Film Review: The Karamazovs
Bottom Line: Dostoevski’s classic story is given new life in a film about the production of a play in an odd venue.
Jul 16, 2008
Breaking a leg with "The Karamazovs."
Venue: Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.
KARLOVY VARY, Czech Republic -- Fyodor Dostoevski’s classic novel about four brothers divided by the murder of their father forms the basis of Petr Zelenka’s “The Karamazovs,” a film about a play based on the book. A stage dramatization of the book by Evald Schorm, which has been successfully directed at the Prague Dejvice Theatre by Lukas Hlavica, is staged at an unusual venue -- a local steelworks at a town in Poland.
The actors and theatrical company arrive at the factory under a government grant. The action of the film shows a complete run-through of the play with only a handful of spectators. One of them, however, is going through a terrible personal drama that puts the whole question of art into perspective.
Setting a classic literary tale in a broken down industrial structure helps to underline the story’s exploration of family, faith and duty. Terrific performances by a fine cast flesh out the novel’s characters. Blending in a present-day incident provides added resonance. Art-house audiences will give it a very positive welcome.
Lenka Krobotova as the actress playing Grushenka and Michaela Badinkova as Katerina match the men for strength and a good understanding of the twin nature of their roles. Andrzej Mastalerz plays a maintenance man whose son has fallen from a platform in the factory and is near death in the local hospital. The man knows he should be with his son but, wracked with guilt, he becomes mesmerized by the story being staged at his place of work.
Director Zelenka and cinematographer Alexander Surkala make very good use of the machine works in the factory and the many nooks and hideaways available. Never losing sight of Dostoevski’s powerful statement about faith, the film raises significant questions about the complex relationship between art and its audience.
Production: Prvni verejnopravni, CinemArt, Czech Television.
Cast: Ivan Trojan, David Novotny, Igor Chmela, Martin Mysicka, Radek Holub, Lenka Krobotova, Michaela Badinkova, Roman Luknar, Andrzej Mastalerz, Adrianna Miara. Director: Petr Zelenka. Screenwriter: Evald Schorm. Based on the novel “The Brothers Karamazov” by: Fyodor M. Dostoevsky. Producer: Cestmir Kopecky. Director of photography: Alexander Surkala. Music: Jan A.P. Kaczmarek. Editor: Vladimir Barak. Sales agent: Prvni verejnopravni.
No rating, 100 minutes.
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