THE ITALIAN

Director: Andrei Kravchuk
Cast: Kolya Spiridonov, Maria Kuznetsova, Yuri Itskov, Darya Lesnikova, Nikolai Reutov
Run Time: 99 minutes
Country: Russia
Language: Russian with English subtitles
Rating: PG (Violence, coarse language)

Reviews

 

Imbued with overtones reminiscent of Charles Dickens, THE ITALIAN – presented at the 2006 Toronto International Film Festival® – is a humane and sympathetic study of a young boy in the grim world of a Russian orphanage.

Scheming adults are the only role models for children who, when they’re not planning their escapes, are simply trying to find their way through a world with no hope for the future. It is not difficult to detect the documentarian behind director Andrei Kravchuk’s winning feature debut, in which he seamlessly depicts the harsh reality of this environment while remaining open to the dramatic possibilities offered by the story of six-year-old Vanya.

The orphanage is run by the wily “Madam” (Maria Kuznetsova), who is only interested in making money by selling the children to wealthy Westerners. Each adoption is treated as a financial transaction. The vulnerable but tough-skinned Vanya is given the nick-name “the Italian” when he is chosen for adoption by an Italian couple. It seems Vanya will be one of the lucky ones; at least he will escape. The other children his age find themselves at the mercy of older kids involved in everything from theft to pimping. However, Vanya’s life changes when he meets the birth mother of another boy who had left for the West in the hands of foreigners. This encounter has a huge impact, and convinces Vanya that he needs to find his own birth mother. Confronting one obstacle after another, Vanya is tireless in his attempt to find his mother. During his voyage, he encounters kindness and sympathy, treachery and duplicity, but remains unwaveringly focused on his goal.

THE ITALIAN is blessed with the stunning lead performance of Kolya Spiridonov, who is full of spunk, yet also deeply sensitive. Like the works of Dickens, the film is neither black nor white, depressing nor uplifting, but rather a wonderful combination of differing emotions. Vanya’s roller-coaster ride through post-Glasnost Russia is an edifying and inspirational tale.

“What began as a vivid tour of enclosed institutional rot segues, smartly and seamlessly, into a compelling open-road odyssey.”
– Adam Nayman, Eye Weekly

“Combining the influences of Italian neorealism with Dickensian melodrama, Andrei Kravchuk's simultaneously tough-minded and sentimental “The Italian” is as bracing as it is moving.”
- Frank Scheck, The Hollywood Reporter

AWARDS

2005 Berlin International Film Festival
Best Film


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