
This week, for the first time in Perth, Cinema Paradiso will host the Russian Film Festival, Russian Resurrection. One film enjoying its world-wide premier as part of this festival is Vitali Melnikov’s Beat the Enemy. Set in the waning months of the Second World War, this film charts a communist propaganda group, hastily assembled from mismatched exiles and actors, as it travels down a remote Siberian river. Stopping at various isolated communities, the group’s task is to glorify Soviet military feats through an eclectic fusion of song, dance, music, theatre, art and silent film. What begins as a seemingly simplistic narrative quickly develops into a rich tapestry of wildly variable encounters and gradually shifting relationships, that all come to a head when the team’s vessel floods, and they find themselves isolated on one of the river’s sparsely populated islands.
Whether they be propaganda projects  or powerful post-war reflections, Russia has always been renowned for  its war films, and for its treatment of wartime themes.  While  not set on the frontline, Beat the Enemy is a powerful and appropriately  complex exploration of the war’s impact in Russia, and of this tremulous  transition period in Russian history.  By introducing so many varied  local communities, the films scans the whole register of emotional responses  – from the devoted Communist youth leader who barks orders at her  inferiors and cries over the propaganda footage, to the old woman forced  to saw the crucifix off her local chapel as it becomes a Communist ‘activities’  hall,’ to the German exiles suspended in limbo between two identities.  But what truly rescues this film from mediocrity is the complex development  of its five main characters.  These characters shift unpredictably  as the narrative progressions, and, even though this results in a far  less concise narrative, their rapid mood swings are indulged and given  full reign.  The result is a film that is touchingly realistic,  and thought-provoking in its density.  Produced in grey tones and adhering  to all classic conventions, this is no cinematic marvel, but it is an  intriguing character study, tinted with an emotional variety that marks  it as uniquely Russian. 
Far less successful is Heat,  Russia’s miserable attempt at romantic comedy. Set in the midst of  a stifling Russian heat wave, this film sees four school friends reunite  several years after graduation.  These men are clearly meant to  symbolise a cross-section of Russian society, with the navy boy, spoilt  rich kid, aspiring actor and black ‘gansta’ all represented. This  mix of characters feels painfully contrived, and the narrative developments  seem to only emphasise this self-consciousness. This feels like a film  that is desperately trying to represent modern Moscow as a space that  is “Western-yet-still-distinctly
Beat the Enemy: 6.5
Heat: 2.0

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