A Friend of the Deceased
Times are tough in Kiev, where it costs about a million rubles for a bottle of
Smirnov and the only jobs that pay cold hard American cash are in the black
market or worse. For intellectuals like Anatoli (Alexandre Lazarev), the
prospect of making a living translating business reports or giving English
lessons to crass, nouveau capitalists is grim. When wife Katia (Angelika
Nevolina) leaves him for a colleague with a flashy red Ford, Anatoli drunkenly
takes up an offer from his friend Dima (Eugen Pachin) to hook him up with a
contract killer. Instead of targeting his wife or her lover, however, he sets
up himself.
Although its premise is almost identical to Aki Kaurismäki's black comic
I Hired a Contract Killer and has echoes of Abbas Kiarostami's recent
masterpiece Taste of Cherry, Vyacheslav Krishtofovich's film resonates
with a haunting melancholy all its own. Unfolding with crystalline spareness,
it's given depth and clarity by Lazarev's rueful, laconic performance and is
brightened by a tiny, winsome Tatiana Krivitska as the hooker with a heart of
US greenbacks who tweaks Anatoli's soul. Her intervention sets him on a path in
which he realizes that not only is life worth living, it's worth being
responsible for. In a culture where all else has been devalued, A Friend of
the Deceased argues that a conscience can still have currency.
-- Peter Keough
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