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Eastern Promises (2007)
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Rated: |
R |
Starring: |
Viggo Mortensen, Armin Mueller Stahl, Naomi Watts, Vincent Cassel. |
Director: |
David Cronenberg |
Genre: |
Crime | Drama | Mystery | Thriller |
DVD Release Date: 12/23/2007 |
Viggo Mortensen and Academy Award nominee Naomi Watts star in this electrifying thriller from critically acclaimed director David Cronenberg (A History Of Violence). Criminal mastermind Nikolai (Mortensen) finds his ties to a notorious crime family shaken
when he crosses paths with Anna (Watts), a midwife who has accidentally uncovered evidence against them. Their unusual relationship sets off an unstoppable chain of murder, mystery and deception in the explosive film critics are calling "provocative and
engrossing" (Claudia Puig, USA Today).
Storyline: In London, the Russian pregnant teenager Tatiana arrives bleeding in a hospital, and the doctors save her baby only. The Russian descendant midwife Anna Khitrova finds Tatiana's diary written in Russian language in her belongings and
decided to find her family to deliver the baby, she brings the diary home and ask her uncle Stepan to translate the document. Stepan refuses, but Anna finds a card of a restaurant owned by the Russian Semyon inside the diary and she visits the old man
trying to find a lead to contact Tatiana's family. When she mentions the existence of the diary, Semyon immediately offers to translate the document. However, Stepan translates part of the diary and Anna discovers that Semyon and his sick son Kirill had
raped Tatiana when she was fourteen years old and forced her to work as prostitute in a brothel of their own. Further, Semyon is the dangerous boss of the Russian mafia "Vory v Zakone", jeopardizing the safety of Anna and her family. Meanwhile, Semyon's
... Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Cast Notes: Viggo Mortensen (Nikolai), Naomi Watts (Anna), Vincent Cassel (Kirill), Armin Mueller-Stahl (Semyon), Sinéad Cusack (Helen), Mina E. Mina (Azim), Jerzy Skolimowski (Stepan), Donald Sumpter (Yuri), Josef Altin (Ekrem), Aleksandar Mikic
(Soyka), Sarah-Jeanne Labrosse (Tatiana), Lalita Ahmed (Customer), Badi Uzzaman (Chemist), Doña Croll (Nurse [as Dona Croll]), Raza Jaffrey (Doctor Aziz).
User Comment: *** This comment may contain spoilers *** ourson66 from Toronto, Canada, 15 September 2007 • In a wet and dreary pre-Christmas London, an anonymous, distressed, 14-year old Russian girl staggers into Trafalgar
hospital, on the verge of giving birth, hemorrhaging badly and with obvious heroine tracks on her arms. Pediatric nurse Anna (Naomi Watts) tries in vain to save both mother and baby, but in the end, all that remains is the newborn, and a diary written in
Russian in the girl's purse, that contains a business card for a Russian restaurant. Haunted by her own previous miscarriage, and determined that the baby girl not be sent to an orphanage, Anna attempts to have the diary translated in order to identify
the anonymous girl's family. In so doing, she becomes embroiled in the dark, seething world of crime, drugs, and prostitution of the Russian Mob. It is an enclosed, hot house society, where family loyalty and responsibility and adherence to the "vory v
zakone" code of thieves are paramount, and shady characters like the "restauranteur" Semyon (Armin Mueller-Stahl), his son Kirill (Vincent Cassel) and his "driver" Nikolai (Viggo Mortensen) exist on the periphery of the law.
As a long-time fan of Cronenberg's work, it is interesting for me to see his recent films grab the public attention in such a mainstream way. While it is true that both "A History of Violence" and "Eastern Promises" feature less obviously fantastic
elements than, say, "The Fly" or "Scanners", Cronenberg's uniquely clinical and undramatic visual and storytelling style remain intact throughout all of his films. Nothing in a David Cronenberg film appears on- screen without a reason. He's sort of the
film-making equivalent of Ernest Hemingway: a deceptively simple, unflinching eye; a calm surface that somehow manages to get under your skin and hints at labyrinthine depths beneath. Cronenberg's work always makes you uncomfortable, but here in "Eastern
Promises", it is done very subtly, almost subliminally, so you find yourself thinking about it afterward without realizing it.
The acting in Eastern Promises is uniformly excellent. Viggo Mortensen's Nikolai, in particular, displays a still, coiled menace that is chilling and intense, which plays well against Vincent Cassel's portrayal of the feral Kirill, whose confused and
tortured attempts to live up to his father's criminal expectations set the plot in motion, and Armin Mueller-Stahl's stunningly nuanced performance as the crime boss Semyon: Satan dressed up as your favorite uncle at Christmastime. As Anna, unwittingly
tossed into this den of serpents, Naomi Watts manages to be simultaneously vulnerable and tenacious in a role for which she will doubtless receive too little credit.
Cronenberg's no-nonsense approach to violence is still in evidence here, from the shockingly bloody opening scene, to one remarkably brutal fight sequence that deserves to be written down in the annals of film history, and is so astonishing that it isn't
until afterward that you register the fact that Viggo Mortensen did the whole thing completely nude. But, in the end, it is the sinuous undercurrent of hope, the trickle of humanity that manages to somehow exist amongst these desperate characters, that
sticks with me in this film. The writing hints at things rather than stating them, the muted "film noir" visual style enhances this, and even the "big plot twist" near the end of the story (that I wouldn't dream of spoiling for you) is handled with the
most minimalist of gestures. I swear, sometime soon David Cronenberg is going to discover the meaning of life in a black screen.
Summary: Eastern Promises ... and delivers.
IMDb Rating (01/22/08): 7.9/10 from 26,467 users
Additional information |
Copyright: |
2007, Universal Studios |
Features: |
• Secrets And Stories: See how Director David Cronenberg Brought the Screenplay to Life in the Dark and Forbidding Streets of London
• Marked For Life: Director David Cronenberg Reveals the Hidden History Behind Russian Tattoos as Well as Their Complex Symbolism and Unique Visual Storytelling |
Subtitles: |
English, Spanish, French |
Video: |
Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic-16x9) |
Audio: |
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
FRENCH: Dolby Digital 5.1
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Time: |
1:41 |
DVD: |
# Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1 |
UPC: |
025193330024 |
D-Box: |
No |
Other: |
Producers: Robert Lantos, Paul Webster, Directors:, David Cronenberg; Writers: Steven Knight, Producers:, Robert Lantos, Paul Webster, Directors:, David Cronenberg; running time of 101 minutes; Packaging: Keep Case;
[CC]. {[V4.5-A4.0] VC-1 - } |
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