Elena (2011 film)
Elena | |
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Festival poster
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Directed by | Andrey Zvyagintsev |
Written by | Oleg Negin Andrey Zvyagintsev |
Starring | Nadezhda Markina Elena Lyadova |
Music by | Philip Glass |
Cinematography | Mikhail Krichman |
Distributed by | Zeitgeist Films |
Release dates
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Running time
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109 minutes |
Country | Russia |
Language | Russian |
Elena (Russian: Елена) is a 2011 Russian drama film directed by Andrey Zvyagintsev. It premiered in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival[1][2] where it won the Special Jury Prize.[3]
Contents
Plot
The film depicts the social and cultural distance between the inhabitants of an exclusive apartment in downtown Moscow and a crumbling khrushchevka in Moscow's industrial suburb. Elena is a woman with a proletarian background who connects these disparate worlds. She met Vladimir, an elderly business tycoon, in a hospital when she was his nurse. Their alliance has been described by a critic as "a morganatic marriage nearly a century after the October Revolution".[4]
Elena's son from a previous marriage is poor and wants money from Vladimir to send his 17 year old son to university, keeping him out of the compulsory military service. Vladimir makes it clear that he is not going to subsidize Elena's relatives, and informs her that he plans to make a will leaving his wealth to his only daughter from an earlier marriage. Elena poisons him so that he dies intestate and she inherits half his estate.
Reviews
Jim Hoberman referred to Elena as "the most vivid evocation... of Moscow’s contemporary society". According to Hoberman, "Zvyagintsev has mapped out a world ruled by ingratitude and the absence of justice".[5] Critic Stephen Holden of The New York Times was impressed by Zvyagintsev's "vision of Moscow as a jungle teeming with predatory wildlife" suggesting that "in this quasi-feudal social environment, avarice and blood ties trump all other values".[6] The Village Voice acclaimed Zvyagintsev's "scalpel-like precision dissecting class that recalls Claude Chabrol".[4] "Shoot this film in black and white and cast Barbara Stanwyck as Elena, and you'd have a 1940s classic", Roger Ebert observes.[7]
Awards
- Special Jury Prize of the Un Certain Regard section at the Cannes Film Festival
- Golden Eagle Award for Best Film
- Nika Award for Best Actress
Nadezhda Markina was also nominated for the Best Performance by an Actress at the European Film Awards[8] and the Asia Pacific Screen Awards.
References
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External links
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