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It feels like one of those late Westerns, a sweeping epic where the majesty and grandeur of the landscape seem almost to overwhelm the humans and their concerns, grave though those might be.
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The eponymous central character takes her son in their horse-drawn cart, heading out of her village for a place unknown. Her husband is left behind. There seems to have been some sort of scandal, but the details are fuzzy.
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It becomes clear fairly soon that Katalin is not someone who you should cross lightly. At times she seems to be composed entirely of naked willpower.
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This culture feels so alien -- not just the (to me) strange-sounding language, but the overwhelmingly rural nature of life. It's as if the modern world has only superficially penetrated here, the occasional cheap cheep of a mobile phone giving us the only clue that we're even in the current century.
I keep reading that Katalin Varga is a feminist revenge movie, which is both patronising and irritating. It just so happens the character seeking revenge is a woman: feminism it ain't. But it's an engrossing and rich film.
2 comments:
I think that you should prove what you say about Tibor's penis.
Don't you agree? :)
I'd love to, but my crappy Apple Mac has stopped playing DVDs, which means I can't make a screen grab.
Sorry -- you're going to have to keep using your imagination!
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