Beanpole (2019) Poster

(2019)

User Reviews

Review this title
56 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Very bleak and somewhat compelling - a film I admired more than I liked
Bertaut27 December 2019
Written by Kantemir Balagov and Aleksandr Terekhov and directed by Balagov, Dylda is inspired by (although not based on) The Unwomanly Face of War by Svetlana Alexievich, an oral history of the experiences of Russian women who fought during World War II. We've seen countless stories (many of them superb) about men who have fought in war, only to find themselves unable to reintegrate into society upon the cessation of combat, but Dylda is the story of two such women. And whilst one has to admire the emotional and ideological sincerity of the filmmakers, and the craft on display (it looks amazing, with the production design some of the best you'll ever see), for me, Dylda was a somewhat disappointing experience, adding up to something quite a bit less than the sum of its (often exceptional) individual parts.

Leningrad, 1945. In the days immediately after the defeat of Nazi Germany, the city is attempting to recover from the longest and most destructive siege in human history. As the film begins, we're introduced to Iya (an astonishing debut by Viktoria Miroshnichenko), a former soldier invalided out of active duty several years prior. Shy, socially awkward, with pale features, white hair, and standing well over six-foot-tall, Iya suffers from a severe case of concussion-induced PTSD that manifests itself as random episodes of total paralysis. A nurse in a hospital for wounded soldiers, Iya lives in a small one-room apartment with her son, Pashka (Timofey Glazkov), until a horrific accident changes everything for her. Meanwhile, Masha (Vasilisa Perelygina, in the film's second exceptional debut performance), who served with Iya, returns to Leningrad unexpectedly. Suffering from her own PTSD, which causes her to be cruel and selfish, Masha is horrified to learn of the accident and begins to push Iya along a path of rectification that could destroy both of them.

Aesthetically, you'd be hard pushed to find fault with Dylda, with Sergey Ivanov's production design especially laudable. The film is mainly confined to the hospital where Iya works, her apartment, and the nearby streets, with each location telling its own story - the hospital is grim and underfinanced, the apartment is modest but homely, and the streets are cold and alienating, the aftereffects of the Siege still very much apparent. Despite everything looking completely authentic, the exteriors weren't shot on location, but were sets built for the film, making it all the more impressive. If you were enamoured with Dante Ferretti's work for Gangs of New York (2002), you'll definitely appreciate Ivanov's work here. Olga Smirnova's costume design is also exceptional, working in tandem with the production design to create an over-all tone of sombreness.

This tone is helped immeasurably by the use of colour - or rather the avoidance of colour. The film's palette is extremely drab, dominated by grey, dirty yellows, some white, and, especially, a sickly green. There are virtually no blues, purples, or reds for much of the film. Indeed, the most colourful moment is literally the very last image, with Balagov bringing together the oft-seen green and the recently introduced red in a thematically fascinating manner.

Balagov and cinematographer Ksenia Sereda often shoot in long takes, affording the audience nowhere to hide from the suffering on screen. One notable example of this is a scene depicting one of the most harrowing and disturbing deaths I've ever seen - a scene which goes on and on and on without a single edit, driving home the abject horror of what we're witnessing. Another example, although not quite as disturbing, is a sex scene (if you can call it that) shot from above, and again in a very long take. Balagov's intention with shots like this is obvious enough - horror and pain shouldn't be sugar-coated but presented in all their unpleasantness.

Thematically, the film is about broken people trying to put themselves back together, much as the city around them is trying to do the same. The fact that the siege was lifted and the Germans defeated means relatively little in the day-to-day lives of those for whom the experience of combat has eaten away a part of their soul. The Leningrad of the film is a place where many of the norms of society have eroded, where any sense of Utilitarianism has become secondary to the mechanics of survival. A good illustration of the condition of the city is found when Iya brings Pasha to the hospital to amuse the soldiers by making animal sounds. However, when one soldier asks him to bark like a dog, he doesn't seem to understand, and another soldier points out, "where would he have seen a dog? They've all been eaten." Very rare is it that we see such an unrelentingly bleak depiction of the utter ruination of war, and the filmmakers must be commended for having the courage of their convictions.

For all its laudable aesthetic elements and thematic complexity, however, I was disappointed with Dylda. I have no problem with bleak stories; in fact, generally speaking, I'm drawn more to bleakness and pessimism regarding the human condition, not just in cinema, but so too in fiction, theatre, poetry, and painting. However, I found the film too long, with it feeling padded in places, especially in the sense that Balagov tends to let scenes run a few beats longer than they need to. The aforementioned death scene is very long, but it works because of the length, affording the audience no respite. Other scenes, however, simply run long without much in the way of thematic justification. On occasion, Balagov can also be far too didactic, overstating emotions and literalising internal conflicts. At the same time, some of the most important plot points come across as contrived. Additional, the film is both front and end-loaded, with the best scenes and most interesting themes coming in the first and last acts. Unfortunately, much of what's in between is unfocused and flabby.

Dylda won Best Director and Best Film in the Un certain regard section at Cannes and it was Russia's entry for Best International Film for the 2020 Academy Awards, and is expected to make the final five nominees. So, I freely admit I'm swimming against the tide in saying I didn't really like it. I can certainly celebrate its craft, its thematic sophistication (that Balagov is only 28 seems almost impossible given the thematic maturity), its acting, and the way it isn't even remotely interested in conforming to prescriptions adopted by more mainstream films. And ultimately, although I didn't especially like Dylda, and was somewhat disappointed by it, I certainly admired the hell out of.
74 out of 100 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Fascinating Slow Burn of a Movie
evanston_dad2 September 2020
A fascinating slow burn that is as exhilarating as it is difficult at times to watch.

"Beanpole" is actually a good movie to be watching during the 2020 COVID pandemic, as it's a reminder to a whole population of people who've never experienced any significant hardship how much worse things could be. Watch a movie about post WWII Russia and then ask yourself how big a deal it is that Trader Joe's was out of your favorite brand of crackers again.

The towering actress Viktoria Miroshnichenko, as the film's title character, and Vasilisa Perelygina, as her friend who's recently returned from the front, give amazing performances navigating exceptionally difficult material. This is one of those movies that would be off putting if the direction and acting didn't strike just the right tone. It's one of those movies about which people say "I didn't like any of the characters" as a way to dismiss the whole thing. But, like the best character studies, "Beanpole" doesn't care whether or not you like anyone in it. It instead asks you to live with the characters for awhile and see if you can empathize with them, and understand their choices based on the circumstances in which they find themselves.

And, directing and acting aside, the film looks beautiful. For a film set in such a drab time and setting, it uses saturated colors, especially green and red, to tie images visually to the mental states of the characters.

The movie year still has a way to go, but I imagine this one will make my own personal shortlist of favorites.

Grade: A
9 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A beautiful mess
FrenchEddieFelson8 August 2019
Leningrad, 1945. In the aftermath of World War II, within the remaining ruins, two young women, Iya and Masha, try to give a purpose to their meaningless lives. They met at the front during this endless war but they stayed in touch, probably because they felt alone and were desperately disillusioned. They now live in the present, without any perspective for their future that they do not even try to consider. The complete disarray!

Dylda (2019) is darkly sad, with an extremely but deliberately slow pace. If you are depressed before you even consider this movie, you should probably envisage another viewing. Otherwise, this film is breathtakingly beautiful and is excellently filmed. Moreover, the gorgeous actresses Viktoria Miroshnichenko (Iya) and nm10695947 (Lyubov Petrovna) shine despite a voluntarily sober play.

As a synthesis: 7/8 of 10
32 out of 55 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Deeply felt drama about love and reclamation.
JohnDeSando15 March 2020
You could expect a 1945 Leningrad setting to be joyful after the Russian victory over Nazis, but writer/director Kantemir has caught the downside in Beanpole. It's a deeply moving, complicated story about two former soldiers who tackle the melancholy and desperation of victors with no spoils---just ruined buildings and crushed hopes.

This melancholy drama centers on two women: Iva (Viktoria Miroshnicenk) and Masha (Vasilisa Perelygina), who attempt to bring meaning to their lives after the devastation. Mostly it's about Masha's attempt to have a life within her, mainly a baby. Her first baby died at the hands of Iva, who now owes Masha a baby.

Through a series of lengthy scenes and shots (sometimes they are too long), the audience is drawn into the emotional needs of the protagonists set against the needs of the other Leningrad citizens to gain happiness and hope after a ravaging war. The scenes between Iva and Masha are lovingly and deeply felt as Masha navigates getting a replacement baby and Iva resists the machinations to do so.

Given the wide scope of WWII, Beanpole is a small-scale drama, whose intensity comes from the characters rather than the setting. Love is the operative word, married to hope to make a satisfying character study in a drawn-out drama of human longing, regardless of the time period.
10 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A strange drama set in a fever dream of post-war Russia
rumour-mill30 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
This is an eerie, unsettling portrait of two women who - through the shared trauma of war - become dependent on one another.

It's difficult to describe their relationship as romantic, nor uplifting, nor indeed equal; belying her size, Iya (Beanpole) is an anxious wallflower who is emotionally manipulated by Masha into surrogacy. It is uncomfortable viewing; one never gets the sense that Masha is wedded to anything except her need to become a mother again. As such, the reconciliation at the end feels sour; Masha says what Iya needs to hear, and Iya says what Masha needs to hear, but do we imagine that description of an idyllic future is anything but another yarn to string Iya along?

Through this story, we gain other glimpses into post-war Russia - primarily revolving around the comings and goings of a Leningrad hospital caring for injured soldiers. But even seemingly extraneous narrative threads turn out to be linchpins in our two protagonists' tale (for example, unsactioned euthanasia providing the 'kompromat' for Masha to force the doctor into sexual service).

The two central performances are very good. Dialogue is often frustratingly sparse - we get the impression that little of what our characters are thinking makes it out of their mouths intact. The cinematography is artful, and notably warm in its palette - where others might have chosen a washed out, bleak look as a crude match for the mood. Music is almost entirely absent, beyond the occasional diegetic ditty on a radio or record player.

Overall, this is a well-executed, unusual and unnerving film that is difficult to love, but easy to admire.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
The war in Russia wasn't over after the Germans surrendered
Red-1252 March 2020
The Russian film Dylda was shown in the U.S. with the translated title Bean Pole (2019). It was co-written and directed by Kantemir Balagov

The movie is set in Leningrad right after World War II. Viktoria Miroshnichenko plays Iya, who has suffered brain damage in combat during the war. She has been discharged, and now works as a nurse or attendant at a hospital for wounded soldiers. (She is, indeed, a head taller than the other women, and very slender, so that's why she's called Bean Pole.)

She is joined at the hospital by her wartime friend, Masha, portrayed by Vasilisa Perelygina. Masha, who was also wounded, stayed in combat until the war ended. When we first see her, she's still wearing her army uniform.

The film was very grim, as it focused on the wounded men in the hospital, and the physical and emotional problems of the two women. I was surprised that there was very little anti-Stalinist material. In the movie, the government recognizes the sacrifices that the people have made, and appears to be doing its best to help. I don't know whether this reflects the reality of the time or not.

This is a complex film, because it portrays two very different women, each of whom has suffered terribly, and both of whom are trying to bring some normalcy into their lives.

As far as I can remember, there were only a few moments where anyone smiled in the movie. Those were hard times, and people were glum and depressed.

However, the film is so well constructed, and so well acted, that it's worth seeking out and watching. We saw Dylda at Rochester's excellent Little Theatre. However, it should work well enough on the small screen. The film has a solid IMDb rating of 7.2. I think it's even better than that.
17 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Film Review - Beanpole (2019) 7.4/10
lasttimeisaw17 October 2020
"Masha effects a more philosophical guise toward her bereavement, but in time, acknowledging that she is now infertile, she will oblige Iya to get pregnant and bear a child (a son) for her, claiming that only a newborn baby can fill that profound void (child becomes a fungible item to quench a woman's maternal distress). But Iya harbors her own suppressed feelings for Masha, things get even trickier when Masha has a new suitor in the person of Sasha (Shirokov), who actually hails from an apparatchik family."

read my full review on my blog: cinema omnivore, thanks
4 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Riven by Poverty & Despair...
Xstal21 April 2020
... and seared by the cold - this magnificently performed and beautifully filmed piece of cinema reveals the challenges faced by two young women in post war Leningrad. Damaged and psychologically disturbed by their experiences, shell shocked from the battles, real and imagined, battles they would never have aspired to fight some years earlier, while surrounded and enveloped by uncertainty, indignity, poverty and despair.
27 out of 34 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
St Petersburg is saved people are not
vanmust24 March 2024
Long I was suspecting that from the two cities who suffered in WWII (Stalingrad and Leningrad) the latter has a far more tragic story to tell....allthough cinema in both east and west glorifies the war against Nazi Germany especially because Stalingrad is the bloodiest battle till now....the effects were more time enduring in Leningrad -St Petersburg now and we must consider ourselves lucky that the great museum of Hermitage was saved for the upcomming generations....nowhere ekse in post Soviet Union was the results of WWII more visible than here...Russia bore the bulk of Germany's war machine and that's why they are just 146 mil.instead of 300 + they should have been by now every single home had casualties mainly people of reproductive age....it took decades for Russia to return in a normal way of life ..even more than their foes..women especially not only lost their mental health which could drive them to the goal of creating families but also drove them to leave the places of suffering and immigrate to all corners of Europe (for the delight of local men) in order to forget the hell they faced .....allthough I have photographs of Stukas flying over Hermitage by the river I suspect maybe Goering was somewhat planning a future plundering it and it remained intact.... I don't know if the youing director tried to make a statement but the Sasha character resembles a funny wisel phase Putin at a young age .....finally the only other actress I remember to be that tall is Lilly Cole from the movie " The Imaginariun of Dr. Parnassus"
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
An intense examination of damaged people
howard.schumann8 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
During World War II, the German blockade of Leningrad cut off the city from the outside world for three years, an act that took the lives of over one million people. While the world has largely focused on the causes and details of the siege, little attention has been paid to how survivors coped with their trauma, suffering which the Russian leadership did their best to hide. Winner of the FIPRESCI Prize and the award for Best Director in the "Un Certain Regard" category at Cannes, 27-year-old Russian director Kantemir Balagov's ("Closeness") Beanpole (Dylda) focuses on the relationship between two young women who have returned to Leningrad (today St. Petersburg) from the front in the immediate aftermath of the war.

Brilliantly performed by Viktoria Miroshnichenko as Iya Sergueeva, a nurse nicknamed "beanpole" because of her height and slender frame, and Vasilisa Perelygina as Iya's mercurial friend Masha, it is an intense examination of damaged people desperately trying to find some peace and connection during a time when the world no longer values it. Russia's official submission for Best International Feature Film at the 2020 Academy Awards, the film was inspired by Nobel Prize winning author Svetlana Alexievich's "The Unwomanly Face of War," a devastating chronicle of women's experience during the war. Beanpole opens in a hospital for wounded soldiers after the war, many whose bodies are so desperately shattered that they long for death. Stepan (Konstantin Balakirev, "Angels of Revolution"), one of the most badly injured, is paralyzed below his neck and pleads to the nurses for death, but it is not possible under the law.

Iya has a supportive relationship with her superior Dr. Nikolay Ivanovich (Andrey Bykov) and works with him to secretly euthanize patients who will not recover from their wounds. Suffering from post-concussion syndrome, now known as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Iya is subject to sudden seizures, spasms in which she cannot talk or move and is unable ask for help. Her condition tragically manifests itself in an extended sequence that is most difficult to watch. The atmosphere of decay is underscored in a scene in which the patients at the hospital play a game with Masha's young son Pashka (Timofey Glazkov). When they ask him to bark like a dog, he only stares at them without expression. "How would he know what a dog is like," one man says. "They've all been eaten."

The focus of the film is on the relationship between Iya and Masha, one that is based both on mutual need and sexual attraction but also contains an element of exploitation. As photographed by cinematographer Kseniya Sereda, the film is shot in faded pastel colors of red, green, and ochre rather than in black and white which the material might suggest. As Balagov explains, "The green that we use is also about being alive, but the ochre symbolizes the wound. And red is also the color of rust and blood." When Masha returns from the front where she remained to seek revenge for the death of Pashka's father, she is intent on having another child which she believes will heal all of her internal wounds from the war.

Sadly, the number of abortions she had during her time at the front prevents her from having any more children and she demands that Iya bear her a child with a surrogate. Masha's exploitation of her friend strikes a jarring note and the look on Iya's face when she is forced to do something against her will threatens to destroy her relationship with the only person she can turn to. Using men to fill a void in her life, Masha develops a relationship with Sasha (Igor Shirokov), the son of upper-class Communist bureaucrats. Assured that he loves her, they plan to marry until a visit to his parents in their mansion outside of the city prompts Masha to confess a disturbing truth about her life. In one of the film's most striking moments, Sasha's mother Lyubov Petrovna (Ksenia Kutepova) clashes with Masha, telling her what she sees as the truth about Sasha's intentions.

Beanpole is an intense, impeccably acted examination of repressed emotions and spiritual emptiness in a world in which normalcy is an outdated concept. In an astonishing scene, Masha asks a neighbor, a seamstress, (Olga Dragunova, "Closeness") if she can twirl in a green dress the seamstress is fitting. As Masha spins faster and faster, however, the delight she experiences turns into an outpouring of grief. While Beanpole is bleak, it is made with such consummate skill that it is not depressing. With its humanism and compassion and its willingness to tackle issues such as feminism, bisexuality, and abortion, Balagov challenge to Russia's conservative social outlook and patriarchal society gives the film a surprising political edge. It also makes clear that Balagov is one of the best young directors in film today.
44 out of 63 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Complete book of Cinema
vivek-227031 November 2019
This movie is a perfect example of what a movie should like be. From its direction, camera movement, lighting, production design, script, sound design everything was excellent. You could spot a minor distraction I whole movie. The first minute of the movie was enough to grab the interest till the last scene.

Direction, the storyline and storytelling both is so subtle that you will flow in this whole movie. It's would be a smooth drive that will stick you to the story like a glue. The character transformation and development both are mesmerising.

Production Design, what can be said about it. It is done in extraordinary way. It's not an easy job to take a periodic movie to this level. Each corner each frame and each location everything is done with brilliance. The use of different materials, colours, elements, object everything adds upto its beauty.

Cinematography, the use of camera and production design of this movie both are in perfect harmony. It's is a pleasure to watch one scene transforms into another with same brilliant composition. The use of hand held camera movement to show feelings on a character, the proper use of pan and tilt. This is masterpiece in term of good cinematography. It's a visual dictionary and Bible for filmmakers.

Music, the best part of the movie is the music you don't hear it you just feel it. The idea behind sound design of this movie is one hell of concepts. The use of signatory music sequence is remarkable in this movie.

It's is the next masterpiece of cinema, one should watch this movie to learn how a excellent movie is crafted.
47 out of 70 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Amateur Effort
discocassettefreakout17 June 2020
I think the filmmaker confuses emotional manipulation with artistic merit. This film should have been 40 minutes shorter and spends so long lingering on people's faces without meaningful dialogue or interesting image composition that you could be forgiven you aren't watching some melodramatic soap opera stuck playing at half speed. Just because a film is provocative doesn't mean it's good. I'm fine with slow cinema, heavy subject matter and minimal dialogue, but so often these days these things are used as mask for confused and shallow directors hedging their bets and hoping that their film will be perceived as something deep and meaningful without doing any of the heavy lifting themselves. Usually films like this at least look good, but the cinematography to me was quite average and the saturated grade is tacky and cheap. I'm giving this three stars because I think so many people who give this a one star review could be perceived and dismissed as people who were shocked and horrified and "just weren't cut out for this type of film". The filmmaker was 28 when he directed this film. If you're under 30, you don't get to direct multiple feature films in Russia without being born into privilege and this film to me comes across as a little rich kid trying desperately to be gritty and bleak.
27 out of 64 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Mesmerising
bladepowell6 October 2019
Warning: Spoilers
'Beanpole' showcases a hauntingly realistic depiction of 1945 Leningrad, Russia, in the immediate months after the Second World War. The story centres around two female characters, Iya and Masha, each attempting to find their own idea of meaning and hope in this seemingly hopeless landscape. It is an extremely slow experience that takes its time with the viewer to create an unforgettable feeling that becomes burned into the viewers' minds.

The film opens with a shot of Iya having one of her PTSD caused freezing moments, and promptly establishes the tone and spirit of the film to come. In each of these 'freezing moments', the sound design is especially remarkable and it is felt as though we're being frozen alongside her. It quite literally took your breath away, and in some cases I had to actually remind myself to breath because of these stunning sequences. One of my favourite scenes in which this occurs, is where Iya's adoptive toddler son (named Pashka) and herself are play-fighting on the floor, and while Iya is on on top of Pashka, she freezes up, this time for a few minutes. It's a mesmerisingly gruesome yet beautiful long shot where all that's being shown is Iya's frozen-in-time back and Pashka's tiny hands clawing for freedom as he suffocates to death beneath Iya's weight. "Less is more" and in this scene (and the film as a whole) this is a key ideology of the director. The situation as a whole doesn't need to be shown such as showing the little boy's face, as all the audience needs to see is his hands grasping for air accentuated by the whimpers he lets out as he slowly suffocates. It gives the viewer more of an ambiguous, powerful emotion. This is just one of MANY amazing scenes that were simply so mesmerising it's hard to describe.

From the opening moments of the film until much after the credits have rolled, it's as if the movie places the viewer into an inescapable chokehold, where it demands all of your attention and nothing less. The use of sound design, cinematography and the flawlessly 'human' acting from every character creates an atmosphere like no other.

The colour palette is something that I took note of as well. The film boasts an uplifting yet also depressing spectrum of primary colours in its presentation. The colours red, green and yellow were used extremely frequently (along with other 'cheerful' sort of colours) but to me the colours themselves seemed almost 'drained' and had lost their soul. The colours were all pastel and even though the actual colour was a happy one, the tone of the colour certainly wasn't. I believe the colours represented what "could have been" had the situation that the city is currently in not occurred. The joyful colours show such a contrast to what's being shown on screen, and the 'drained' feel to them with the pastel is a bleak reminder of their situation. It's as though all the happiness has been taken away from the environment and characters, which adds to the overall feel of the movie, and assists in creating a unique atmosphere.

Although many critics have quoted that the film is much too slow with little action for their taste, in my opinion this adds to the hopeless ambience being presented. It feels as though you, the audience, are alongside the characters and feel their struggle for each moment that it's happening, which is something I must applaud the film-makers for.

This is certainly not a film for everyone, being much too slow for a mainstream audience's taste, but for those who can take some time to feel the atmosphere of the setting being shown to them, this is a true masterpiece of cinema and will stick with you for many days after you've watched it.

I give 'Beanpole' a 10/10 and it is certainly one of the very best films 2019 has to offer.
47 out of 70 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
unlike anything else
foxantoine30 January 2021
I just think that people who are not from Russia or not from a former USSR republic don't understand how deep and important this film is. we are (russians and ex-soviets) are so used to the glorification of WW2, but this film doesn't do it. no, it shows how bleak and joyless the life after war is and it may not seem so groundbreaking for the western viewer but it is for me. also Kantemir Balagov isn't even 30 years old and he is a master of the craft alreasy. it means something.
12 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
A Work of Art
Silazevedophoto17 February 2021
This film set in post-war USSR is beautifully shot and superbly acted. Every scene is a work of art that reglects the melancholic mood of that generation. Not a light watch, but extremely rewarding.
7 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Exceptional drama, intelligent and original script...
RosanaBotafogo1 August 2021
A heavy film, the title does not reflect all the hardship of the war, the incessant search of the two women for survival and personal fulfillment in a sexist and cruel era, deranged by the post-war hunger, and allied to all this drama, the Tall Woman suffers from freezing post concussion and hysterectomy Masha, which makes it incomplete after the loss of the child (which I could swear it was no accident), warm colors, contrasting with the coldness of the war, exceptional drama, intelligent and original script...
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
There's not much to say
Erictoolander9 July 2020
I'm a history buff, WWII in particular, I love St Petersburg and I'm used to foreign language films, so I was really looking forward to this one. Unfortunately the film lacks direction. The characters are dull and over acted. It doesn't feel genuine but it's not fun either. The plot is slow and doesn't make sense. The director is relying too much on the camera, hoping to bring meaning to a weak script by simply showing the character's emotions. But without a good script, it becomes difficult to understand them.
18 out of 49 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
The Soul Seeks to Survive
barnesboffey-7221725 September 2019
This movie is an intense and thoughtful exploration of relationships between survivors of war. The desire to find meaning and love and connection drive people to do beautiful and desperate things, and in the end to find either peace or conflict within depending on what they can accept and create within their minds. Beautifully acted.
31 out of 52 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Beanpole is both very beautiful and very uncomfortable, a rare combination
frankde-jong22 February 2020
"Beanpole", the second feature length film of the talented Russian director Kantemir Balagov, is a film you either love or hate. I love it.

The film is both very beautiful and very uncomfortable. Very beautiful because of the prominent use of the colors red (despair) and green (hope). Very uncomfortable because of the many uneasy scenes it contains. I counted at least 5 or 6, which is very much for one film. In this review I cannot treat them in detail, because each uneasy scene would be a spoiler in itself.

"Beanpole" is loosely based on the novel "War's unwomanly face" from 1985 by Nobel prize winner Svetlana Alexievich. The film is situated just after the Second World War has ended and has nothing to do with the heroic war films from the Poetin era. It rather falls back on films such as "The cranes are flying" (1957, Mikhail Kalatozov), that display the more unpleasant sides of war and show that not al Russians were heroes.

The film is situated in the aftermath of the war, and in this respect resembles "The best years of our lives" (1946, William Wyler). In stead of showing the physical and econmic damage the war has done, "Beanpole" focuses on psychological damage. In stead of following a group of male veterans ("The best years of our lives"), "Beanpole" follows two female veterans. The message of "War's unwomanly face" is that society looks with suspicion upon women with a history on the front of the war. Did they really do any fighting or were they just the call girls of the male soldiers? In "Beanpole" there is a (very uneasy) scene that reflects this ambiguity. By the way "The best years of out lives" shows that male veterans are also nog always welcomed back in civil society and treated with the respect fitting with the atrocities they have experienced.

As I said "Beanpole" focuses on the psychological damage done by the war, and neither of the main characters has survived the war wholy intact in this respect. Their relationship can be characterized as a strange mixture of mutual support and power struggle. Sexual attraction is used as one of the weapons in this power struggle. In this respect the film made me think of "Lady Macbeth" (2016, William Oldroyd), although I can not really explain why.
7 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Far from easy viewing but great cinema nevertheless
MOscarbradley5 November 2019
Russia in the days immeadiately following the end of World War II. Two young women, scarred from the horrors they have encountered, do what they can to survive in what, fundamentally, is a living hell. "Beanpole" is every bit as depressing as that short synopsis might suggest. It's also only the second feature from the young Russian director Kantemir Balagov, (he's not yet thirty), who might yet turn out to be the greatest Russian filmmaker since Tarkovsky and like Tarkovsky he certainly doesn't believe in compromising.

This is a grim but deeply humanist picture, deeply engaged with its devastated characters. Shot in rigorous close-up with an astonishing use of colour and magnificently played by Vikoria Miroshnichenko and Vasilisa Perelyygina as the two women in question this is great cinema and a welcome relief from so much of the highly commercial crap that Hollywood turns out these days though being Russian and 'art-house' this will never get the audience it deserves. Nevertthelss, Russia thought enough of it to put it forward as their entry for this years Foreign (now 'International') Film Oscar. It would certainly be a very worthy winner.
24 out of 42 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Love in a Fallen City
Blue-Grotto4 March 2020
Wounds are still raw in Leningrad in the aftermath of World War II. Two young friends, Iya and Masha, are rebuilding their lives in the shattered and barely functioning city. While each woman is fiercely independent, they approach life differently. Iya, a veteran's hospital nurse with post-concussion syndrome, suffers paralyzing seizures made worse by stress and anxiety. Through kindness to others she finds some solace and manages to persevere. Having spent time on the front lines of the war, Masha is an active manipulator who takes what she wants from life and others. She is brutally honest, direct and practical. Both women are barely hanging on. To heal they have each other to look to, but that is not their style.

Women speak up and men take a backseat in this authentic, heart-rending, colorful and resonant account of the tragic consequences of war. There are many deep, emotionally charged and enlightening discussions between the characters. There are amazing scenes I will long remember including one with Masha twirling in a borrowed emerald dress like Cinderalla lost in her unlikely dream of escape. The chemistry between Masha and Iya is palpable as an electric current. Beanpole is based on the writing of Svetlana Alexievich, a Nobel Prize winner and author of The Unwomanly Face of War. Seen at the Mayan theater in Denver.
6 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
This film is NOT for most viewers and you should think twice about it before you watch.
planktonrules3 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I saw "Beanpole" at the Philadelphia Film Festival...or at least I saw MOST of this film. I say most because after a while, I simply left the theater....the awfulness of the story was simply overwhelming and film festivals usually feature too many such films....films artsy folks love but which the average person would hate.

What was so tough to watch in the movie? Well, you get to see a woman suffering from PTSD accidentally suffocate a small child, vomiting, euthanasia and a rape in which a man and woman are forced to have sex by a third person. The bottom line is that I was feeling very depressed and decided I needed a break...as did my daughter who left the film even earlier than I did.

For the artsy folks....and no one else.
26 out of 80 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Misses the mark
gbill-748777 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
A film I thought I was going to like, but confess I struggled. It wasn't so much that it's relentlessly bleak; I looked forward to the exploration of picking up the pieces and attempting to heal almost insurmountable trauma in post-war Leningrad. One of the best scenes for me is when the child can't identify a dog imitation while playing a game with a bunch of wounded soldiers, and then one of them realizes he's probably never seen a dog since they've all been eaten. In this very subtle way we get a hint as to the horror of the war in the Soviet Union. Aspects like the lead character's PTSD causing her to accidentally smother a child to death, and then for her friend (the real mom) to want to go out to a bar and look for men upon hearing the news, seemed less successful to me. The story or maybe the way it was presented didn't feel true to 1945, it seemed overly voyeuristic, and the pace was often unbearably slow. At times there are beautiful images, e.g. the walk up to the large estate in the snow towards the end, and the two main characters have great presence with the depth of their expressions, but it wasn't enough for me. I think it needed a stronger script and to be pared down to a shorter runtime.
7 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Outstanding movie
searchanddestroy-17 August 2019
That's a Russian film about post Great Patriotic War which takes place in Leningrad, in a war veteran hospital. Two female nurses, two friends, who both fought during the war, try desperately to find a meaning to their life. To emerge from their pain, grief, disillusionment, by having a child of their own. A daily struggle to survive. That's a gripping, powerful feature, but sso gloomy and certainly not for main audiences. Unfortunately.
33 out of 68 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Painful to watch!
li09044267 February 2021
It's a very difficult movie to watch to the end. The director managed to show the pain, distress, loss that the war causes and continues to cause even after its end. Not only through the faces, eyes and attitudes of each character, but also by the environment surround them, the film makes us dive into the depth of pain, sorrow and madness of a human being in desperation. It's a powerful movie, sometimes painful to watch some scenes.
7 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed