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Oligarkh |
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Rating: Summary: A new dirty Russia Review: An amazing look at the new corruption in Russia and the shady characters that the new system promotes. This film is right up there with some of the best U.S. gangster movies, including Goodfellas, Godfather, and Scarface. A movie that no one hears of but everyone should see.
Rating: Summary: Deserves all five stars Review: If you come accross this movie, go ahead and watch it. I didn't find the story fantastic at all. This is what happens in third world countries. As reviewers we can't give away plot line and spoil it for everybody. The main character Plato is successfully assinated after some fifteen attempts and the story is told through flashbacks to great effect. A coterie is pulled and pushed againts each other in a game of finding a traitor. Along the way Plato earn enemies and friends. Among the most virulent enemies is a corrupt Russian aristrocat whose wife Plato bangs and I will leave it at that. I think one of the most intriguing character is the district attorney who is investigating Plato and his billion dollar firm INFOCAR. His motives are not entirely clear but the this DA is uncovering all kinds of stuff.
Rating: Summary: Powerful portrait of the "new" Russia Review: The timeframe depicted in this film spans from the 80s into the collapse of the Soviet Union and the rise of what is termed in Russia the "oligarchs"--essentially, robber barons who ruthlessly did, and do everything they can to make millions of dollars. One such, a real person, was Boris Berekovski, here christened Platon Makovski.
Using flashbacks, the director, Pavel Longuine, a dual citizen of France and Russia, gives us a penetrating look at how Russians thought and felt and acted as the backbone of their entire civilization, communism, disappeared, to be replaced by a capitalism whose brutality made--and makes--people like John D. Rockefeller resemble babes in the woods. In the new Russia, people openly kill each other for business. Is that true in the US? Sure. But it's true typically of criminals--i.e., those whose lives are on a specific path.
What Longuine shows us in this film is that in the new Russia, it's true of businessmen who follow a path of doing business that can just as easily include whipping out a Kalashnikov and blowing away their competition as it can sitting at a conference room table.
The flashback technique is used effectively, counting down the years--starting at 15 years prior to Makovski's untimely demise--until just before the day of his death. We meet Makovski, his business associates, his mistress(es), the judge who uncovers the truth, his rivals, his allies, his friends. As each character makes his/her presence known, more of the new Russia is revealed until we see a picture of just how cutthroat things became--and still are. To illustrate this, one of Makovski's associates tells a joke about a man who bought a tie for $3,000 and is told by his friend that he was ripped off, since he saw the same tie somewhere else for $2,500.
This is a unique film--no other cinematic work has explored this territory, certainly not as clearly and comprehensively as Longuine has here. Great job.
Rating: Summary: Politics,money,power,and now art in Russia Review: This is Russia today.
Now I can understand the daily news happenings.
Farenheight 911 is to USA as Tycoon is to Russia.
This picture should be required course in schools.
I wish some of the scarface antics would be easier for me to follow.
Rating: Summary: A True Look at Russian Business Review: This movie was excellent, it trully captures the reality of how Russia operates. Nothing in this movie has been exaggerated at all.
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