In einer russischen Küstenstadt muss Kolya gegen den korrupten Bürgermeister ankämpfen, nachdem er über den bevorstehenden Abriss seines Hauses informiert wurde. Er engagiert einen befreunde... Alles lesenIn einer russischen Küstenstadt muss Kolya gegen den korrupten Bürgermeister ankämpfen, nachdem er über den bevorstehenden Abriss seines Hauses informiert wurde. Er engagiert einen befreundeten Anwalt, aber dessen Ankunft bringt weiteres Unglück für Kolya und seine Familie.In einer russischen Küstenstadt muss Kolya gegen den korrupten Bürgermeister ankämpfen, nachdem er über den bevorstehenden Abriss seines Hauses informiert wurde. Er engagiert einen befreundeten Anwalt, aber dessen Ankunft bringt weiteres Unglück für Kolya und seine Familie.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Für 1 Oscar nominiert
- 38 Gewinne & 52 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Nachalnik politsii
- (as Dmitriy Bykovskiy)
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A man and his family face off against a politically backed fat cat who wishes to buy the piece of land upon which stands their house, willing to destroy their family nest to raise a modern building in its stead. The grandiose, solemn music of Philip Glass (Akhnaten; Act I Prelude) opens and ends the movie, flanking it like a sturdy front and back cover a fine book from a Russian master's pen. Other than that, the movie is rather stark, musically and otherwise. It is remarkable how effective silent scenes can be. With little music and less sound effects, the film has your undivided attention, reaching emotional heights towards the end. The lack of a musical backdrop further enhances the gritty realism that imbues all the 140 minutes. Relationships between the characters evolve and change significantly over the span of the movie, and though the patterns are somewhat familiar, interpersonal developments are portrayed with commendable subtlety and brilliance. There is a lot of intelligence to the storytelling; much can be understood without words. We embark on a chilling journey into the land and home of ordinary, simple folks, who are kicking and screaming for justice under the suffocating oppression of ruthless power, also blighted by their own frailty.
Leviathan is an outstanding work of art that manages to drive home universally relevant points with sparkling clarity in its refreshingly honest way. A highly recommended piece.
You cannot resist in taking sides when you see and understand the heroes battling with their demons and their enemies, that seem to be surrounding everything that makes their lives...
Andrey Zvyagintsev after the wonders of drama, passion and mystic lyricism (Vozvrashchenie and Izgnanie) offers yet another one similar of his creations, adding though, a "spicy" allow me to say subject, a taboo, about corruption in modern day Russia and how all those things which are considered as high values to the Russian State and people, seem to be part in this injustice, destroying peoples' lives.
God may not be immediately apparent in the god-forsaken Russian coastal town of the rewarding film Leviathan, but the devil surely resides there. Or let's just say the proletariat suffers for Politburo politics rather than God to an extent that is disruptive of daily life and lethal in the wrong circumstances. If you cross Crime and Punishment with a dollop of Dr. Zhivago, you might get a hint of how bleak and fateful this rugged world is, relieved by the beautiful timelessness of the landscape.
Kolya (Aleksay Serebryakov) is a vodka-swilling, perpetually smoking, car-fixing local doomed by the fates and his own temper. Not only does the corrupt local mayor, Vadim (Roman Madyanov), seem destined to seize Kolya's property for a patronage resort, but Kolya" wife, Lilya (Elena Lyadova), is also carrying on with his close friend and attorney, Dimi (Vladimir Vdovichenkov), and no good to come of either ill-fortunes.
I was captured the whole time by the sense of impending doom especially when director Andrey Serebryakov is featuring only decrepit buildings and sea wrecks. Given the Russian cinema tradition, those images are sure bets to represent the decay of a society that drinks and broods the whole long day. Not that it's a bad thing; it's just that doom creeps along at a petty pace as it circles victims like Kolya and Lilya, who are decent people but moved by passionate forces that emerge from the rocks and roiling sea. The devil is menacing, powerful, and relentless as it stalks its prey, notwithstanding the priest's counsel that God is the one calling the shots.
Leviathan, like the titular skeleton of a whale that serves as a figurative touchstone, is long, slow, and dark, confirming a stereotype of hardscrabble Russians trying to survive under the portraits of Putin and Gorbachov, the old and new struggling for the heart of the country. Think of Appalachia joined with Montgomery; now there's a whale of a comparison, and this is a behemoth of a film.
We've seen it before- a man desperately tries to keep his property being taken away from rich greedy fat cats.
But this is also a strong family drama, a tale of friendship, betrayal, corruption, hope, hopelessness...
Impressive acting overall, the very slow paced narrative and almost no music besides two fitting Philip Glass pieces make this a movie to remember.
The cinematography also deserves a mention, there are countless wonderfully framed scenes.
Excellent slow burning drama.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesFor many of the scenes involving drinking, the actors and director decided that they would drink for real, and the take that ended up being used in the movie was often the eighth or ninth take, after they had gotten really drunk and their movements and reactions were slower, which can be difficult for an actor to replicate.
- VerbindungenFeatured in 72nd Golden Globe Awards (2015)
- SoundtracksAkhnaten -Act 1 - Prelude: Refrain, Verse 1, Verse 2
Written by Philip Glass
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizielle Standorte
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- Auch bekannt als
- Левіафан
- Drehorte
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Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 1.092.800 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 15.200 $
- 28. Dez. 2014
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 4.439.481 $
- Laufzeit2 Stunden 20 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1