The Interpretation of Dreams
By Film Buff
The
Moscow Film Festival ran from 17 to 26 June. We saw so many films we
became almost nocturnal. There were a number of very good films; but
one film for us stood out - as it happens, a Russian film -
Dreaming of Space. Written by Alexander Mindadze, and
directed by Alexei Uchitel, it tells the story of two men and two
women living in a port town on the Russian/Norwegian border, in the
years 1957 to 1961.
The title has many meanings. It refers first of all to the first
sputnik (satellite) put into space by the Soviets, and as the press
release says, "That was a time of unprecedented optimism and
euphoria." In the film, the characters look up at the sky and duly
wonder about their place on earth and about their dreams. How
achievable are their particular dreams on earth, however, is another
matter. The nearest some people get to space travel is when they
fall off their bike.
This is only Uchitel's fourth film, and what
links them together are the extreme settings. In Dreaming of
Space there are so many types of boundaries that people
experience: the physical limits of boxing and swimming in cold water
(Gherman the loner is in training so that he can swim out of the
USSR); the closed border; the forbidden fruits of listening to
Western music on a transistor radio; and of course the unrealisable
desire to fly in space (except for all but the chosen few). In
Giselle's Mania there was the extreme of Spessivtseva's
madness; in His Wife's Diary the claustrophobia of Bunin's
home life; in The Stroll characters are living on the edge.
The film is set during the Cold War, and there are many moments
which could be thought of as being critical of that period - the
beating up of both the two heroes for owning a transistor radio,
being followed by secret agents, being surrounded by informers. Yet
this is not a political film, if by that we mean a film which puts
propaganda or a political viewpoint beyond what the storyline can
support. It is a film that explores the complexity of human
relationships - men with men, men with women, women with women. The
film celebrates both the human capacity for cerebral wonder, and the
hot sweat of good sex.
Yet, for all its emphasis on the primacy of
human relationships, outside of all political factors, this is a
film about artifice. The film never steps out of character; it never
weakens and allows something to intrude from our own times, but
makes its point only within the frame of its own storyline. What we
as modern viewers bring to the film, of course, is our own
recognition of what has changed since then. Horsie, trying to
explain to his girlfriend Lara why he is so in awe of Gherman,
beyond the fact that he is a better boxer (and by implication in
such a masculine and macho world, the better man) exclaims that, "He
has the whole world in his room." In 1957 that meant a map of
Northern Europe, with the line of the Iron Curtain marked out for
emphasis, a transistor radio tuned to Radio Liberty, and some books
in English. We know that all of these things were forbidden; that is
our first register; but then perhaps we understand what it meant to
live in a world without the Internet.
The film is so tightly bound together, the plot so well-oiled,
that you can almost miss the crucial fact that it gives up its
meaning as reluctantly as a tightly screwed-down bolt - there is no
escaping from the self.
The very bleakness of the industrial landscape
emphasizes the loneliness of each character, and the concomitant
need for warmth: not only human contact, but the actual heat from
the kitchen in which Horsie, the dreamer, works as a chef, with the
two waitress sisters, Lara and Rima; or the smoke-filled fug of the
men-only bar. The camerawork gives a hard-edged beauty to this
border town, situated on the edge of nowhere - a no-man's land -
with all of its inhabitants on edge. The moment, for example, when
an old trolley bus rattles straight towards us, sandwiched between
two factory walls, and at the last moment, just before the camera
cuts away, sparks fly from the overhead cables and illuminate a
green plant.
It's a good title, for a good film - Dreaming of Space
will have you do that very thing.
Dreaming of Space (directed by Alexei
Uchitel, written by Alexander Mindadze) Starring Yevgeny Mironov,
Yevgeny Tsyganov, in Russian, with English subtitles Premiere
at Kodak Premiere, July 7 General release at selected cinemas
throughout Moscow, St. Petersburg and across Russia.
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