As a barren particular is brought into the forefront, behind which
rests a model representative of flight, stationary and passive, pensive
and solitary, the image's distinction begins to slowly fade, before,
after a fellow aviator arrives, it is subtly and universally
interiorized.
What follows is
an expertly executed yet modestly matriculated morphology, wherein each member of a
seemingly content couple exercises their predetermined propensities
to finance a younger generation.
Hypocrisy and deception abound.
Historical preference bifurcates.
Galvanized wit is rewarded.
And opportunity will not be displaced.
Andrey
Zvyagintsev adopts sparse means to inculcate a breathtaking exemplar,
which suggests that the film's form undeniably upholds Elena (Nadezhda
Markina), although an internal cross-examination, mischievously interjected
by its music, which preliminarily tricked me into believing Elena
is simply a collusively cheeky quotidian parody of your traditional
blockbuster, sustainably supports the case's other systemic suitor
(original music by Philip Glass).
The imaginary factor
is brilliantly lubricated by Elena Lyadova's (Katerina) provocative
pirouette, volatile yet absorptive, as she self-indulgently tears up the
runaway.
Melancholic film.
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