City on the River (2020) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
The tides of war
hof-45 October 2023
Latgale or Latgalia is the landlocked easternmost region of Latvia north of the Daugava river. It has a mostly Catholic or Eastern Orthodox population, in contrast with the rest of Latvia, predominantly Protestant. Latgalia also had a large Jewish minority before WWII; most of them perished in the Holocaust or emigrated. Latgalia has its own language, one of the historic forms of Latvian. This is the language of this film. Scenario: a town on the Daugava river. Subject: the life and loves of Ansis, a young budding local artist who makes a living as a sign painter. He is Everyman, a survivor, carried by the tide of his country's fortunes while trying not to lose his good nature.

Originally a part of the Russian Empire, Latvia became independent in 1920 during the Russian Civil War. In 1934 a nationalistic dictatorship took power, and the movie begins in this period. Ansis' love interest is Zisele, daughter of a local Jewish shopowner, a courtship strongly discouraged by her father and the local priest. Zisele is a convinced Communist; we see her reading one of Alexandra Kollontai's books (Kollontai was a champion of Marxist feminism). Zisele supports the Soviet occupation in 1940 but is put off by its oppressive nature. Ansis' new love interest is Naiga, a Latvian girl. He feels an obligation to Zisele, and in fact saves her life during the Nazi occupation. The movie ends at the closing of the war, with the Germans defeated and in flight, a new Soviet occupation looming and many Latvians trying to get away as far as possible from the madness of Europe. All through the movie a small boat plying the Daugava reflects the changes; we see it first loaded with right wing paramilitaries, then Soviet soldiers, then Nazi soldiers and finally desperate fugitives.

I liked this movie with some reservations. The action is at times too slow. I was somewhat put off by the oblique, off kilter shots. This device works in edgy urban scenes (The Third Man) but is not suited to a placid rural setting. There is not much feeling or chemistry in either of Ansis' relationships. On the positive side, acting is first rate (many of the actors are nonprofessional) and cinematography does justice to the melancholic landscapes of Northern Europe. As a bonus, you get to listen to Latvian folk songs, both plaintive ditties and spirited, joyful dance music.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Movie that tries to be too much at once, but unfortunatly fails in most departments
savickis-arturs4 April 2020
I'm Latvian, and I'm patriot, and I've even spent a lot of my childhood in the locations near our Eastern Russian border, where this movie's plot was happening and where it was shot, so I had reasonably high expectations for this movie. Also in the last few years our local movie studios have started to make a really decent movies, especially historic ones, so I did expect that this one will keep rising the standards of our local moviemaking. Boy, I was wrong.

Unfortunatly this movie left a lot to be desired - plot was trying to be a romantic drama (and comedy) set on the top of politic/social/war stage, cinematography tried to follow the latest modern trends, and cast of mostly unknown actors was trying to give a fresh feel to this flick, but unfortunatly it failed in all three areas...

Plot was boring, badly paced and intended bits of non-linear storytelling made some bits even straight confusing, and I imagine it would be even worse for the people who have not read the source novel first. Cinematography was poor. Artistic choice of making every...single...shot to have an angled horizon was just painful to watch - instead of serving as a nice touch and bringing some fresh framing to the scenes, it left me wondering whether the film crew simply had a problem with a camera dolly leveling... And acting was far from what I expected after reading news articles about "cast of young, fresh talents" - there was absolutely no chemistry between any of the main characters in the love triangle, or between anyone else, for that matter. The dull expressions and awkward clumsiness of the lead actor was not so much portrail of his character, as it was simply a bad acting. Asking actors to speak in three languages, most of which were not their native, didn't help at all.

In conclusion - maybe if this movie would've been conceived, shot and launched in theaters a few years earlier, before the numerous other latest Latvian historic dramas, it would be a somewhat decent movie by itself, but given the good Latvian movies shot lately, this was a really dissapointing in comparison. 5 out of 10 stars from me.
18 out of 30 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed