Igla
- 1988
- 1 Std. 21 Min.
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuMoro returns to Alma Ata to collect money owed to him. While waiting out an unexpected delay, he visits his former girlfriend Dina, and discovers she has become a morphine addict. He decides... Alles lesenMoro returns to Alma Ata to collect money owed to him. While waiting out an unexpected delay, he visits his former girlfriend Dina, and discovers she has become a morphine addict. He decides to help her kick the habit and to fight the local drug mafia responsible for her conditio... Alles lesenMoro returns to Alma Ata to collect money owed to him. While waiting out an unexpected delay, he visits his former girlfriend Dina, and discovers she has become a morphine addict. He decides to help her kick the habit and to fight the local drug mafia responsible for her condition. But Moro finds a deadly opponent in "the doctor," the mafia kingpin who is exploiting D... Alles lesen
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 wins total
- Nurse
- (as Ajkhan Chatayeva)
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Overall, I find the film very depressing (must be because it reminds me of the "good ol'" Soviet Union times), but what do I know. Anyway -- if you're interested in Soviet Union, especially Perestroika time, this is a must see -- it really captures the mood of the time and feels much like time-machine. But if you are not, then you really shouldn't bother (and it might be extremely hard to get a copy anywhere that's to West from Russia).
People act tough and just trying to get by in a seemingly hopeless post communist Russia, where life is a little dark and absurd. The hero tries to do the right thing, benefited of a somewhat comic stoicism, he is compassionate of the eccentric types he finds.
It's touching and sad and finds humor in odd moments. The hero does not affect coolness but is cool, despite being kind of a thug. The mellow mood conveys a poetic sense of longing. From within a sense of cultural decay, there is a hope for a better world, and a sad awareness it is not so easily found.
The music, the mood, the visual style are all very good. It's understated but elegant, symbolic but subtle. There's a post punk attitude, and a jangly alternative guitar vibe.
Highly recommended for fans of quirky indie dramatic comedies.
"Igla" is one of those loaded movies. Maybe you should have spent your teen years in the 1980s-1990s to feel its drive. Or perhaps you should be kind of out-of-this-world. Or, maybe, just a very romantic and un-CGI dreamer. Or corny and unpretentious fellow, who enjoys cinema without cornflakes & Coca-Cola. Or insane... Just make sure that you are watching the original "Igla", not a glamour remix/remake, which, as this treacherous cinema business rotates today, does exist too.
Oh, almost forgot to say a couple of words regarding the essence of the movie. It's about a bunch of young degenerates living on the ashes of the once prolific empire (USSR). You cannot blame these weirdos - the older generation led them into a dead end.
A 10 out of 10 for this greyish no-escape flick from the amazing 1980s. Thanks for attention.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe movie set off a movement that has come to be known as the "Kazakh New Wave." The film also became a model for the Russian version of postmodernism.
- VerbindungenEdited from Die Klapperschlange (1981)
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Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 25.387 $