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April 1995, Week 2

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Subject:
From:
Milos Stehlik <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 7 Apr 1995 19:23:50 CDT
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----------------------------Original message----------------------------
 
 
On Thu, 6 Apr 1995, Emily Zants wrote:
 
> ----------------------------Original message----------------------------
> The most spectacular cinematography I've ever seen!  And he and his
> daughter are a great acting team.  Those of us who attended the Sarasota
> French Film Festival last November got to see it; come join us at the
> 1995 Festival!  Accoring to an announcement I received from UniFrance
> Film, _Burnt by the Sun_ is scheduled for release in the United States
> in June 1995.  The Distributors were a little slow!
>         The film lasts 152 minutes -- and I was sorry it was over!  If
> you haven't seen Mikhalkov's previous film, _Close to Eden_, available in
> VHS format, you can get an idea of the kind of cinematography he does,
> though that film is a historical peasant setting of Russia long ago,
> whereas _Burnt by the Sun_ is Russia, with the officer's family living a
> pastoral existence during the time of Stalin.  Mikhalkov himself plays a
> hero of the Bolshevik Revolution.  We were told at the festival that he
> decided to play the role himself so that his daughter would feel natural
> playing the role of "daughter" in the film -- and the father-daughter
> love that comes through is phenomenal.  The ending is heart-breaking
> tragedy and has all the brutality of the Stalin regime in it, and it
> arrives and strikes only when the viewer's anguish has reached a peak:
> such a beautiful, loving family realtionship can't really be destroyed,
> can it?  And throughout, the cinematography, the lighting!!!!
>         You won't criticize the Academy for selecting this one!
>
> ! Prof. Emily Zants, U. of HI  "... and the whole of Combray ... sprang !
> ! Tel: (808) 237-8082          into being, town and gardens alike, from !
> ! FAX: (808) 237-8284          my cup of tea."                   Proust !
> ! [log in to unmask]           Speak of the Butterfly Effect!!!
>
>
> On Wed, 5 Apr 1995, Donald Larsson wrote:
>
> > ----------------------------Original message----------------------------
> >
> > Leave it to the Academy to pick the most obscure candidate for Best Foreign
> >  Film.
> > Does anyone have information about the Russian film that won--and whether it
> > "deserved" it more than the Macedonian, Cuban and Tawainese candidates?
> >
> > Don Larsson, Mankato State U.  (MN)
> >
>
Beg your pardon, but isn't the original title of "Close to Eden" Urga, and
wasn't it set in Mongolia, where Mikhalkov went to make the film under
quite difficult circumstances?
Milos Stehlik

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