Friday, 13 October 2017

Ya ne Vernus

"There was a girl in the orphanage. One day she ran away from everyone. She came across a lake and saw a swan. She asked the swan to take her away. So the swan picked her up in his beak and flew away. The swan put the girl in his house. But he went away to see his kids and the girl saw him less and less. One day the girl jumped in the water. But she didn't drown and turned into a fish. The swan came back and couldn't see the girl. He began to cry. The fish-girl could see the swan but she couldn't speak to him. From that day, the fish would come up to the surface every day and see her swan cry".

I recently came across a Russian film called I won't come back, or Я Не Вернюсь (Ya ne vernus) in Russian. It took a while to decide which one to watch, from a list of films by the likes of Pedro Almodóvar and Michael Haneke. And I chose to watch the film by an unknown Estonian director Ilmar Raag. But after watching it, I can say the much-cliched phrase that you've only failed when you stopped trying. Failing, in this context, is not knowing the world of the parallel cinema, not knowing about a different world away from glitzy Hollywood and Bollywood, not witnessing life in another part of the world so less represented in the media. I won't come back is a powerful film about two orphans fighting their corner in the world and desperate search for love. The harsh realities of life, laced with short tales as the one above — a poetic, magical, getaway from the sombre undertone of the storyline, and a brilliant cinematography spanning the vast expanse of the Russian countryside to the Altai mountains in Kazakhstan — the result of the eclectic mix is unforgettable. And above all, I won't come back is remarkable due to a career defining performance by Polina Pushkaruk and young Vika Lobacheva.

Polina portrays Anya, who grew up in an orphanage, and she becomes a lecturer Ina college. There, she falls in love with a professor, but he has a family with children. One day she was accused of hiding drugs she didn't know about, and she escapes the police. To avoid arrest, Anya goes to an orphanage claiming she's fifteen, and there she meets Kristine, a thirteen-year-old girl who is bullied by other inmates. Anya defends her and Kristine becomes close to Anye. When Kristine tells Anya that she knows an escape route, Anya escapes one day, only to find Kristine following her, pleading to take her to her grandma in Kazakhstan. Thus begins the voyage to Kazakhstan, with very little money and they had to hitchhike. Halfway on the way, Anya receives a call from Andrei, that all charges against her were dropped and she should come back to the uni. Thus begins the clash between the two characters, both desperate to find a tie, a sense of belonging and being loved — Anya, in her lover and Kristine, in her grandma. Anya tries to send Kristine to Kazakhstan in a train but fails. Through various dramatic sequences it emerges that these two girls started relying on each other, but when Kristine said that to Anya, she refused to admit it, resulting in Kristine hitchhiking alone in a car leaving Anya behind. After a day of searching for her, Anya finds her alone, walking along the snow covered road in the upcoming winter. Anya finally realises how much she loved Kristine and decided to travel to Kazakhstan. Then in a sudden twist of fate, as they waited for a car, a drunk driver skids and hits the shed where Kristine was resting, killing her instantly. Anya in her grief realised that she'd become an orphan again, and lost the only human being who loved her unconditionally. The film then shows resolute Anya telling Andrei that she's not coming back, and finally reaches the village in the Urals. Kristine' grandmother mistakes Anya to be Kristine, and Anya carried on with the lie, to finally find a place to call home.

I found Ya ne vernus a magical film, despite its dark and sad undertone. A number of scenes were truly emotional, and Polina and Vika made those instances realistic as much as if the tension was palpable. Instances such as the time when Anya leaves a howling Kristine in the cemetery petrified of the wolves, or the instance when Kristine kept asking Anya to admit she loved her but Anya kept refusing. Perhaps the most touching scene was when Kristine suddenly dies. With the two girls finally agreeing to go to Kazakhstan, and the viewers expecting a journey to Kristine'a grandmother for a happily ever after, the suddenness of her death left us speechless. Perhaps Anya's grief in the film moved at a faster pace than the viewers realising that Kristine, the eccentric and dreamy teenager is actually dead. No miracle is happening, Anya won't be taking her to a farm where Vika would be treated and recover.

Yet, despite the dreary backdrop throughout the film, it also highlights the strength of a relationship and reinforces the fact that blood is thicker than water is just a phrase with no significance. The mythical interjections in the film, by the dreamy Kristine, gave the film a fantastic aura. These short intervals of fantasy take the viewers' attention away from the harsh reality of the main plot. Scenes like Kristine introducing herself to Anya telling there are an eagle and a dog inside her who talk to her all the time, or that she had wings but they were broken and she couldn't fly anymore because God only gives you wings once. We'll remember Kristine pouring soda on the road so the road sends them a lift, and that of the swan and the girl kept us hoping that there is something positive happening to these girls. We see the relationship between Anya and Kristine evolve with a background of the out and about places in Russia, captured by the fabulous cinematography — from a busy city to the Altai mountains, from a dark, snow-laden cemetery at night to busy service stations. The film presented slices of Russian life and culture through various imageries, perfectly blended into the storyline, such as the tale of the swan, as they walked past a deserted lake. As much as the unforgettable character portrayals of Polina Pushkaruk and Vika Lobacheva, the cinematography made the film great.

However, it's the turmoil and the relationship between the characters of Anya and Kristine is the tours de force in Ya ne vernus. It was surprising to find out later that Vika Lobacheva actually spent a large part of her childhood in social care. Anya's character is shown as an intelligent young woman, finding her place in the world putting the life in the orphanage behind her. However, as much as she appeared confident in professional life, she seemed helplessly desperate in her personal life. She was looking for stability throughout the film, and that's why knowing that she had no hope of getting Andrei leave his family for her, Anya clung on to him. Her only hope, still, was to stay in the city she was living and pray the Andrei leave his wife and family one day. Until then, at least she can still be in an affair with him. Kristine, on the other side, had nothing in the city. She has no relatives, she's bullied by all the inmates of the orphanage. All she had was a small tin box, inside which was a crumpled photo with an address of a remote village in Kazakhstan, where her grandma lived. Living in a shelter knowing that she had a living relative made her flee one shelter to another until she met Anya who, unlike others, was ready to stand up to anyone harassing Kristine. Kristine saw her like a big sister, she felt loved and cared for. And she felt secure. But her ultimate goal was to reach Chemolgan, the village in Kazakhstan where her grandma lived. It appeared as though one of these girls will have to make a sacrifice or will be separated forever. If Anya goes to Kazakhstan, she'll never see Andrei again, and if she went back to the city, Kristine will not see her Grandma. The director Ilmar Raag depicted through some unforgettable scenes how Anya opened up her feelings towards Kristine, and that the feeling she felt towards Andrei was slowly fading away.

Polina Pushkaruk was phenomenal in portraying the role of Anya but it's the young Vika Lobacheva who stole the heart away of the viewers. She made the character of dreamy and feisty Kristine very real to the audience. It was amazing acting by a young actor and I wonder why she hasn't been nominated for the best young actors.

Ya ne vernus is an exceptional film, magically woven by talented Ilmar Raag and supported by the lead actors Polina and Vika Lobacheva. Adding the cinematography featuring the vast expanse of the Russian countryside, it made Ya ne vernus one of the phenomenal films I've watched recently. I'm glad I made the choice, as did those young girls in the film, to go off the beaten track. 

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