Saturday, 13 November 2010

Drifting Clouds recommends: "Katalin Varga"

Drifting Clouds Cinema Group watched Katalin Varga at the BFI on 27th December 2009. The film was made by a British Filmmaker in Romania, in Romanian, check out Hilda Peter in the lead, great acting: true, forceful, generous. Here's what Timeout says

Katalin Varga (2009)

Director: Peter Strickland

Cast: Norbert Tanko, Hilda Peter, Andrea Gavriliu, Roberto Giacomello, Melinda Kántor, Attila Kozma full cast

Genre(s): Drama

Rated: 15

Duration: 85 mins

UK Release: Oct 9 2009

 Movie review

From Time Out London

British writer-director-producer Peter Strickland has decamped to the Transylvanian countryside to fashion a moody and satisfyingly archaic debut drama about a scrawny, middle-aged mother whose sudden lust for vengeance is purely primal. The enigmatic Katalin Varga (Hilda Peter) is ostracised from her village and rejected by her loving husband when a horrid discrepancy from her past comes to light. Shedding no tears, she collects her son Orbàn (Norbert Tanko), gathers up her few belongings and heads off on horse and cart ‘to visit grandmother’. The purpose of – and not to mention her violent commitment to – her mission becomes apparent late in the film, as a series of brutal encounters suggest that she may not be as mentally balanced as we initially assume.

Strickland’s intricate screenplay thrives on not letting us see around the next corner until the very last moment – scenes are often trailed with mysterious preambles, such as when Katalin seduces a man around a campfire and then follows him to a bar before her intentions become clear. Visually, Strickland portrays the same, Romany milieu as Tony Gatlif does but clearly with his mind on the desolate landscapes of the American western. Technical flourishes, such as deploying dense soundscapes of white noise and ambient yelping, imbue unremarkable scenes with a brooding, ambiguous tension. There’s the occasional contrivance to shunt the story onwards, but it’s not enough to cloud the fact that Strickland and his star, Peter, have delivered a film of remarkable assurance and intensity

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