Beanpole

audience Reviews

, 76% Audience Score
  • Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
    Mostly impressed that, given the subject matter, this thing isn't just a parade of misery for its own sake.
  • Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    One of the best antiwar movies.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    I have not given this five stars simply because it is a hard watch and tbh if I had known what it is like I probably would not have gone to see it. But if the evidence of a good film is one that stays with you, this is it. Everyone in the film is damaged by the War in different ways and everyone is searching for love to heal themselves. Iva seeks love from Masha, who can only find it in a child. Sasha also seeks love from Masha but he is naive. The other important character is Nikolai the Medical Director, like Iva a profoundly decent person trying to do his best in very difficult circumstances. This is definitely not to everyone's taste as among other things it js quite slow and long. And l have to say l found Masha much more interesting than Iva. A real survivor.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    Two characters in the squalor and misery of post-war Leningrad communicate mostly by scowling and staring at the floor in each other’s presence, while awful, depressing things happen and they make additional awful life decisions. The painfully slow pacing may be intended to make the viewer feel the misery more immediately, and if so, it works.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    Spoilers: Vasilia is so luminous yet war-ravaged, and pale Viktoria is so languidly genuine yet damaged by war. By the numbers, when the Germans ran a WWII siege of Leningrad that lasted 872 days, a million in the city died, most by starvation, as food was largely cut off. And many more fled, so that the city was largely depopulated. This is what is troubling these people, as they try to resume or rebuild lives, as wounded are still dying and the survivors may be worse off than the dead, psychologically as well as in coming by food, and electricity blackouts are common. Iya keeps freezing up, as these people say, going into minicatatonic episodes, and none seem to be shocked by it happening as they've seen it before -- what we'd attribute now to PTSD. One cost the young child his life, as Iya was caring for him yet inadvertently suffocated him. At her hospital job, she had a series of euthanasia jobs, as her doctor boss kept asking her to do it to those who no longer wanted to live. When the best thing you can do for someone is inject him out, it takes a toll on you. And when Masha, the soldier mother of the dead boy, returns, she finds her boy gone, and wants Iya to have a child for her, and extorts her and Iya's boss into sleeping with Iya just to get her pregnant. In the all-time meet the boyfriend's upscale government service parents dinner from hell, Masha reveals she is sterile after abortions and had slept with a series of soldiers, as sort of campfire Annies too served the USSR, and were not fighters at all. And her boyfirend's mother says her son is too soft to get through any hard times with her, as he storms out of the dining room, and the relationship with Masha disintegrates on the spot. Everyone at the dining table knew everyone else was telling the hard truths, which was actually refreshing. So Masha and Iya, living in one small apartment, conclude they have only one life-affirming dream and path to carry them on -- Iya having a baby the two could raise together, which, though unrealized, is the high note of a narrative of bleakness. Detail was rich, and the plotting and script were inventive, and the acting, superb. The term beanpole referred to tall, thin Iya, who was called that. But it is layered, as a beanpole is just a tall pole with no meat on it. And that is what was left of Leningrad, as the whole surviving population had to rebuild life, commerce, infrastructure, sufficiency of all sorts, as well as the just as important inner lives of dreams, hopes, ambitions and directions of the people. An interesting and unusual take. Living without war is way better than picking up the pieces after war. Bravo!
  • Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    Filme pesado, o título não traduz toda a dureza da guerra, a busca incessante das duas mulheres pela sobrevivência e realização pessoal numa época machista e cruel, degringolada pela fome da pós guerra, e aliado a todo esse drama, a Mulher Alta sofre de congelamento pós concussão e Masha histerectomia, o que a torna incompleta apos a perda do filho (que eu podia juras que não foi acidente), cores quentes, contrastando com a frieza da gerra, drama excepcional, roteiro inteligente e original...
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    We enjoyed the movie. Great performance of the two main actress. Specials sense of colors, with red and green dominating. Long but capturing the attention all the time. very realistic.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    An exquisite film that reminds us of cinema's capacity to move us.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    I really don't get the point (if there's one) nor the relationship between the characters, however its distinct and picturesque style is interesting enough.
  • Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars
    I will give it a 3 based on the fact that others think it was artistically relevant. I could not watch past the first - about 15-20 minutes - the subject matter was horribly depressing, and I am not easily affected in that way. Ugh.