Compartment Number 6 (2021) Poster

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8/10
Railroad to Somewhere...
Xstal2 October 2022
What would you do, in a carriage made for four, there's just you and a drunk guy, and he thinks that you're a whore, there's nowhere to run or hide, this will not be a great ride, but you're stoic and heroic, you will take it in your stride.

A wonderful story, as Laura and Ljoha, two strangers on a train, gradually allow the ice that encapsulates us all to thaw, defrost, puddle and merge, creating a bond that was as distant as the poles when they first encountered each other at the beginning of their journey from Moscow to Murmansk. A story that proves what a catalyst we can be to each other when the barriers are removed to reveal the compassionate and emotional beings we are deep inside.
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8/10
long journey to the north
dromasca26 November 2021
I was curious to see 'Compartment no 6', the film by Finnish director Juho Kuosmanen, which became one of the most awarded movies on the festival circuit during this special year which is 2021. The film is a 'road movie' or if you wish a 'railroad movie' , whose story takes place most of the time in a train that runs through the Russian steppe from Moscow to Murmansk, in the far north, beyond the Arctic Circle. Two young people, a Finn woman and a Russian man, who have nothing in common except enough reasons not to be able to tolerate each other are forced to spend the three days and two nights of the trip together. The formula seems pretty rusty, especially as what almost everything viewers expect after the first ten minutes of watching the film happens, and yet, beyond the not very original story, the film manages to catch the attention through sincerity and the natural and empathetic way in which the characters and the reality around them are treated.

The film director and the lead heroine are Finnish, but the story takes place in Russia, sometime in the late '90s. Laura (Seidi Haarla), a student in Moscow, is planning a trip to Murmansk, in the far north of Russia, together with Irina, her Russian girlfriend. The friend gives up at the last moment and from what will follow we understand that the relationship was almost over from her point of view. Laura takes the trip alone, in a sleeping cars train, the purpose of the trip being to see some petroglyphs 10 thousand years old, which arouse her interest as a future archaeologist. In the train she is assigned to the same compartment with a young Russian man named Ljoha (Yuriy Borisov), a drunk and rude person. She tries to find a place in another compartment, but this proves to be impossible. The trip promises to become a nightmare, the communication between the two being hampered by differences in language (Laura speaks only elementary Russian), culture, and alcohol fumes. From here, however, things will evolve.

The interaction between the two works wonderfully, and even if the situations are not that original - we have already seen similar ones in too many romantic comedies - the subtlety of the script writing, the talent and the chemistry between the two actors manage to make the relationship credible and human, leaving room for multiple subtexts and interpretations. The romantic element appears late, and until then the communication between the two young people is based neither on language (which is a tool of misunderstanding rather than understanding) nor on sexual attraction. Cultural differences are subtly described, juggling around stereotypes. We can of course ask ourselves how true to realities is the image of Russia in the first decade after communism that is presented to us on screen. I know too little about Finnish cinema, except for a few films by Aki Kaurismaki, so I'm not sure if my assessment is correct, but it seemed to me that compared to what I saw, the focus is less on the comic and sarcastic dimensions and more on the human connection and communication between the heroes. In other words, 'Compartment no 6' looks more like a Russian film about a young Finnish woman directed by a Finn than like a Finnish film. Anyway and whatever shelf we lay it, it is a simple and good film, whose viewing has chances to please many spectators. The actors do an excellent job, and the camera work makes watching the scenes on the train, in Russian homes, or from the frozen steppe an immersive experience. The decisions of the juries of festivals such as Cannes or Jerusalem, I believe, will in this case be validated by the reception of the public.
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7/10
Sensitive journey
bea3721 October 2021
I have just watched this at the Mostra Internacional de São Paulo.

It feels very genuine: the acting is naturalistic and the story, simple. It's a road movie/coming of age experience that teaches us a few valuable lessons without preaching them. Also a reminder of how much we miss natural-looking people on the big screen.
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7/10
Polar Express
evanston_dad25 February 2022
A Finnish romance of sorts about a woman whose first negative impressions of her fellow train compartment passenger make way for warmer feelings as she gets to know him.

I think "Compartment No. 6" is a lot about the importance of being open to new experiences and the rashness inherent in instantly forming judgements about people. The female protagonist in this movie studies anthropology because she feels like knowing our history is important to understanding who we are now. But is it really? In a cultural and sociological sense, probably. But at the individual level, when does attachment to the past interfere with living in the present?

There's a great scene in this movie that takes place after a fellow Finn, a tall strapping guy with a guitar no less, is crooning songs to the woman as he crashes in their compartment for a bit, and she looks out the window to see the off-kilter Russian who has set her on edge standing out on the train platform punching and kicking snowballs. In that moment, we get what she's feeling, because we feel it to. Yeah, the Finnish guy is good looking and "safe," but he's also boring. The Russian guy is weird and maybe crazy, but he's different, and sometimes different is exactly what you need.

Grade: A-
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9/10
Much more than just a brilliant character study!
thao17 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This is such a beautiful film and way deeper than some might realize. It is not only a brilliant character study, but also hints at some brutal facts about Russia's past.

There will be spoilers from here on!!!

So what's the problem with Ljoha? It is never spelled out but from all we see and hear we realize that he was an orphan during the collapse of the USSR. Orphanages were never good in the Soviet Union but they got no better after its collapse.

This is from Wikipedia: "There have been reports over the years that the conditions in the orphanages are not providing proper mental and physical care. Researchers have stated that children 3 and under lose one IQ point for every month spent inside. Children adopted from Russia are also more likely than any other country to have fetal alcohol spectrum disorder. Doctors visiting some of these institutions have even reported seeing toddlers sitting alone, rocking back and forth, staring blankly, or even banging their heads against walls. Children in the 1990s were often not provided with proper nutrition and were not given quality living and sleeping conditions.

The older woman whom they visited (who was more than a mother) probably worked at the orphanage. This is why he struggles with rejection. And this is also why he does not write down his address. He probably does not have one.

I love how the film first presents him as a terrible person but slowly shows us his humanity. How he is much more than what is on the surface.

The main theme of the film is lies. Lies the government tells through statistics (as the old woman points out). Laura's life in Moscow is also a lie. She is really not in a loving relationship and all these educated people are just performing for each other. She slowly realizes this and loses her camera at the same time with all the fake memories. And Ljoha is hiding his past.

And then there's the whole purpose of the trip, which ends up being the least interesting thing that happens, because even though the past matters, the connections we make here and now matter more.
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7/10
Nicely rough-edged and vodka-soaked
rubenm21 February 2022
Aah, the pleasures of traveling by long distance train! Admiring the scenery from the compartment window, enjoying nice meals in the restaurant car, and dozing off at night to the clickety-click sound of the wheels.

Everybody who once took a long distance sleeper knows the reality is different. Those people will enjoy this film. One of the drawbacks of international trains is the company in the compartment to which you have been assigned. Finnish student Laura has bad luck, having to share hers with a drunken Russian miner who asks without much ado if she is a prostitute.

During the long ride from Moscow to the northern city of Murmansk the two travel companions get to know each other better, and even learn to appreciate each other. This sounds a bit cheesy, but it isn't. Laura is dissapointed and lonely: her lover couldn't accompany her on the trip and reacts coolly to her phone calls. When, during a long stopover, she has to choose between the company of her rude but adventurous travel companion or no company at all, the choice is a no-brainer.

An extra attraction is that the movie takes place in the not-so distant past. It is the pre-internet era of pay phones and Walkmans. This is no major issue in the film, but it explains why Laura takes the train instead of flying.

There's a bit of 'Lost in Translation' in this film, a bit of 'Before Sunrise' and a bit of 'Ma nuit chez Maude'. Plus: it's Russia, so everything is nicely rough-edged and vodka-soaked. Na zdorovie!
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10/10
Open Mind
thebeachlife1 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
A woman from Finland, who's been staying in Russia for quite a while and who speaks the language really well, sets out on a journey from Moscow to Murmansk. At the outset, it doesn't go exactly as planned but later on things change drastically: two people she trusts implicitly turn out to be a con-man and a liar but the one who looks the most revolting appears to be a friend.

And what always helps her on her way is her curiosity, sincerity and an extremely open mind.

The film is full of terrible stereotypes about Russia but once you see through them, you start genuinely enjoying it.

And there's a sweet surprise at the end.
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7/10
Travelling very North
Jaffaroll2 September 2022
Compartment Number 6 is superficially a bleak 'Russian' railRoad film largely centered on a mismatched couple thrown together in a train compartment travelling from Moscow to Murmansk. I gather it was largely filmed in Russia, Moscow, but is directed by the Finnish, Juho Kuosmanen, who had previous success in Cannes and then shared the grand Prix there in 2021 for this effort, (with "A Hero"). It is from a Finnish novel by Rosa Liksom.

I like bleak "Russian" films (They are unpredictable, often very well done and more like my impression of life -) and this didn't disappoint. Laura is an older Finnish student, having an affair with her landlady in Moscow, circa the 90's. Landlady may be over the affair and has pulled out of a planned trip the 2 were making to see petraglyphs in Murmansk (these are 1000 year + old rock carvings and sound fascinating. Go in summer and maybe by plane.) So Laura decides to go anyway. After an uncomfortable pseudo-sophisticated farewell party where the gauche Laura tries hard but flails and seems out of place with the neat pretentious guests, she joins the train heading north to Murmansk. Russian winter. To her dismay she finds sharing the cabin is a boorish, rude, heavy drinking, Russian miner Ljoha (Yuri Borisov) heading back up there to his mine. She cant get another cabin. So there they are - both in their way lacking social graces and pretty dysfunctional. And you can compare these 2, with the earlier relaxed members of society at the party.

The Acting particularly of the lead couple is excellent as is direction and the filming in and out of the train. Bleak and rough but also in some way sweet. I liked it.
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9/10
Finnish movie that won Grand Prix at Cannes this year.
suuronenmiro7 November 2021
Only finnish director that has won that before this was Aki Kaurismäki with The Man Without a Past 2002.

So i was very excited to see this one.

I'm always little skeptical with finnish movies.

But this ended up being very delightful movie.

Very good and beautiful story about finnish woman who travels across Russia to see petroglyphs in Murmansk.

Main part of movie is when she travels by train.

She meets russian guy and they are completely different peoples.

Their unique friendship develops beautifully.

There are also many other very different peoples who she meets in her journey.

Good and little less good peoples.

This movie has many sweet and funny moments in it.

It's mostly spoken in russian but it was very fun to hear finnish language in it too.

Very good performances from two leads definitely.

I also heard that this was chosen to be Finland's Oscar runner for foreign category.

So best of luck with that too.
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7/10
Good performances and a good script (possibly based on a equally interesting novel)
JuguAbraham22 February 2022
Very unusual film that keeps your interest to the end. At Cannes, this film shared honors of the second best film in competition with Farhadi's Iranian film "A Hero." I found this work to be far superior to the Iranian film. "Compartment no. 6" is based on a Finnish novel by a reputed lady novelist from that country. As I have not read the novel, how well the Finnish director adapted it is unclear. The performances of all the actors are convincing--especially that of the Russian miner (Yuriy Borisov) from start to finish. Definitely, one of my best films of 2021. Actor Yuriy Borisov had a small role in Zvyagintsev's "Elena," (the actor's debut in feature films)--and it is impressive for him to evolve into a major character actor in this film. He was evidently Zvyagintsev's discovery.
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8/10
A real rail movie
frankde-jong2 March 2022
Juho Kuosmanen is knwown for small films. With "The happiest day in the life of Olli Maki" (2016) he won a certain regard award in Cannes. With "Compartment number 6" (2021) he even won the Grand prix. "The happiest day in the life of Olli Maki" was hard to see in Dutch cinema's. I saw it a few years later on TV. "Compartment number 6" is shown in more then 30 Dutch city's when writing this review.

"Compartment number 6" is situated during a long train journey. It thus is a road (rail) movie. Road movies are about chance encounters, and in "Compartment number 6" this is between a Finnish scientist (Laura played by Seidi Haarla) and a Russian mine worker (Ljoha played by Yuri Borisov).

Alfred Hitchcock often used the train as a closed system from which it is hard to escape, for example "The lady vanishes" (1938). In this movie you cannot escape danger. In "compartment number 6" you cannot escape a person that is very different and gives rise to a lot of annoyance.

Of course during the journey the two gradually grow towards each other, without the film ever becoming a romcom. In essence their relationship is more symptomatic for the years in which the film is situated, just after the end of the Cold War, with Eastern and Western people still interest in each other and still eager to get to know each other better.

While Laura gradually grows towards Ljoha, she gradually drifts apart from Irina, in Moscow her teacher, landlord and lover at the same time. At the beginning of the film we learn that in this relationship Irina is the dominant and not always sympathetic one, just like Emma (Lea Seydoux) in "La vie d'Adele" (2013, Abdellatif Kechiche). Laura just needs some more time and more distance to come to the same conclusion. Quite striking in the present time is the fact that in this film in relation to the main character her male companion (Ljoha) becomes more and more sympathetic while her female companion (Irina) turns out to be abusive.

The film is based on a novel of the same name by Finnish writer Rosa Liksom. In the novel the trainjourney is on the Mongolian express, in the film the final destination is Murmansk, above the arctic circle. This, combined with the fact that Laura is on a scientific journey (she wants to study the Kanozero Petroglyphs), reminded me of "Beyond sleep" (2016, Boudewijk Koole). In this film (after the novel of Willen Frederik Hermans) a geologist (Alfred) goes on expedition in Finnmark. Alfred never reaches his goal. Laura ultimately reaches her goal, but does not get any satisfaction from it.
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6/10
Just Ok
yespat24 March 2022
It was ok, nothing special. It did give a realistic sense of what winter in the far north looks and feels like. Might be a nice relief to watch in the dead of summer. Also gives an idea of the kinds of things young and adventurous people in their 20's do that can lead to a fatal outcome or new horizons. Everything looked good, realistic, and the actors were great, casting perfect. All that said, there is no reason to rush to the theater to see it. Watch it at home when it becomes available, or not.
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1/10
A long, rather slow and pointless journey
georgedimitriou146 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I honestly don't get the high rating of this film. I watched the whole movie, surprisingly though as it is rather boring, hoping that something worthwhile will eventually emerge. However nothing worth mentioning happens, there is no actual message, no interesting plot either but just a train journey of two total strangers who travel in the same compartment. A Finnish girl (a lesbian who initially was going on this trip with her partner) on one hand who travels to the Arctic Circle in order to see some petroglyphs and a low life Russian with an alcohol problem on the other. Her partner seems distant and uninterested as soon as the woman leaves Moscow and she finally gets involved in a romantic affair with the Russian stranger. I still don't get why the movie was filmed in the first place? Is it the cinematography or the impressive landscape? No as most of the movie takes place in the train. Is there a special chemistry between the two, a unique love affair worth watching? Nope! It's a complete waste of time. Take my word for it and don't spend two hours of your time watching this slow and boring film.
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7/10
Fascinating developing story
laduqesa10 August 2022
Let's put one thing to rest. Anywhere at all where there are night trains, the sexes are mixed. Even in Muslim countries - the night sleepers in Morocco, for example, are not single sex cabins. Not knowing this is not a reason for giving low marks just because they find the situation unbelievable!

As for relationships in the film, ideas of distance and travel played a huge part. The further from Moscow, the more the lesbian lover receded and rejected. But the nearer to the petroglyphs, the deeper the bond between the ill matched compartment mates became.

However, the script didn't go overboard - there was no sentimentality in the refusal to swap addresses.

90s Russia was portrayed perfectly. Not yet a consumer society, there were hangovers from the communist times, notably in the appalling service offered on hotels and restaurants as well as the train itself.

As a speaker of (very poor) Finnish, I loved the joke about the terrible swear word in that language that framed the narrative on the train. It means a lot more than the tame subtitled translation that was offered.

I loved this film. The actors were perfect as were the locations. I personally enjoy train journeys and would now want to go on this one.
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8/10
Very Good
atractiveeyes10 January 2022
Finland's official entry to 2022's Oscars, that made it to the shortlist, is beautiful, simple and genuine. The relationship between the leads is so unique and likable. Their performances are superb and their characters are catchy too. The film also tackles interesting topics like passion, relationships and trust. It's sensational but also sometimes feels empty and flat.
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7/10
Very good acting, weak plot
medfair25 September 2022
This Finnish-Russian co-production garnered a first prize at Cannes and very good reviews on IMdB and Rotten tomatoes. The plot is weak. A young Finnish woman, an archeology student living in a rarefied intellectual atmosphere in Moscow of the nineties (which includes a woman lover), decides to go on a interminable train trip to Murmansk, the northernmost Russian port, to look for 10,000 year old petroglyphs. Her lover cancels at the last minute (the affair, like the weather, growing cold), but she decides to follow up with the plan. Most of the movie describes the never-ending train trip with an accidental replacement for her lover, a young Russia worker going to Murmansk to work on a lucrative but dangerous mining project. He is uneducated, uncouth, often crude and repulsive, so the forced company makes her trip a misery. But with time (guess what) she discovers an introvert, sensitive, chivalrous man and (guess what) falls in love. The reasons for her lover cancelling the trip are vague, as the reasons for her continuing with their plan. The best I could guess was a young woman, really still a girl, trying to find her intellectual and sexual identity under the cover of academic pursuit. Alioha, her Compartment 6 roommate, is even more enigmatic. He is attracted to her, but also scared of the budding romance. All-in-all, a very slow lyrical trip into the snow-covered north in a prediluvian train to look for prediluvian rock art. The movie deserves really just six stars, but the acting and the sort-of-mystical camera earn it another one. Truth in advertising-the petroglyphs are in the area of Murmansk-on Kanozero island. They are "just" 3-4 millenia old (but in other sites there are some much much older). Having seen many much older and more enigmatic - I wouldn't have braved Russian trains, Russian cold, and Alioha to see them up close.
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8/10
Thought
AM001212 January 2022
I really enjoyed the melancholic way in which this was filmed and how there is a yearning behind both character's actions, just cause they can't bare being alone. Both happen to be so alone, yet they don't care if they're total opposites, just to make each other company. I think it talks about the importance of basic human interaction.

I would have craved more depth in their relationship, I was left with a lot of questions. I would assume this happens since it's based on a book. I guess I'll have to read the book in order to know a bit more. Who knows?

Good one though.
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7/10
A movie feels so real
bennyboey31 July 2022
Warning: Spoilers
One of the reasons that i love this movie is it feels very real and the audience can relate to it. The director tries to show us many real-life person to person interactions eg, the initial hostile interaction between the train crew and the female lead which turns friendlier as the show goes on. This show also teaches us that sometimes looks can be deceiving. One may appear friendly and close but is dangerous. The other may appear dangerous and it may turn out to a very sincere and kind person. It would give it a 7.5.
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10/10
So Close, yet so Far!!
li09044268 January 2023
Warning: Spoilers
The movie "Compartment 6" has a beautiful script about human relationships, one of the best in the road-movie genre, even though this one is on rails. Two complete strangers share a train compartment and during the trip, they avoid each other, and the more it happens the closer they get. Seidi Haarla as Laura and especially Yuriy Borisov as Ljoha are simply wonderful in their performances. The chemistry between them is so intense that their eyes reveal the slow connection that begins to emerge between them. Two lost strangers, one for lack of knowledge of the world and the other for love disappointment, two worlds that intersect and manage to empathize with each other.

Laura realizes the emptiness of her love relationship when a Russian taxi driver tells her that any Russian knows that it is impossible to reach her destination because of the rough weather in winter. And Ljoha realizes that his uneducated world is restricted to working in the mine.

The script intelligently accepts the sexuality of each one, not forcing sex scenes, especially when there is a man and a woman sharing a tiny train compartment for 3 days. Also, they do not confront each other, they accept each other the way they are. This is an adult movie where human connection is the main subject.
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90s Russia
Prekarijus24 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
They really tried and did everything to portray 90s capitalist Russia,took every western stereotype about 90s Russia and put it into Lyoha when irl he's a typical criminal portrayed as a regular Russian man,the whole movie it seemed like he was hiding that he was in jail for hideous crime,because how he acts is exactly how hardcore criminals in Russia act,not regular men,so it was confusing when they showed him as a regular miner.

They blurred out the nice parts of the city,really tried and found bad places of the cities,even the apartments look like from the 90s which are hard to find without renovation. Portrayed Russians as mean and uncivilized,the smoking on the train,constant drinking and rude train worker was obvious if you actually know the actual culture. Russians statistically drink less than western Europeans and train workers are picked for their service,not rudeness.

Ending was disappointing,I kept thinking whats the point of this movie other than the obvious Russia uncivilized? There was no romance really. No journey,she took a long train trip for nothing. It didn't show the actual beauties of the train trip locations,they blurred out the city on purpose. There was no romance,just a woman realizing her life is empty and that she surrounded herself with phonies and rather than holding onto something real she just left... And I heard this movie is based on a book,is the book this disappointing too? I can write a better plotline.
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7/10
Compartment
michaelsiphone14 August 2022
Compartment No. 6 (Finnish: Hytti nro 6) is a 2021 internationally co-produced drama film co-written and directed by Juho Kuosmanen 🚂

It's good 🙂 I'd recommend it if you like this genre 👍🏼
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8/10
Oh, what a sweet little romance
pasaribuharisfadli1 February 2022
It took time before it finally shows its true color. When it did, Compartment No. 6 is really a rewarding experience. After The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki and then this, I'm really looking forward to what's next from Juho Kuosmanen.
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6/10
Train pane
anil-kulkarni-108-8566311 December 2022
Both an unusual film and yet doesnt stray far enough from standard tropes of romcoms/ Unusual in the sense that this is set in the hinterlands of Russia, not a geography known for movie sets.

The locales are as much of a cast as the likeable leads.

Mostly a two hander with a Finnish woman and a Russian man who meet on a train and forge a connection, sort of.

The lady is an archeological student and is keen to visit Petroglyphs, we never see them except in a book, no spoilers here.

The Russian is a typical for a russian male I guess, with the booze and ciggies flowing non stop.

They first rub up against eash other and then the thaw. It's handled unfussily and typical of the locales not too much of emotions in play.

The ending is ambigous in keeping with the theme of a brief encounter.

Worth wathcing for the Russki trains, ice laden far lands and a peep into a socialist Russia lost now, probably forever.
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4/10
Predictable and dull
evg4221 March 2022
About 5 minutes after the two main characters met the entire arc of the film was pretty obvious. The dynamic between the main characters was fairly interesting but the individuals were not. Also they stop at St Petersburg despite leaving from Moscow heading eastward which makes no sense.
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7/10
Livet är mer än bara yta = Kärv osnygg film med värme
jerryadebrink29 March 2022
2022-03-29. ÅrstaBio: en finsk tjej om lämnar sin flickvän gör att ta tåget till Murmansk för att se utgrävningar och som får dela kupe med en otrevlig rysk kille som har svårt med känslor- men gör sen allt för henne - m.a.o livet är mer än bara yta.
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