Russia's
'Leviathan' has high Oscar hopes but hits nerve at home
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[February 13, 2015]
By Eric Kelsey
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
Andrey Zvyagintsev, the director of the Oscar-nominated,
Kremlin-rankling corruption drama "Leviathan," pauses,
looks at his producer and wryly smiles.
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"Should I tell the truth?" the 51-year-old asks.
"No, go ahead and lie," Alexander Rodnyansky replies with a
sarcastic chuckle.
"Leviathan" tells the tragic tale of middle-aged auto mechanic
Kolya, whose life crumbles after he challenges a corrupt mayor
over the seizure of his waterfront house and business. It has
earned universal praise abroad but has divided home audiences.
The movie, which has been attacked by Russian officials as high
as the culture minister for its bleak portrayal of everyday life
and the coarse language of its vodka-chugging characters, is
considered a front runner for the best foreign language picture
Oscar after winning a Golden Globe last month.
"I have to say that the success the film has seen in Europe,
India, the United Arab Emirates and the United States has for
some reason strangely irritated people living in Russia," the
slight, bespectacled director told Reuters in an interview.
"I don't know why, but it's a fact that's pointless to argue."
"Leviathan" has also been criticized for its portrayal of the
Russian Orthodox Church, which it shows encouraging the ruthless
mayor's resolve in targeting Kolya with the aid of police and
courts.
"The film's reception abroad proves its universality - it is
understood everywhere," Zvyagintsev said. "It evokes compassion
for a person who finds himself in the grips of injustice and
tries to maintain a sense of dignity."
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Shot on the Barents Sea near Russia's northern border with Norway,
"Leviathan" showcases the Arctic's raw beauty as a counterpoint to
Kolya's despair as his livelihood and family disintegrate.
The erratic mayor, whose office is dominated by a portrait of
Russian President Vladimir Putin, has led many outside of the
country to consider the film a satire, a notion the director admits
he did not intend.
"I see it more as a tragic comedy," he said.
"Satire is something you can only see from the outside ... When
you're on the inside - when you live it - it's something else
entirely."
Despite attacks from the local government where the film was shot,
Zvyagintsev said residents who saw an early screening gave it their
approval.
"The locals in the area spoke of the fact that this film is absolute
truth," Zvyagintsev said.
The villagers responded: "Life is even harder," the director said.
(Reporting by Eric Kelsey, editing by Jill Serjeant and Lisa
Lambert)
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