Ce lume vesela

Summary The film tells the love story between a doctor and a much younger painter, a love story in which, at the end, it is not clear who used whom. "What a happy world!" it is the terminus of a cinematic tetra-logy that began with "On the Left Bank of the Blue Danube", continued with "Figures" and "No One Lives Here", a fresco of Romanian society over the course of five decades. View more details

Ce lume vesela

Directed : Malvina Ursianu

Written : Malvina Ursianu

Stars : Florin Piersic Jr. Vasile Albinet Tania Popa Tamara Cretulescu

6

Details

Genres : Drama

Release date : Mar 16, 2003

Countries of origin : Romania

Language : Romanian

Production companies : Agerfilm S.r.l.

Summary The film tells the love story between a doctor and a much younger painter, a love story in which, at the end, it is not clear who used whom. "What a happy world!" it is the terminus of a cinematic tetra-logy that began with "On the Left Bank of the Blue Danube", continued with "Figures" and "No One Lives Here", a fresco of Romanian society over the course of five decades. View more details

Details

Genres : Drama

Release date : Mar 16, 2003

Countries of origin : Romania

Language : Romanian

Production companies : Agerfilm S.r.l.

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So Close to Home

So Close to Home

Maggie, a professional women in her 30s, is in the sleeping compartment of an overnight train to Sydney. Maggie is a workaholic who drowns her loneliness in a busy world. Unable to relax, she pulls out her laptop. But on this night, Maggie's lifestyle of extreme order and isolation is disrupted when a 14-year-old Albanian girl silently demands her seat and Maggie is forced to travel backwards. The next morning as Maggie anxiously prepares to meet her estranged mother, Ramona, she is disturbed to realize that the girl, Azra, is following her. To Ramona's incredulity, Maggie invites the stranger home and there Azra begins to reveal a deep secret. Ramona's world of quiet suburbia, where novelty letterboxes front the neat yards, is an unlikely scene for a clash of language, culture and family turmoil. But as Azra reveals she is a refugee from Kosovo, the fragile walls of suburban familiarity begin to crack. Her family shattered by war, all Azra has to hold on to is a hand-made postcard of the Opera House, which her mother sent from a detention center in Australia. Azra's past is glimpsed in a nightmarish memory, which is echoed by the childhood experience that Ramona later relays to her own daughter. These fragments within the story add a personally poetic layer to the underlying politics of exile and belonging. Both emotionally troubled, Maggie and Ramona struggle to deal with the stranger. Ramona is highly critical of Maggie, who in turn resents her mother's overbearing ways. Their relationship is turned on its head, when Azra'search leads to a surprising and ultimately moving discovery. In the current climate, where the issue of asylum seekers has polarized opinion, So Close To Home is a remarkable depiction of the ironies and challenges involved in the idea of strangers. What begins as a story of boundaries is soon transformed into an exploration of the bonds of family and in particular, motherhood.

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