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Reviews |
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Egor Konchalovskii, Flight [Pobeg] (2005) reviewed by Seth Graham©2005 |
"Flight is definitely not a remake," insists Egor Konchalovskii, referring to his fourth
feature film (Manuel Muhm, “The Running Man,” St.
Petersburg Times [8 April 2005] ). Aficionados of American popular culture, however, will find the plot very
familiar: a prominent doctor is wrongly convicted of the murder of his wife,
makes an unplanned, opportunistic escape from a prison transport, and spends the
rest of the movie being hunted by a hard-edged federal agent while
simultaneously searching for the true culprit. Konchalovskii—who established himself as one of Russia’s leading
action-film directors with Antikiller (2000) and Antikiller 2
(2003)—complicates the character development and motivations that drive the
venerable plot in ways that distinguish it from both the 1993 American film The
Fugitive(dir. Andrew Davis) and the 1960s television series of
the same name. He gives the
pursuing agent, for example, a melodramatic back story, and the
doctor-turned-fugitive begins the film as talented, but also unlikeable. The camera-work is also eclectic; Konchalovskii and cinematographer Anton
Antonov use the familiar black-and-white-flashback device, as well as a grainy
stock and choppy slow motion for some of the action scenes.

The complications are close to excessive, not because they distract from
the central action of the chase, but because they are woven together in a
Zhivago-like web of coincidences that taxes the viewer’s credulousness.
The fugitive, Vetrov, has a preternatural talent for being at the wrong
place at the wrong time, and is accused not only of murdering his wife, but
several other murders, a fatally botched operation, and, in a flashback, his
wife’s miscarriage.
Mironov and Konchalovskii
One of the film’s other shortcomings is the uneven performance of the
lead actor, Evgenii Mironov, who begins well, portraying the nuances of the
altruistic-yet-self-absorbed surgeon, but for most of the film seems to have two
thespian modes: saccharine and scenery-chewing. Also doing a bit of chewing, but generally more convincing,
is Aleksei Serebriakov (unforgettable as the transsexual stakhanovite in Sergei
Livnev’s 1994 film, Hammer and Sickle) in the role of Pakhomov, the
colonel in charge of the manhunt who for some reason insists to the point of
violence that the fugitive be captured alive (just one of the mysteries revealed
at the end of the film). Konchalovskii
is to be commended for exploring the similarities between the hunter and the
hunted—which gives the film a sort of parallel-action buddy-film feel that
worked well for Harrison Ford and Tommy Lee Jones in the 1993 film—but, again,
the extraneous characters and plotlines distract from this central relationship.
Konchalovskii is the nephew of director Nikita Mikhalkov and the son of
director Andrei Konchalovskii and actress Nataliia Arinbasarova (heroine of the
elder Konchalovskii’s 1965 debut feature film, First Teacher), who has
an uncredited cameo as the director of an orphanage. He is also the grandson of Sergei Mikhalkov, a famous writer
of children’s stories and perhaps the only man in history to have written
three national anthems―all for the same country.
Seth Graham, Stanford University
Flight Russia,
2005
Color,
117 minutes
Director:
Egor Konchalovskii
Screenplay:
Sergei Astakhov, Dmitrii Kotov, Oleg Pogodin
Cinematography:
Anton Antonov
Art
Direction: Denis Kuprin
Cast:
Evgenii Mironov (Vetrov), Aleksei Serebriakov (Pakhomov), Viktoriia Tolstoganova
(Irina), Andrei Smoliakov (Topilin)
Producer:
Ruben Dishdishian, Sergei Danielian
Production:
PS TVC, Central Partnership
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Egor Konchalovskii, Flight [Pobeg] (2005) reviewed by Seth Graham©2005 |
10/07/05