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Review: Silent Souls

Magic realism and Chekhovian melancholy
By GERALD PEARY  |  January 17, 2012
3.0 3.0 Stars



This is probably the only film we'll encounter about the Merja culture of West Central Russia, a Finno-Ugric tribe in which even the most modernized people pay allegiance to ancient customs. Here, a man whose young wife has died asks his best friend to accompany him on a ritualized highway trip, which includes bringing the naked body of his deceased spouse in the car so she can be burned on a beach, her ashes floated on the water. Aleksei Fedorchenko's wistful film has echoes of Parajanov magic realism combined with a Chekhovian melancholy. It's poetic in the most muted way, a chamber road movie.

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