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Blue Moon

Blue Moon (2002)

October. 31,2002
|
6.4
| Adventure Comedy Romance

After screwing up a money exchange a Viennese small-time crook accompanied by a Russian hostess hits the road to the East.

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Reviews

TinsHeadline
2002/10/31

Touches You

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Beanbioca
2002/11/01

As Good As It Gets

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ActuallyGlimmer
2002/11/02

The best films of this genre always show a path and provide a takeaway for being a better person.

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Kaelan Mccaffrey
2002/11/03

Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.

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Aspor_DeLaPianta
2002/11/04

This film really moved me a lot. It is both intelligent and soulful. If you have never been to middle Europe or Russia believe me: This movie is so true! My favorite scene is when Johnny meets the brick gang and gets "robbed"! And what a wonderful woman Jana is. I can recommend the film to all!

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NinaSemmelin
2002/11/05

I have seen Blue Moon at the Locarno International Film Festival this summer and liked a lot. To me and my friend it was the most interesting feature showing there. Light hearted, great performances and very subtle in its tone and style. I talked to a lot of other festival visitors who all loved the film. Johnny and Ignace (the two Germans) are terrific and Jana, the Ukrainian looker is surely a star! There is a European tone in all this, as if Lubitsch and Wilder amalgated with Kustorica and Almodovar, yet there is a warm an tender female touch to the story. Great movie! Go see it!

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Karl_Maier
2002/11/06

This movie made me both lough and cry. Great actress Viktoria Malektorovych!!! She is so cute!!! Very nice pictures and a cool sound! I love this movie!

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Tina-Tsornigg
2002/11/07

The auspicious directorial debut from Viennese columnist Andrea Maria Dusl, this road movie which takes Eastern Europe as its subject, should have no problem finding receptive audiences in German-speaking countries. In particular, the presence of Josef Hader, one of Vienna's top cabaret acts, and Detlev Buck, a leading German actor-director, will certainly strike a chord. But with careful handling, Dusl's portrait of the former socialist empire, as seen through concerned but often amused contemporary Western eyes, should be able to reach beyond these cultural barriers to the overseas arthouse circuit. Certainly the performance of Viktoria Malektorovych deserves a wider international audience.Opening with an innocent-looking shot of the Odessa Steps, one of cinema's most celebrated locations thanks to Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin, the film traces the love story between a Ukrainian girl (Viktoria Malektorovych) full of surprises and an Austrian man (Josef Hader) she meets by accident. Started haltingly and on a whim, it blossoms as the couple move further and further into the east, from Austria to Slovakia and then all the way through the Ukraine, via Lviv, Kiev, down to the Black Sea and Odessa. A third character, a fast-talking German conman (Detlev Buck) down on his luck, joins in for stretches of the road to flesh out the film's comments about the transitions taking place in this part of the world.Originally conceived as a series of shorts about Eastern Europe since the fall of the Iron Curtain, Dusl felt her purpose would be much better served by combining them into one feature film. The plot that ties them together is pleasant, although at times come across as a bit loose, occasionally resorting to arbitrary subterfuges to keep the story afloat. But then what counts here is the writer/director's reflections on what she feels is still terra incognita for many of her fellow Westerners. Somewhere, between the strict political system of the past and the sudden freedom, chaos and corruption of the present, East Europeans are trying to find their own way of coping with the new economy, the new morality and the old habits, from which they have not entirely divested themselves.Collecting incidents that she obviously feels reflect on the bigger picture, Dusl's notes are always sympathetic, and often astute and entertaining. Metaphors, such as the unfenced sheep which refuse to run away unless someone persuades them to or a money-obsessed girl who keeps communist artefacts in her home, are often used to re-enforce the message. Additional commentary is provided by nuggets of grandma's wisdom introduced in the narration and by the constantly running video camera, used to expand or underline certain points.The star of the show is undoubtedly Viktoria Malektorovych, a young Ukrainian actress whose expressive face and body language do wonders for the lead role and hold the film together. Hader's laid-back, effectively understated performance and Buck's typically extrovert rascal offer all the support that she needs.Screen International's Dan Fainaru in Locarno 05 August 2002

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