Test (2014 film)
Test | |
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Russian | Испытание |
Directed by | Aleksandr Kott |
Written by | Aleksandr Kott |
Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Levan Kapanadze |
Edited by | Karolina Maciejewska |
Music by | Alexei Aigui |
Production companies | Igor Tolstunov Production Company (PROFIT), Drug Druga |
Release date |
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Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | Russia |
Language | no dialog |
Test (Russian: Испытание) is a 2014 Russian film about a doomed love triangle, set in 1949 on the prairie of the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic in present-day Kazakhstan, near the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site. The film does not have dialogue. The main character, Dina, lives with her father Tolgat on a serene farm that is near a nuclear test site. Dina is gentle, has a strong attachment to nature, and loves art. She loves to scrapbook and collage with the leaves and sticks. In one of her scrapbooks she creates a plane flying away representing her dream to one day travel and escape the isolation she feels in the remote farmland. "Unspecified in the movie itself, the geographical setting can be deduced as somewhere near Semey in modern-day Kazakhstan, then known as Semipalatinsk — notorious as the site of the USSR’s first nuclear test, in August 1949."[1]
Background[]
During the time period of 1949 and 1989, Semipalatinsk was used as a testing site for the Soviet Union conducting 456 nuclear tests. One of the first weapons tests took place at this testing site in 1949. A Limited Test Treaty Ban[2] was put into effect in 1963 allowing the use of underground bombing despite the ban on nuclear testing in the atmosphere or in an environment that will possibly lead to radiation. On the bright side, Semipalatinsk testing site was one of the peaceful nuclear testing sites.[3]
Plot, Characters, and Themes[]
Dina, a poor farm girl, lives with her father on a remote farm in the middle of present day Kazakhstan but was a part of the Soviet Union when the movie took place in 1949. Tolgat, Dina's father is a farmer and used to fly planes. While never stated, it is assumed Tolgat fought in World War II. Both Dina and Tolgat show little emotion throughout the film. They have experienced trauma and the isolation is brutal. Tolgat often comes home with such intense sun burns that he is unable to walk.
Dina also has two love interests. Kaisyn is a local who comes from a similar background to Dina. His relationship with her shows more of a passionate and intense intimacy, while her second love interest with Max represents a more goofy and lighthearted love. Max is blue eyed and Caucasian. He is clearly not from the same area of the Soviet Union and ultimately ends up with Dina in the ends of the movie when a nuclear bomb explodes wiping out Dina's home and everything with it.
There are many themes that are used in this film in order to implicitly show Dina's emotions. One of these themes is nature and her strong attachment to it. Dina is one with nature as a result of her extreme isolation. The vast farm land of nothingness adds to the feeling of isolation. There is a lack of infrastructure and people, preventing any real interaction with the world besides the characters present in the film. This minimal interaction presented creates more of an urge for Dina's dreams of leaving. She uses it in her artwork to represent her future ambitions of escaping the area she lives in. Her artwork also is an indication of the creativity she develops because she uses the elements of nature in her work to present to viewers her feelings of wanting more without directly speaking on her emotions. Another theme is "actions speak louder than words", as cliche as it sounds. The element of no dialogue drastically adds to the feeling of isolation because viewers are solely left to observe the scenery, objects, and the action of characters. There are many opportunities for viewers to ponder and contemplate on the characters' actions and emotions since there are no conversations. With the absence of dialogue, there is additional work done with the framing distance, lighting, color, camera angles, and editing to assure that viewers think critically about how its mise en scène contributes to telling the story of the film without words adding to the story. Overall, no dialogue adds to the element of loneliness and detachment that may reflect the emptiness of this time period. Another theme is her ambition to travel. There is a large World map in her room that she often gazes at. Dina additionally includes Indian dancing rituals and exotic fish in the collages she makes. Tolgat is also a pilot, so it seems as though travel should be more accessible, which makes her longing to escape more drastic.
Cast[]
- Elena An as Dina
- Danila Rassomakhin as Max
- Karim Pakachakov as Tolgat
- Narinman Bekbulatov-Areshev as Kaysin
Reception[]
Neil Young of The Hollywood Reporter stated "Elevated by a luminous performance from newcomer Elena An and Levan Kapanadze's crisply poetic cinematography (...)" along with Noémie Luciani's response that "Pictures and sounds are worth (nearly) a thousand words."[4][5]
Accolades[]
The film has won the following awards:
- Narrative Competition, Abu Dhabi Film Festival 2014
- Grand Prize of the Festival, Sochi Open Russian Film Festival 2014
- Best Artistic Contribution Award, Tokyo International Film Festival 2014
- Best International Feature, Golden Orange Film Festival 2014 (Turkey).[6][7]
Awards | Year | Category | Results |
---|---|---|---|
Abu Dhabi Film Festival[8] | 2014 | Special Jury Award | Won |
Best Narrative Feature | Nominee | ||
Asia Pacific Screen Awards [9] | 2014 | Achievement in Cinematography | Nominee |
Nika Awards[10] | 2015 | Best Music | Won |
Best Film | Nominee | ||
Best Cinematographer | |||
Best Sound | |||
Russian Guild of Cinematographers, Russia[11] | 2015 | Best Cinematography in a Feature Film | Won |
Russian Guild of Film Critics[12] | 2015 | Best Composer | Won |
Best Director | Nominee | ||
Best Cinematographer | Nominee | ||
Sakhalin International Film Festival [13] | 2014 | Grand Prix | Nominee |
Sochi Open Russian Film Festival[14] | 2014 | Best Cinematographer | Won |
Grand Prize of the Festival | Won | ||
Prize of the Guild of Russian
Film Scholars and Film Critics |
Won | ||
Tokyo International Film Festival[15] | 2014 | Best Artistic Contribution | Won |
WOWOW Viewer's Choice Award | Won | ||
Tokyo Grand Prix | Nominee | ||
Transylvania International Film Festival [16] | 2015 | FIPRESCI Prize | Won |
References[]
- ^ Neil, Young (22 October 2014). "'Test' ('Ispytanie'): Antalya Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
- ^ "Glossary | Learn | NTI".
- ^ “Semipalatinsk Test Site.” Nuclear Threat Initiative - Ten Years of Building a Safer World[1]
- ^ https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/general-news/test-ispytanie-antalya-review-742889/
- ^ Test (2014), retrieved 2021-05-11
- ^ "Test (2014)". IMDb. Retrieved January 26, 2018.
- ^ Neil Young (October 22, 2014). "'Test' ('Ispytanie'): Antalya Review". Hollywood Reporter.
- ^ "Abu Dhabi Film Festival (2014)". IMDb. Retrieved 2021-05-11.
- ^ "Asia Pacific Screen Awards (2014)". IMDb. Retrieved 2021-05-11.
- ^ "Nika Awards (2015)". IMDb. Retrieved 2021-05-11.
- ^ "Russian Guild of Cinematographers, Russia (2015)". IMDb. Retrieved 2021-05-11.
- ^ "Russian Guild of Film Critics (2015)". IMDb. Retrieved 2021-05-11.
- ^ "Sakhalin International Film Festival (2014)". IMDb. Retrieved 2021-05-11.
- ^ "Sochi Open Russian Film Festival (2014)". IMDb. Retrieved 2021-05-11.
- ^ "Tokyo International Film Festival (2014)". IMDb. Retrieved 2021-05-11.
- ^ "Transilvania International Film Festival (2015)". IMDb. Retrieved 2021-05-11.
External links[]
- 2014 films
- Films directed by Alexander Kott
- Russian films
- Films set in Kazakhstan
- Films about nuclear war and weapons
- Films about the Soviet Union in the Stalin era
- Films without speech
- 2010s historical romance films
- Russian film stubs
- Historical film stubs