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Wonderful ‘Tulpan’ finally opens in the UK

November 13th, 2009 Posted in Film, News, Reviews

I had a very enjoyable dinner at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival two summers ago with Kazakhstan film director Sergey Dvortsevoy celebrating his marvelous film “Tulpan”, which finally reaches cinemas in the United Kingdom this weekend. Go see it, you’ll be glad you did.

The film will run from Nov. 13 in London at the Apollo Piccadilly Circus, The Gate Notting Hill, the Odeon Panton Street, and Curzon’s Renoir, and in Dundee, Dublin, and Hawkhurst. New Wave Films distribution has all the details and more about the film. There was also a good piece about Dvortsevoy by U.K.-based Polish filmmaker Pawel Pawlikowski in The Guardian.

Here’s my review of the “Tulpan” from The Hollywood Reporter:

By Ray Bennett

CANNES – Polished, funny and utterly charming, Kazakhstan director Sergey Dvortsevoy’s first feature film, “Tulpan,” which won the top prize in the Un Certain Regard sidebar at the Festival de Cannes, tells of a family not only surviving but also relishing the harsh life of sheep- and goat-herders on a barren landscape.

Set on the bleak and windswept Hunger Steppe in southern Kazakhstan, 500 kilometers from the nearest city, it’s about a nomadic peasant existence that demands hard work from everyone with pleasures few and far between. The film’s universal story of conflict between generations and the way little eccentricities make life bearable will please audiences everywhere. “Tulpan” will thrive at festivals and art-houses and its accessible humor may lead the way to mainstream exposure.

Key to the movie’s enjoyment is the unforced comedy that Dvortsevoy draws from the everyday activities of the family led by stern but loving shepherd Ondas (Ondasyn Beskikbasov), who tends his flock with the same care and attention he gives to his wife Samal (Samal Yeslyamova) and their little ones.

Ondas is worried because his lambs are arriving stillborn and it doesn’t help that his main helper, Asa (Askhat Kuchinchirekov), Samal’s brother, shows no signs of developing the skills and commitment required of a shepherd.

Asa wants his own herd but Ondas insists that he first take a wife. As a result, the boy is desperately wooing a neighboring shepherd’s daughter whose name is Tulpan and who is said to be very beautiful but is never seen.

The film follows Asa’s attempts, aided by madcap pal Boni (Tulepbergen Baisakalov), to convince Tulpan’s parents that he is a good catch and his determination to show Ondas that he can make a good shepherd. His ability is tested when he finds himself alone in the desert with a stricken pregnant sheep badly in need of help.

The screenplay, written by Dvortsevoy and Gennady Ostrovskiy, is filled with delightful moments showing the children at play, the tactile affection of the parents, the dauntingly punishing work, and the impossible dreams of the young men. The acting is sublime and cinematographer Jola Dylewska captures the bleak terrain in all its unforgiving glory.

CAST: Askhat Kuchinchirekov, Samal Yeslyamova, Ondasyn Besiskbasov, Tulepbergen Baisakalov. DIRECTOR: Sergey Dvortsevoy. SCREENWRITERS: Sergey Dvortsevoy, Gennady Ostrovskiy. PRODUCER: Karl Baumgartner. DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY: Jola Dylewska. PRODUCTION DESIGNER: Roger Martin. EDITORS: Isabel Meier, Petar Markovic. SALES AGENT: The Match Factory. No MPAA rating, running time 100 mins.

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