial revolution that may
outstrip even its greatest moments as the prime medium for Soviet
propaganda. In just the first three months of this year, Russian films
have taken £20.5m at the box office.
Yuri Gladilshikov, film critic for the Vedomosti newspaper, says: "Five
years ago Russian TV serials ousted the American ones from prime time.
Now, little by little, this has been repeated in the cinema. It is too
early to speak about a 'victory' over the Americans, but this reflects a
serious change in the consciousness and demands of the audience. It's a
phenomenon among the young, the main cinema audience. Clearly they want
to see Russian films."
Yet as with all Russian revolutions, there is a political architect. In
September 2002, the ministry of culture, since then reformed by the
Putin administration into an agency, declared it wanted to invest in the
Russian market. Russian directors were struggling at the time to
release 57 films a year, and needed state subsidies to put them on the
screen. Minister Mikhail Shvidkoi said he wanted Russia to produce at
least 100 films a year, and offered to finance a third of these, with
directors having to propose a script the ministry would then sanction.
Most importantly these films had to be "patriotic", "historic" or for
children, perhaps a sign that Putin shares Lenin's edict that "among all
the arts, for us cinema is the most important".
Patriotism is a key thread that unites Nochnoi Dozor, Turetski Gambit (a
highly popular tsarist-era war drama) and another blockbuster, Lichni
Nomer (aka Countdown), along with state sponsorship, and partnership
with state-owned First Channel TV. The opening credits of Lichni Nomer
(which boasted a budget of £3.7m but never quite reached the astronomic
profitability it was aimed at) is surely a prime example of how the
Kremlin would like things run - state TV and the government working with
socially responsible business to feed the population "useful" ideas.
They read: "Presented to you by First Channel, the Federal Agency of
Culture and Cinema, and Sibneft" - one of many oil companies keen to
remain friendly with the Kremlin since the arrest of Yukos CEO Mikhail
Khodorkovsky.
Lichni Nomer itself is a clumsy action thriller that follows the
conspiracy theory blueprint regularly touted by officials to explain
hostage atrocities like Beslan and the Nord Ost theatre siege. A Russian
security service officer is forced to confess to trying to blow up
apartment buildings in Moscow (a popular theory surrounding the
apartment blasts that sparked the second Chechen war in 1999, which in
turn put ex-KGB officer Putin in power). A rogue Russian billionaire (a
loose reference to Boris Berezovsky, accused of masterminding such
schemes by the same theorists), finances the terrorist seizure of a
circus in Moscow. The security officer single-handedly breaks into the
circus to save the hostages, one of whom is, of course, his daughter.
If this doesn't already sound familiar enough, the film ends happily
with the officer vindicated and all the bad guys very dead. The evil
terrorists, trained at a camp in the Middle East where their Arab
masters appear strangely Slavic beneath their make-up, mimic the Bin
Ladenites in Trey Parker's Team America: World Police, roaming the world
in chequered scarves intoning "Allahu Akhbar".
The film's makers were on the defensive from day one. Alex Eksler, film
critic for the pro-Kremlin Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper, wrote a
glowing review, saying its "professionalism" and "class" overcame the
suspicion he felt after hearing it was "ordered by the state" and the
"Russian answer to Hollywood". The state news agency RIA Novosti praised
the film and said: "The film-makers, imitating Hollywood, strive for
political correctness and depict the Chechens as victims more than
villains even though they are involved in the seizure of a circus. In
the film, Americans are the Russians' allies. The leader of the
Americans is a noble black general. Both secret services cooperate to
save the comical, but nice Europeans."
Few doubt that the film's toadiness helped raise its huge budget. Anton
Dolin, film critic for the Gazeta newspaper, said: "We are living in a
society which slowly but surely is moving towards authoritarianism, so I
think a film [about the suffering of Chechens] is impossible. Today no
private producer would risk giving money to make [such] a film."
Adopting the tone of a Soviet commandant extolling his battalion's
vanquishing of the Nazis on the battlefield, Minister Shvidkoi last
month announced he expected Russian films to account for a share greater
than 25% of the cinema market in the near future: "The fact is that the
national product has pushed out foreign ones in a process of normal
competition," he said of Russian cinema's ability to win the cinema war
in the same way it had won the TV serial war.
In the coming months, a host of new blockbusters promise to let Russia's
"forces of good" in the cinema hold the ground they have taken. A £5.2m
budget fantasy, Volkodav (Wolfhound), is promised, as is a sequel to
another popular gangster flick, Bumer (aka Bummer) - imaginatively known
as Bumer 2 - and, of course, Nochnoi Dozor 2. Proof, if needed, that
the cold war passion for beating the enemy at their own game lives on.
· Nochnoi Dozor (Night Watch) will be released in the UK in October.
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment