On Demand: Klondike (2022) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Samuel Goldwyn FilmsUkrainian writer-director Maryna Er Gorbach, married to Turkish filmmaker Mehmet Bahadir Er, has primarily co-directed films with her husband for Turkey including but not limited to the 2009 comedy Black Dogs Barking before moving on to Love Me and Omar and Us.  But following the ongoing 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Ukrainian filmmaker moved up to the director’s chair in her first effort as a writer-director with her recurring creative and personal partner moving back to the position of producer while rejoining forces with their cinematographer Sviatoslav Bulakovskiy for the startlingly timely and arresting Turkish-Ukrainian co-produced Klondike.  A testament to maternal instincts prevailing over wartime hardships, this widescreen panoramic film isn’t interested in the ongoing conflict so much as it is in what drives someone amidst it all to stay put in a dangerous situation.  Like so many other Ukrainians before the central protagonist, she doesn’t want to leave even at gunpoint. Reeling back to 2014 at the very beginning of the ongoing conflict, the film set in the village of Grabove, Donetsk region near the Russian border consists of three primary characters: pregnant wife Irka (Oksana Cherkashyna), her beleaguered husband Tolik (Serhiy Shadrin) trying to appease his stubborn spouse and her younger brother Yurik (Oleg Shcherbina) from Kyiv.  Beginning with the happy but anxious couple in their bed as they mull over renovating the house when the infamous Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 plane crash which killed nearly 300 people occurs outside of their home, leaving a gaping hole in the frontage of their house.  As separatist militia members pass through their farmland home with cattle, Tolik is forced at gunpoint to kill and sell off his cow meat for soldiers while younger brother Yurik tries desperately and unsuccessfully to pry his older sister out of their crumbling home.  A bit like an Andrey Zvyagintsev, Jonathan Glazer or Nuri Bilge Ceylan film with its naturalistic running long takes observing familiar turmoil as a microcosm of an entire populace and uncompromising forays into bleakness, the Turkish-Ukrainian coproduced Klondike is less interested in politics or logistics than it is simply intensely trained on the plight of an ordinary expectant mother trying desperately to carry on daily routines as pandemonium erupts all around her.  Shot in Turkey with support of the Ukrainian State Film Agenvy as well as the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Turkey, the multi-national co-production includes work from Bosnian sound designer Serjan Kurpiel and Georgian composer Zviad Mgebrishvili who serves up a profoundly depressing and hopeless score.  The film also so happens to be produced by Sviatoslav Bulakovskiy who served as the film’s cinematographer who captures the increasingly decrepit and somber war-torn settings with mannered symmetrical beauty.  Somehow or another Bulakovskiy and director Gorbach find unlikely beauties amid the unfathomable horror. Oksana Cherkashyna goes all the way out on a limb here as a pregnant woman expecting her first child while her hogtied husband played by Serhiy Shadrin comes off as embittered, defeated and helplessly carrying on actions undecided by himself.  Oleg Shcherbina as younger brother Yurik is a young but well-meaning hothead from Kyiv trying desperately to yank his stubborn sister out of the Hell percolating around her home.  There’s also a small amount of supporting cast members playing rebels and military personnel.  The details of who is who on the sides of the conflict don’t matter, only that wife Irka and husband Tolik are forced to roll with the changes like it or not.  That the film stays focused primarily on three central characters also brings an intimacy to the ongoing conflict, like you yourself could be one of these ordinary civilians watching bombs fall nearby. Currently only on streaming platforms (fingers crossed Kino Lorber rights that wrong), Klondike became a critical success and Sundance Festival favorite where it won the Best Director Award for World Cinema Dramatic Competition.  It also went on to win the Ecumenical Jury Prize of the Berlin International Film Festival and the Golden Tulip at the International Istanbul Film Festival.  Simultaneously a war film, a character study, a paean to maternalism and the will to survive in the face of certain death, Klondike manages to be an apolitical ode to the endurance of motherhood and an almost feral human instinct to keep on living in spite of social, economic or political collapse.  With the Russo-Ukrainian war still going on, the Ukrainian film industry has responded with refreshing, intensely personal and relatable tales of the human spirit in the face of adversity.  --Andrew Kotwicki

Jun 6, 2024 - 11:56
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On Demand: Klondike (2022) - Reviewed
Images courtesy of Samuel Goldwyn Films

Ukrainian writer-director Maryna Er Gorbach, married to Turkish filmmaker Mehmet Bahadir Er, has primarily co-directed films with her husband for Turkey including but not limited to the 2009 comedy Black Dogs Barking before moving on to Love Me and Omar and Us.  But following the ongoing 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Ukrainian filmmaker moved up to the director’s chair in her first effort as a writer-director with her recurring creative and personal partner moving back to the position of producer while rejoining forces with their cinematographer Sviatoslav Bulakovskiy for the startlingly timely and arresting Turkish-Ukrainian co-produced Klondike.  A testament to maternal instincts prevailing over wartime hardships, this widescreen panoramic film isn’t interested in the ongoing conflict so much as it is in what drives someone amidst it all to stay put in a dangerous situation.  Like so many other Ukrainians before the central protagonist, she doesn’t want to leave even at gunpoint.

 
Reeling back to 2014 at the very beginning of the ongoing conflict, the film set in the village of Grabove, Donetsk region near the Russian border consists of three primary characters: pregnant wife Irka (Oksana Cherkashyna), her beleaguered husband Tolik (Serhiy Shadrin) trying to appease his stubborn spouse and her younger brother Yurik (Oleg Shcherbina) from Kyiv.  Beginning with the happy but anxious couple in their bed as they mull over renovating the house when the infamous Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 plane crash which killed nearly 300 people occurs outside of their home, leaving a gaping hole in the frontage of their house.  As separatist militia members pass through their farmland home with cattle, Tolik is forced at gunpoint to kill and sell off his cow meat for soldiers while younger brother Yurik tries desperately and unsuccessfully to pry his older sister out of their crumbling home. 


 
A bit like an Andrey Zvyagintsev, Jonathan Glazer or Nuri Bilge Ceylan film with its naturalistic running long takes observing familiar turmoil as a microcosm of an entire populace and uncompromising forays into bleakness, the Turkish-Ukrainian coproduced Klondike is less interested in politics or logistics than it is simply intensely trained on the plight of an ordinary expectant mother trying desperately to carry on daily routines as pandemonium erupts all around her.  Shot in Turkey with support of the Ukrainian State Film Agenvy as well as the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Turkey, the multi-national co-production includes work from Bosnian sound designer Serjan Kurpiel and Georgian composer Zviad Mgebrishvili who serves up a profoundly depressing and hopeless score.  The film also so happens to be produced by Sviatoslav Bulakovskiy who served as the film’s cinematographer who captures the increasingly decrepit and somber war-torn settings with mannered symmetrical beauty.  Somehow or another Bulakovskiy and director Gorbach find unlikely beauties amid the unfathomable horror.


 
Oksana Cherkashyna goes all the way out on a limb here as a pregnant woman expecting her first child while her hogtied husband played by Serhiy Shadrin comes off as embittered, defeated and helplessly carrying on actions undecided by himself.  Oleg Shcherbina as younger brother Yurik is a young but well-meaning hothead from Kyiv trying desperately to yank his stubborn sister out of the Hell percolating around her home.  There’s also a small amount of supporting cast members playing rebels and military personnel.  The details of who is who on the sides of the conflict don’t matter, only that wife Irka and husband Tolik are forced to roll with the changes like it or not.  That the film stays focused primarily on three central characters also brings an intimacy to the ongoing conflict, like you yourself could be one of these ordinary civilians watching bombs fall nearby.


 
Currently only on streaming platforms (fingers crossed Kino Lorber rights that wrong), Klondike became a critical success and Sundance Festival favorite where it won the Best Director Award for World Cinema Dramatic Competition.  It also went on to win the Ecumenical Jury Prize of the Berlin International Film Festival and the Golden Tulip at the International Istanbul Film Festival.  Simultaneously a war film, a character study, a paean to maternalism and the will to survive in the face of certain death, Klondike manages to be an apolitical ode to the endurance of motherhood and an almost feral human instinct to keep on living in spite of social, economic or political collapse.  With the Russo-Ukrainian war still going on, the Ukrainian film industry has responded with refreshing, intensely personal and relatable tales of the human spirit in the face of adversity. 


--Andrew Kotwicki

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