CoMo No. 33: Estonia (March, 2025)

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Jürka
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CoMo No. 33: Estonia (March, 2025)

Post by Jürka »

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during the past few years, i logged:
Experiment Katja (Eléonore De Montesquiou, 2020, 17m)
The City (Rein Raamat, 1988, 14m)
Inspiration (Elbert Tuganov, 1975, 7m)
Under Control (Ville Koskinen, 2021, 18m)
Substantia Stellaris (Mati Kütt, 2007, 3m)
Hell (Rein Raamat, 1983, 17m) ... from this film comes the pic above ↑↑
Bermuda (Ülo Pikkov, 1998, 11m)
The Light of a Long Day (Villu Kalvik, Rein Kärner, 1970, 7m)

before (i can recall), i watched:
Spring (Arvo Kruusement, 1969, 84m)

my watchlist (for this month) — 10 points action plan (oke, it’s maybe too ambitious):

1/
3 Estonian entries from this programme → https://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/f ... ries/53494
namely:
Kaljo Kiisk, MADNESS / HULLUMEELSUS, 1968, 79 min
Grigori Kromanov, THE DEAD MOUNTAINEER’S HOTEL / ‘HUKKUNUD ALPINISTI’ HOTELL, 1979, 80 min
Peeter Simm, THE IDEAL LANDSCAPE / IDEAALMAASTIK, 1981, 86 min

2/
some earliest footage (Johannes Pääsuke)

3/
some etnography by Lennart Meri (a filmmaker who made it to a president)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lennart_Meri

4/
since the Tangerine Tyrant is bringing us back to the era of mass deportations, taking a few historical lessons might be useful.
Soviet deportations from Estonia → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_de ... om_Estonia
Soviet deportations from Estonia were a series of mass deportations in 1941 and 1945–1953 carried out by Joseph Stalin's government of the former USSR from then Soviet-occupied Estonia. The two largest waves of deportations occurred in June 1941 and March 1949
Martti Helde - Risttuules AKA In the Crosswind (2014) ... 1941 deportation
Jüri Sillart - Äratus AKA Awakening (1989) ... 1949 deportation

5/
2-3 films by Sulev Nõmmik

6/
1-2 films by Leida Laius

7/
Andres Sööt - Draakoni aasta AKA Year of the Dragon (1988)

8/
some documentary about Arvo Pärt

9/
would be nice to find something (yet unseen) about (Estonian-born) Louis Kahn, but i am afraid i saw it all (yup, he is my very favorite).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Kahn

10/
plenty of animations (let’s say “Mati Kütt - Labürint AKA Labyrinth (1989)” is a must)
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Monsieur Arkadin
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Post by Monsieur Arkadin »

Thanks. I was thinking I should check out more Estonian films after Conan's jokes at the Oscars last night.

This year I watched the charmingly homemade parody of Texas Chainsaw Massacre called Chainsaws Were Singing by Sander Maran

At 2 hours, it felt a little bit patience testing, but there were a couple suprisingly good songs, and it definitely got a few genuine chuckles out of me. So it's something I still recommend to people whose sense of humor it connects with. It would actually go quite well with Hundreds of Beavers as a double feature.
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Jürka
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Post by Jürka »

Monsieur Arkadin wrote: Mon Mar 03, 2025 1:42 pm Hundreds of Beavers
reminds me i didn’t mention i might also try to watch All my Lenins
Hardi Volmer - Minu Leninid AKA All My Lenins (1997)

Young and active nationalist Aleksander Kesküla makes up his mind to use Lenin, the Bolsheviks' leader, in order to start a revolution in Russia with German money and create a new national state of Estonia in the north-east of Russia. For security reasons, five counterparts will be found and trained for Lenin; all of them are finally sent to Russia for participating in the revolution. How will the real Lenin put up with all this? How will the surrounding women and fellow fighters react? These are the questions clever Kesküla is asking - and the answers will be born even before those involved start thinking of the matter.
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Jürka
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JP Retrospective, Pt. 1/3 (Documentaries)
Johannes Pääsuke → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johannes_ ... %C3%A4suke

Johannes Pääsuke (1892–1918) was an Estonian photographer and filmmaker. He worked as a photographer for the Estonian National Museum and was dedicated to recording the everyday life of Estonians in the early 20th century.
1/
Sergei Utochkin's flight (over Tartu) (Johannes Pääsuke, 1912, 3m) #CoMoEstonia

Estonian cinema taking off!
the very first doc by JP is supposed to be this.
tho, sometimes mentioned as lost.
sometimes listed with duration 6m.
sometimes two different films listed with (almost) the same title.
anyway, whatever (there is this 3m-long footage flying around ↓↓↓)...
The film footage consists of three parts: a Farman-type biplane flying in the sky (colored brown 00:28-00:44); a landed biplane from which the pilot and a female passenger climb out (colored brown frames 00:44-01:46); the pilot chatting with journalists and the young lady approaching the biplane (reddish frames 01:46-02:31).

2/
Town of Tartu and Its Surroundings (Johannes Pääsuke, 1912, 6m) #CoMoEstonia
In the film, one can see the Czarist town life at its peak. The film, with a positivist take, seems to be shot in the early spring of 1912. One must appreciate the views seen in the film since most of the buildings were either destroyed in the war, demolished, or re-built.

3/
Pictures of Võru County (Johannes Pääsuke, 1912, 4m) #CoMoEstonia
With a few exceptions, the film consists of picturesque vistas, as referred to in the title. What brings the snapshots to life is the beauty of nature — the springtime Southern Estonian landscape. The film introduces Vällamägi, Haanja, the 318-metre Munamäe Hill, Lake Vaskna, River Võhandu, and the ruins of the Vastseliina Bishop Castle. The end with the church of Räpina is somewhat out of context.

4/
Historical Memories of the Estonian Past (Johannes Pääsuke, 1913, 10m) #CoMoEstonia
Film about historical and architectural monuments. Views of Tartu (ruins of the Cathedral, Inglisild, etc.), Vooremäe hillfort, ruins of Helme, Härgmäe, Karksi castles, Tarvastu church, views of Viljandi (castle ruins, lake), views of Paide (church, castle ruins, etc.), views of Narva (Ivangorod, Puusild, Hermann Castle, Joala waterfall, Kreenholm factory), rafting logs on the Narva River.

5/
The White Flower Day in Tartu (Johannes Pääsuke, 1913, 1m) #CoMoEstonia
The White Flower Day in Tartu, organized to support tuberculosis patients, takes place on May 3, 1913 at Raeplats, where white paper daisies that can be pinned to the chest are sold and donations are collected.

6/
A Great Blizzard in the Baltics in December 1913 (Johannes Pääsuke, 1913, 3m) #CoMoEstonia
Snow-covered streets in Tartu. Snow removal. Views from a moving train of the snowplows and snow removal.

7/
Tartu Volunteer Firefighters Association's 50th Anniversary Celebrations (Johannes Pääsuke, 1914, 6m) #CoMoEstonia
The film was shot between 4 and 7 July 1914 during the Tartu firefighters' anniversary celebrations. We can see the lineup, Russian Orthodox priest blessing the men, Lutheran priest blessing the men, parade, demonstrations, and in the end, a festive dinner.

plus one more with a questionable authorship...

8/
Estonia Theatre in Tallinn (Unknown, 1913, 2m) #CoMoEstonia
Though the title of the film has not survived, the title cards have remained intact. The film takes its audience on a tour of the newly built theatre building, designed by Finnish architects Armas Lindgren and Wivi Lönn. The two-winged landmark was built as an opera house and a concert hall. At the end of the film, the actors and actresses of the time are showing off for the cameraman. Whether Johannes Pääsuke is the author of this film is questionable. It is possible the Parikas brothers, photographers from Tallinn, actually shot the film.

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greennui
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Suuuur toll





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greennui
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Post by greennui »

Woman from Kihnu 1974 Kihnu Naine Directed by Mark-Toomas Soosaar

https://arhiiv.err.ee/video/vaata/kihnu-naine
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Jürka
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Post by Jürka »

JP Retrospective, Pt. 2/3 (Ethnography)

Journey Through Setomaa (Johannes Pääsuke, 1913, 7m) #CoMoEstonia
'Journey Through Setomaa' is about the historic Estonian region Setomaa, presently in Põlva and Võru Counties of South Eastern Estonia and Pechorsky District and Pskov Oblast of Russia. The film travels through Petseri Monastery, religious occasions, church in Värska, spring fair, Crucession, Easter customs, crop harvesting in Matsuri, brick factory in Saboldi, Võõpsu hamlet, and seto folk dancing.
The piece is considered to be the first Estonian ethnographic film.

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BALTIC MODERNIST CINEMA: BETWEEN IMAGINARY AND REAL, Pt. 1/3

Madness (Kaljo Kiisk, 1968) #CoMoEstonia
full read → https://issuu.com/eestifilmisihtasutus/ ... s/44320786
(snippets ↓↓)
“It happened in a small town. The German occupiers had already managed to exterminate all the Jews, Marxists, Gypsies and Partisans. Now, it was time to go after the mentally ill…”
These ominous words open director Kaljo Kiisk’s fifth feature film, Madness. A film that emerges both in Estonian film history and in the director’s filmography as the first work made in a truly modernist spirit. In addition to the symbolic language of the film, and the great work by the actors, the number of legends floating around about the film’s production and distribution processes is subject enough for a film of its own
The film is a modern European co-production that brought together Estonians, Latvians, Lithuanians and Russians, but which had a difficult history from its very inception. The screenplay was written by Latvian Viktors Lorencs and it reached Kaljo Kiisk due to the resolute rejection of the screenplay by Riga Film Studio, who found it better not to get involved in making this “moonstruck” story of a madhouse in some unnamed, occupied European country. Kiisk quickly agreed to make the film but the abstract script needed to be rewritten to be more precise, and the detective had to become a fascist, which delineated the time frame for the story and helped “get by” local authorities. Thus, they hoped to minimize the ambiguity but retain the artistic generalization and mystery written into the script.

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The film stars graduates of the legendary Lithuanian Panevežys Theater, Vaclovas Bledis and Bronis Babkauskas, and there is a small part for Lithuanian theatre legend Juozas Miltinis as well as Valeri Nossik from Moscow and Viktor Pljut and Harijs Liepinš from Riga. And, of course, Jüri Järvet from Tallinn,

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who went straight from playing Windisch in Madness to starring in Grigori Kozintsev’s film version of King Lear (1970). That was the beginning of Jüri Järvet’s international fame, which soon found him embodying Doctor Snaut in Tarkovsky’s Solaris (1972).
They made a request to Moscow for the opportunity to watch some films, not available in Soviet cinemas, with the film crew to prepare for the shoot. The list included films like Franju’s Head Against the Wall (La tête contre les murs, 1959), Welles’s The Trial (1962), Bergman’s The Silence (Tystnaden, 1963), Buñuel’s Viridiana (1961), Pasolini’s The Gospel According to St. Matthew (Il vangelo secondo Matteo, 1964), and Kramer’s Ship of Fools (1965).
Some members of the artistic council of Tallinnfilm worked against the film from the beginning, with the later President of Estonia, Lennart Meri, at the forefront of the opposition. Meri wrote to Moscow about the film and made strong recommendations in Estonia that the film would not be greenlighted.

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But at first Moscow approved production of the film without reading the screenplay, and merely based on the opinion of the editorial board who claimed the film to be a whole lot less antifascist than the screenplay and future film really were. After the Prague Spring, Moscow suddenly realized that it was a very complicated time for such a film to be made in Estonia, especially as its screenplay was so ambiguous, so they started a correspondence with Tallinn. Amendments began arriving from Moscow for things like changing the title of the film, reshooting some scenes, and adding a partisan squad and armed insurgent uprising to the end of the film.

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Kiisk was forced to make changes before handing over the film, even though he didn’t make them to the extent ordered by Moscow and he didn’t change the title. He did have to leave out the crazed main character Windisch’s horrific vision, for which they filmed material that the director claimed wasn’t even allowed near the editing table. There were two versions made of the film – one dubbed into Estonian and the other into Russian. The Russian version is about 10 minutes shorter, and some claim it to be more expressive visually thanks to the laconic editing that eliminates the film’s shortcomings and makes the film more engaging.

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The film got permission to screen only in the Baltic Republics and Belarus, and only nine copies of the Russian version were even printed at first, which essentially meant that no one could see the film outside of Estonia purely because there were no prints to screen.
The conditions of Perestroika in 1987 finally made it possible to rehabilitate films like this and thus the official premiere of Madness in Moscow finally took place. The film was also given permission to screen outside of the Soviet Union. There were screenings in Barcelona, Buenos Aires, Munich and London. There had been earlier interest in the film by the Venice Film Festival after Italian film historian Giacomo Gambetti managed to see it at a closed screening in Moscow, but unfortunately the film did not get permission to screen at the festival from Soviet authorities, at the time the rule was that no film could be shown outside of the Union without having distribution within the Soviet Union first.
additional side note:
since Estonian is one of those languages rich in inflectional endings, one can sometimes hear the main character’s surname Windisch pronounced (inflected) as Windisch-it, which creates an unintentional comic effect of a Gestapo officer being openly called “Windy-shit”.
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last but not least:
often feels like a theatrical performance with its limited setting and cast
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BALTIC MODERNIST CINEMA: BETWEEN IMAGINARY AND REAL, Pt. 2/3
GK Retrospective, Pt. 1/5

The Dead Mountaineer’s Hotel (Grigori Kromanov, 1979) #CoMoEstonia
full read → https://issuu.com/eestifilmisihtasutus/ ... s/44270323
(snippets ↓↓)

The sci-fi film in question was released in 1979, a decade after the director Grigori Kromanov had made an immensely popular swashbuckler movie set in 16th-century Estonia, during the whirlwind of the complicated power struggles of the time. The Last Relic, screened in 1969, was the nearest a small film country could get to the dream of global recognition. The film, inspired by the French historical adventure movies, was screened in 60 countries, with 40 million spectators.

Controversially, success brought along less freedom for the director, not more. Several stories developed by Kromanov himself got slowed down or stopped entirely.

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Integrity, restricted by simple rules, became a central idea of his final film. Dead Mountaineer’s Hotel begins with a flashback to an old case that had remained to haunt inspector Glebsky. Years ago, he received a call from a mountain hotel that proved to be fake. Glebsky still decided to stay for the night. In the evening, strange events start to unfold, and on top of that an avalanche blocks the roads and cuts all communications.

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The complexity of the situation unfolds quite quickly. The apparently dead Olaf turns out to be a robot for the aliens, but he had managed to strike up a close relationship with Brun, nevertheless. The girl is equally shocked because of Olaf’s conditional death, and the fact that he is an android from another civilization. Two characters in this weird bunch are extra-terrestrial observers who have deemed it necessary to interfere with events on Earth and protect the principles of justice. Alas, they have been exploited by terrorists. One of the terrorists is also in the hotel, following the orders of his boss, who wants to get rid of the aliens because of their reluctance to help him any further.

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The events of Dead Mountaineer’s Hotel develop rapidly, sometimes leaving the viewer as little time to react as to inspector Glebsky.

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A sci-fi film is never just a story, it is also an independent visual universe. The location, hotel, amazes with its hypermodernity. Streamlined interior design, reflective surfaces, hotel corridors and intersecting levels are in sharp contrast with the organized story. These environments created a fantastic impression upon release, comparable to the one achieved by the narrative.
For the audience, this was a journey to the beyond, in more than one way. Depictions of the West found their way to Soviet cinema primarily through science-fiction.

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The depiction of the West was tolerable as long as the characters conveyed Western vices, doubts and mistakes. The luxurious hotel and the terrorists fit that canon.

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In the final scenes of the film, science fiction transforms into a documentary perspective when the protagonist addresses the viewer directly. Justifying his choices, Glebsky appeals to irrevocable logic, but his need to justify himself as a protagonist becomes apparent in the process. Glebsky understands that the clarity of his choices actually leads to emptiness, closure and a waste of a unique opportunity, much like Olaf’s perfect strikes extinguished the playfulness of the game of billiards in the first part of the film.
Dead Mountaineer’s Hotel was Kromanov’s final film. Although the film won recognition abroad, in Trieste, he couldn’t accomplish his ideas in Tallinnfilm, and he alternated his time between theatre and cinema, his life between Tallinn and Vilnius. Coming from a Russian cultural background of pre-war Estonia, he embodied something other and elusive himself. “He lived in a somewhat different time-space from the others, he didn’t completely fit into the cultural picture of our republic, and had an alienating, not quite comprehensible effect,” said the film’s producer (then director) Raimund Felt when Kromanov passed away.

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karl
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Post by karl »

Like both the abovementioned features (Madness, Mountaineer Hotel) and:

Well, Come On, Smile (Leida Laius, Arvo Iho)
The Master of Korboja (LL)
Werewolf (LL)
From Evening Till Morning (LL) can be seen here:

https://arkaader.ee/landing/bc/rHczO7kKnl/x46-MXdfJsz

Spring (Arvo Kruusement)
The Smacking Sea (AK)
Nipernaadi (Kaljo Kiisk)
Have a look at all the picnics of the intellect: These conceptions! These discoveries! Perspectives! Subtleties! Publications! Congresses! Discussions! Institutes! Universities! Yet: one senses nothing but stupidity. - Gombrowicz, Diary
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Jürka
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GK Retrospective, Pt. 2/5
movie tickets forger wrote: Sun Mar 09, 2025 5:00 pmthe director Grigori Kromanov had made an immensely popular swashbuckler movie set in 16th-century Estonia, during the whirlwind of the complicated power struggles of the time. The Last Relic, screened in 1969, was the nearest a small film country could get to the dream of global recognition. The film, inspired by the French historical adventure movies, was screened in 60 countries, with 40 million spectators.
The Last Relic (Grigori Kromanov, 1969) #CoMoEstonia

a swashbuckler eastblockbuster with occasional allusions to Gummo
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this then held the record for the highest box office sales in the whole of the Soviet Union.

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Post by Jürka »

a map showing the approximate distribution of Finno-Ugric Languages
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Encyclopaedia Cinematographica Gentium Fenno-Ugricarum, Pt. 1/5

The Waterfowl People (Lennart Meri, 1972) #CoMoEstonia
A documentary about the history and linguistic ties of the Finno-Ugric and Samoyedic peoples.
Speakers of the Kamassian, Nenets, Khanty, Komi, Mari, and Karelian languages were filmed in their everyday settings in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
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Nenets woman cutting decorative patterns from reindeer hide.
Khanty man checking fish traps.
Khanty man hewing and sewing a boat.
Komi hunter skiing with traditional skis, setting and checking traps & making a fire during the winter.
Mari people processing hemp fibres, making bast shoes.
Karelian woman making bread. Karelian wood architecture.
oldtimers knew it all!
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Karelia, the country of origin of the true (king-size) burger!
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Jürka
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Post by Jürka »

GK Retrospective, Pt. 3/5

while GK’s sci-fi ↑↑ was decent and his swashbuckler ↑ was a failure (despite all the commercial success), this is a true masterpiece!
considering that next month we (here on SCFZ) are polling the year 1964, i can (almost) guarantee that if you watch this (& you are sensible), you have got a strong entry to your ballot!
One of the greatest pieces of filmmaking ever to have been achieved in Estonia. A cocktail of magical realism, existential tragedy, and rural grotesque that is as resonant in the global capitalism of 2020 as it was in the Soviet Estonian socialist dream of 1964.
The Misadventures of the New Satan (Grigori Kromanov, Jüri Müür, 1964) #CoMoEstonia

the main character (of this remarkable movie) is Satan, called Jürka, coincidentally my namesake (sic!)
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the treacherous God breaking the business contract with Satan provides the starting point of the plot
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the problem is that God turns (in Heaven) mental and thus (consequently) Satan has to leave (temporarily) Hell and play a retard on Earth (no joking!)
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Jürka has to play a retard on Earth, while hiding he comes from Hell (he pretends coming from the totalitarian Russia)
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Jürka has to play a retard who loves cats
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despite playing (on Earth) a pious retard, Earth women (who are not blind) can perceive his subterranean origin and thus (ultimately) he can start a family and beget offspring
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relying on his bitter Earth experience, Jürka makes his Earth children wary of truth and random lies (lying has its rules!)
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his children are grateful for these valuable life lessons, and thus, once Jürka gets injured in a Bear fight, they disinfect his wounds with their urine
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as you can see (based on all the aforementioned), this film is pretty mind-blowing!
thus, i will stop making spoilers and let you only guess what’s going on in the following scene...
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ultimately (in sum), the thoughtful devil Jürka goes berserk and burns everything!
it makes 98% of the protagonists & viewers to fall into despair of pointless theodicy → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodicy
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the remaining 2% sees this annihilation as just another business opportunity
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anyway...
since contributing to the overall havoc & confusion is the last thing i would wish, here (viz the next link) one can read (about the film in question) something that even an average clergyman can understand → https://issuu.com/eestifilmisihtasutus/ ... s/44272852
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The film was made in 1964 in Soviet Estonia where “the figure of the Satan was one that generates fear in ideology. If there is no God, then there should also be no Satan, but suddenly the Satan appears in Estonia,” said the Estonian SSR Cinematography Committee Chairman Feliks Liivik when looking back on the era in 1990s independent Estonia. Indeed, the film’s release at the time was surprising since the period of 1959 to 1964 saw an active anti-religious campaign in the Soviet Union.

But by some miracle, this film with a deeply religious and philosophical subtext was shown all over the Soviet Union and became the first significant success in Estonian film history.
The Misadventures of the New Satan is the last novel by Anton Hansen Tammsaare, the greatest classic of Estonian literature. It was written in the summer of 1939, just before the outbreak of World War II when Europe trembled in fear of war and different ideologies clashed — capitalism against communism and national socialism. The work is considered to be the author’s most multi-layered novel as it contains political, folkloric, theological and intertextual layers, which become the basis for an exciting and original film.
In 1955, Estonian Jüri Müür went to Moscow to study feature film directing at the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography (VGIK) (where his course instructor was Aleksandr Dovzhenko). Only a couple years later, he was already infected with the Satan bug and got VGIK screenwriting student Gennadi Koleda involved to thoroughly work through the material and write many versions of the script. Müür had a definite plan to make his graduate film a full-length feature, and that it had to be The Misadventures of the New Satan (the script’s working title at the time was Earthbound). “Dovzhenko told us that you have to choose your first script like you choose your bride. I’ve also been eyeing my bride for the last four years,” said Jüri Müür at the VGIK Study Council where they were discussing producing the script together with Koleda on March 24, 1960.
Unfortunately, the film was not given the green light at the time and Müür received his diploma for directing the film Men from the Fisherman’s Village (1961), which is also an important work in Estonian film history, as it is the first full-length feature film in Soviet Estonia made with a creative crew composed entirely of Estonians. During the shooting period for the film, he met Grigori Kromanov, who was working as the second director whose job was to direct the actors. For a debut film, Men from the Fisherman’s Village was quite an achievement and, more importantly, it opened the door for Müür to start work on his passion project.

With The Misadventures of the New Satan, Müür and Kromanov were equals as director in the film hierarchy even though they still had quite different roles to play, which probably only benefited the film. Kromanov continued to focus on working with the actors, deliberately staging the dialogue scenes in an uncharacteristically static manner similar to other well-known directors of the same era like Ingmar Bergman or Luchino Visconti.
As a result of all the challenges faced and preparation done, a completely timeless film was made that talks of themes as relevant today as probably at any time, as long as the world still has a capitalist market economy and some form of currency in use. There has always been a danger of working one’s self to death but, today, an era striving more than ever to combine work, a lifestyle and self-realization at any cost possible, these topics are even more relevant than they were in the Estonia of the first half of the 20th century when Satan-Jürka roamed.

The film perfectly presents the absurdity of the situation where the Satan, usually associated with evil, seeks bliss, so he enslaves himself to the big banks, or to loan sharks, or to the embodiment of an inhuman boss, Clever Ants, who keeps raising the rent because that is how our people are supposedly able to live better, even if that means the worker has to sell his worldly belongings and still ends up taking out another loan on top of it all.

There is an absurd atmosphere in The Misadventures of the New Satan, which is enhanced by the brilliant dialogue and excellent supporting roles that help to highlight the contrast between slow-witted Satan-Jürka’s benevolent, extra-terrestrial strength and Clever Ants’s boundless greed. The final phrase that slips from his lips at the end of the film: “Let it burn, the money will come!” is the historically symptomatic attitude of the entire Western worldview that believes in endless economic growth and the reason why humanity and our planet are in danger of catching fire here in the 21st century. It is exceptional how accurately a writer from a small country, and two film directors working together were able to put the confrontation between human greed and sincere benevolence unprotected against exploitation into such an effective, 95-minute, explosive form.
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Post by Jürka »

the traps of urban/rural life in two animation shorts...

Sunday (Avo Paistik, 1977) #CoMoEstonia
Dedicated to the contradictions of scientific and technical progress, warning against one-sided technical developments that turn a person into an involuntary consumer.
Jürka wrote: Sun Mar 09, 2025 5:00 pm
Depictions of the West found their way to Soviet cinema primarily through science-fiction.
The depiction of the West was tolerable as long as the characters conveyed Western vices, doubts and mistakes.
(Western) urban alienation accompanied by the tunes of Pink Floyd (Money).
a male of the decadent West (of the near future) is (robotically) painting his toenails!
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The Simpletons AKA Morons! (Rein Raamat, 1974) #CoMoEstonia
The story of a bunch of peasants who have a hard time using logic to build their community.
Based on the folktale by F. R. Kreutzwald → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich ... Kreutzwald
Five stories of the Simpletons’ “wisdom” have been selected:
stories of rolling logs,
building houses,
helping the cuckoo,
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chasing away creatures from the field,
and burning down houses.
(autotranslated) → https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/15995997-kilplased

Kreutzwald drew his work from German literature. Namely, in the 19th century, there were writings that were popular in Germany that mocked the inhabitants of a certain region of Germany and their abilities and customs. Kreutzwald took a pamphlet about the town of Schilda, retold it, added his own side, and published it under his own name. The German word "das Schild" means 'shield', and from here Kreutzwald created the word "schilders". The characters in the book and their life events left such a deep impression on the people's consciousness that "schilder" began to mean a fool to Estonians, someone who acts first and thinks later, and whose actions are therefore in vain.

The work was first published in Estonian in 1857 (the full title of the first edition: "The miraculous, very strange, unheard-of and unwritten tales and deeds of the tortoises: translated from the Turkish language into the Estonian language and in some parts adapted to the customs of our villages").
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Encyclopaedia Cinematographica Gentium Fenno-Ugricarum, Pt. 2/5

The Winds of the Milky Way (Lennart Meri, 1978) #CoMoEstonia
Sequel to the The Waterfowl People.
The author interprets the kinship, linguistic and cultural relationships of the Finno-Ugric peoples.
Finns, Vepsians, Votes, Setos, Erzya-Mordvinians, Mansi, Hungarians, Sami, Nganasans, and Estonians appear in the film.

some more oldtimers' wisdom!
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We are accompanied by four birds of fate, four souls.
When the sleep-soul flies away, the child awakes.
When the bird returns, the child falls asleep.
But only, when the life-bird leaves a person’s hair, does that person die.
That’s why we scalp our enemies.
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The Young Eagles (Theodor Luts, 1927) #CoMoEstonia
The film depicts the adventures of three young men (a student, a blacksmith, and a farmhand) who enlist in the war when their small country is invaded by the Russian Bolshevists during the Estonian War of Independence (1918-1920) → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estonian_ ... dependence
they all wore the white bands on their sleeves diligently but it was still a mess...
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thx i really enjoyed the waterfowl people and sequel!!

and I'm going to watch jurka too :lol:
:lboxd: + ICM + :imdb:

ANTIFA 4-EVA

CAUTION: woman having opinions
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rischka wrote: Tue Mar 18, 2025 2:27 am and I'm going to watch jurka too :lol:
you won’t be disappointed
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GK Retrospective, Pt. 4/5

after a decent sci-fi ↑↑↑,
an awful swashbuckler ↑↑,
and a hilarious moralist madness ↑,
here we come with a remarkable “red noir” (a nocturnal in-and-out tale of the Party’s upper-class underworld)

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What Happened to Andres Lapeteus? (Grigori Kromanov, 1966) #CoMoEstonia
After a long night with his old war buddies, Andres Lapeteus regains consciousness in the hospital. How has confusion, bewilderment and alienation developed between these men who once fought together side by side? Is this the inevitable result of the Stalinist regime, the influence of his social climber wife, or the effect of his personal cowardliness and conformism? What happened to Andres Lapeteus?

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Such a gripping drama of one man's loss of himself during the horrible times of the 1950s in the Soviet Union when anyone could be discovered as "suspicious or hostile element" and thus thrown out of the Party and losing their career and livelihood. A great piece of cinema about the guilt of a generation that complied with the cult of Stalinism. Estonian version of McCarthyism and the "hardships" of trying your best.

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In essence, the theme of corruptive power wasn’t anything new in the cinema of Soviet Estonia: a film called Under One Roof had been released in 1962, about a power struggle in an ailing collective farm, and Traces in 1963, where the main character has an increasingly hard time remaining human and staying pure in the eyes of the Party at the same time. But for the first time, these issues were brought to an urban environment in Lapeteus — to the streets of Tallinn, the capital of Soviet Estonia.

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Põdrus, the persecuted communist and intellectual, was played by Heino Mandri, an actor who had been imprisoned for seven years for not reporting the existence of an anti-Soviet organization, and who remained in the KGB’s sphere of interest even after he returned from prison
camp. The actor’s case was not reviewed until the perestroika era and Mandri was officially rehabilitated right before his death in 1990.
a long (academic) read → https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... _Modernity
snippets ↓↓↓

What Happened to Andres Lapeteus?
An Upper-Class Homo Sovieticus Caught in the Gears of Soviet Modernity

(by Liisa Kaljula, Baltic Screen Media Review, November 2014)
based on The Case of Andres Lapeteus (Andres Lapeteuse juhtum), a 1963 novel by the Estonian writer Paul Kuusberg.
What Happened to Andres Lapeteus? is set in post-World War II Estonia, starting with the Stalinist 1940s and ending with the Thaw in the early 1960s. Just like the book, the film is structured as a collage of various moments in time, and a complete picture for the viewer is not created until the very end of the film. Thus, with its collage-like structure and with its question-formed title that appears on a broken car window in the very beginning, the film observes the logic of the detective genre. The first scene shows the traffic accident caused by Andres Lapeteus that results in his friend’s death and, thereafter, the film starts investigating the clues, intermittently cutting back to the scene of the accident, and letting the viewer seemingly participate in the solution of a crime. The title of Kuusberg’s book, The Case of Andres Lapeteus, alludes more directly to crime fiction, although the novel only plays with the formal clichés of the Western detective genre, as in the Soviet Union, there was no official place for this genre that revolved mainly around ownership. However, this is hardly a typical criminal case, because an unequivocal answer to the question of what happened to Andres Lapeteus or whether Lapeteus is guilty of anything is not and cannot be provided by the film with its open-ended conclusion. Moreover, the accusation against Lapeteus is broader, more universal, and actually exceeds the competence of the courtroom.

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The contradiction between ideological and party communism is one of the central theoretical problems in the film and does not originate with the director Kromanov, as much as with the screenwriter Kuusberg, for whom it is important — a question that personally affected him throughout his writing career. As a dedicated ideological communist, Kuusberg the writer is often interested in party communism and its widespread moral double standard; and probably also, more broadly, in the careerism, egoism, and materialism in a society that is established on socialist ideals. ... As an innovation for its time, the criticism of both the Stalinist and post-Stalinist years based on the position of ideological communism can be sensed in the film, because, in addition to the widespread criticism of totalitarianism and the cult of personality, the modernizing and hedonistically oriented Soviet modernity that followed Nikita Khrushchev’s rise to power is also criticized. Although for many ideological communists, the second half of the 1950s was a time of great hope, when it was believed that after the Stalinist interlude that went wrong, the Soviet Union would return to its revolutionary era values — in Estonia too, young intellectuals read the early writings of Marx with fervor — then as the 1960s progressed, it became clear to many that the Soviet Union was only undergoing a cosmetic makeover. Reet Lapeteus (Andres Lapeteus’ wife) can be considered to be the composite figure representing the hedonistic Soviet modernity of the 1960s, a modern and self-confident young urban woman, who knows how to get by comfortably and pleasantly, by Western standards, under the conditions of socialism.

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Paul Kuusberg and Grigori Kromanov’s joint work What Happened to Andres Lapeteus? tells an engrossing story about a lost Soviet generation, who went to war directly from the classroom and could not start searching for their place in life until the war ended, therefore grew up during the Stalinist years and achieved their aspirations during the Thaw. Parallel in time to the beatnik generation in the USA, the post-war Soviet Union does not enable the younger generation to publicly manifest their war experiences or the resignation and sense of protest that it caused. When returning from the war they immediately get caught in the gears of the harsh Stalinist regime and the nascent self of this generation never really becomes fully developed. What Happened to Andres Lapeteus? observes the development of postwar homo sovieticus, witnessing his growing into upper-class Soviet functionary, but as time passes, also his becoming dysfunctional in the Soviet system.

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Year of the Dragon (Andres Sööt, 1989) #CoMoEstonia

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it’s always interesting to witness the fall of an empire
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The year of 1988 in Estonia was exceptional — it came as a surprise for everyone that all of a sudden national symbols were allowed; expressions of no confidence were addressed towards the leaders of the Communist Party and the Estonian government; the Popular Front of Estonia and Estonian Green Movement but also the Intermovement (the Workers International Movement of the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic) were founded. Estonian Heritage Society restored the monuments of the War of Independence; the facts about war crimes during the Stalinist regime were disclosed and — imagine that! — the representatives of the Estonian Republic went against the central authorities in Moscow. Events in Estonia draw international attention. Is all this possible in a totalitarian state? This documentary chronicle gives a plausible interpretation of the events that took place in Estonia in 1988, of the changes in people's lives and the awakening after a 48-year-long period of darkness.
3 names (from the film) i tried to familiarize myself with ↓↓↓

1/ Karl Vaino → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Vaino
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2/ Jüri Kukk → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%BCri_Kukk
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3/ Enn Tarto → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enn_Tarto
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Encyclopaedia Cinematographica Gentium Fenno-Ugricarum, Pt. 3/5

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The Sounds of Kaleva (Lennart Meri, 1986) #CoMoEstonia

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A three-act film essay about memory and the historical-cultural ties of the Finno-Ugric peoples.

The first chapter is dedicated to ancient Bearese of memory, such as Karelian cliff drawings, Kalevala runo song, and Khanty bear feast rituals.
Petroglyphs of Lake Onega and the White Sea → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petroglyp ... _White_Sea
The second act portrays the visit of Elias Lonnrot, compiler of the Finnish national epic Kalevala, to Estonia and his meetings with local intellectuals.
Part three re-enacts an ancient smelting and blacksmith ritual set to Veljo Tormis’ cantata “Curse Upon Iron”.

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Mass Deportations Special, Pt. 1/2 (1941)

In the Crosswind (Martti Helde, 2014) #CoMoEstonia

June deportation of 1941 → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/June_deportation
The June deportations were part of a much larger history of depopulation. The "Stalin deportations" from 1928-1953 targeted 13 different nationalities. The June Deportation marked the first industrialized deportations, using rail.
The June deportation of 1941 was a mass deportation of tens of thousands of people from Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, present-day western Belarus and western Ukraine, and present-day Moldova — territories which had been occupied by the Soviet Union in 1939–1940 — into the interior of the Soviet Union.
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Following Stalin's death in 1953, Khrushchev began a program of limited return. In Lithuania, for example, 17,000 people returned by 1956 and 80,000 returned by 1970. Many people deemed nationalist or of non-white ethnic descent were not allowed to return until the 1980s. When survivors did return they faced discrimination and loss of property.
The June deportation has been the subject of several Baltic films from the 2010s.
The 2013 Lithuanian film The Excursionist dramatised the events through the depiction of a 10-year-old girl who escapes from her camp. Estonia's 2014 In the Crosswind is an essay film based on the memoirs of a woman who was deported to Siberia, and is told through staged tableaux vivants filmed in black-and-white. Estonia's Ülo Pikkov also addressed the events in the animated short film Body Memory (Kehamälu) from 2012. Latvia's The Chronicles of Melanie was released in 2016 and is, just like In the Crosswind, based on the memoirs of a woman who experienced the deportation, but is told in a more conventional dramatic way.
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Mass Deportations Special, Pt. 2/2 (1949)

Awakening (Jüri Sillart, 1989) #CoMoEstonia

Operation Priboi AKA March Deportation of 1949 → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Priboi
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Operation Priboi (Operation "Tidal Wave") was the code name for the biggest Stalin-era Soviet mass deportation from the Baltic states on 25–28 March 1949. Also known as the March deportation.

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More than 90,000 Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians, labeled as "enemies of the state", were deported to forced settlements in inhospitable Siberian areas of the Soviet Union.

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Over 70% of the deportees were either women or children under the age of 16.
The deportees were exiled "for eternity" and no right of return to their home, with the penalty of twenty years of hard labour for attempted escapes.

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138 new commandantures were set up to monitor the deportees, censor their mail, and prevent escapes. Deportees were not permitted to leave their designated area and were required to report to the local MVD commandant once a month, failure of which was a punishable offense.
“with the penalty of twenty years of hard labour for attempted escapes”, i.e. an offense as grave as burning a swasticar!

long (academic) read → https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10 ... 24.2379368
snippets ↓↓
The transformation of the memory of Soviet mass deportations in Estonia:
from Awakening (1989) to In the Crosswind (2014)

(by Hanna Maria Aunin, 2024)
ABSTRACT
This article explores the changing memory of Soviet mass deportations in Estonian film through a comparative analysis of two features: Jüri Sillart’s Awakening (1989) and Martti Helde’s In the Crosswind (2014). Examining their artistic choices and reception offers distinct depictions of mass deportations, shaped by the memorial frames of the times in which they were produced. The article shows how Awakening contributed to the formation of a national narrative and the illumination of historical complexities later sidelined in the nationalized memory culture, while In the Crosswind aimed to contribute to the transmission of the memory of mass deportations beyond Estonia.
In 1988, Roland Lään, a Communist party veteran, provided a detailed account of the 1949 Soviet mass deportation in Kõue municipality in the newspaper Harju Elu (Harju Life). ... Lään’s article serves as a testament to the policy of glasnost in the Baltic states during the late 1980s, allowing for open discussions about the formerly taboo topic of Soviet mass deportations from Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. The discussion of Stalinist repressions, especially the deportations, was instrumental for the formation of a new collective memory and a post-Soviet identity in the Baltic states. Although the importance of the memory of Stalinist mass deportations has diminished since the 1990s, the full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia in 2022 has reignited public debate on Soviet repressions and heritage.
Awakening portrays a single day in an Estonian village on 25 March 1949, the first day of mass deportations, by presenting different episodes from the deportation process. We witness how the squads of deporters drive from farm to farm, the arrest of the bell-ringer Mõistuse Jaan (Smart Jaan) at a church, the deportation of children picked up from school, and a shootout between some deportees and deporters. Despite its tragic conclusion, the scene at Nuudimäe farm, which depicts how several men opted for armed resistance against the deportation before losing their lives, shows that not all deportees submitted silently. The shootout scene was based on historical events that happened in a different context of Soviet repression, and supports the collective image of resistance. The episodic structure of the film highlights that the filmmakers chose not to follow a single character and storyline, but instead focused on different episodes to depict the diverse experiences of deportation in rural Estonia.
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JP Retrospective, Pt. 3/3 (Dramatic Arts)

Bear Hunt in Pärnu County (Johannes Pääsuke, 1914) #CoMoEstonia
the first Estonian narrative film
wtih Eng subs!
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Werewolf (Leida Laius, 1968) #CoMoEstonia

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Superstition! Midsummer bonfires! Sexual jealousy in a quasi-incestuous conservative community!
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She was no werewolf, she just had a jealous step-sister..
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Eastern European folkloric horror is hardly a scarce commodity.
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MK Retrospective

Labyrinth (Mati Kütt, 1989, 9m) #CoMoEstonia
This experimental film, hand-scraped and painted on the film strip, is a unique and expressive vision of a sick society, expressed by the unnatural existence in a labyrinth. The subconsciousness reflects the attack of bureaucrats on the world of the creative and natural Woodpeckerman, on his surroundings and his universe — a bird cage. In the end, the image of human existence is presented in the form of a reversed pyramid.

https://vk.com/video-8406752_162243903

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Underground (Mati Kütt, 1997, 12m) #CoMoEstonia
Multiplying the existing point of view, the actual oneness seems to change to unevenness.

https://vimeo.com/groups/339534/videos/152900103

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Substantia Stellaris (Mati Kütt, 2007, 3m) #CoMoEstonia rewatch
Ilmar Laaban’s poetry written in the Cosmos scatters like filings, builds up in our senses and spreads out in our bodies as stellar substance.

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BALTIC MODERNIST CINEMA: BETWEEN IMAGINARY AND REAL, Pt. 3/3

The Ideal Landscape (Peeter Simm, 1981) #CoMoEstonia
This film takes place during the era of collective farms in Estonia in the 1940s and early 1950s, a dramatic period that followed the mass deportations of March 1949.

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In this context, the protagonist, Mait Kukemeri, assigned by the Young Communist League, arrives at a collective farm in Central Estonia. His task is to confirm that the collective farmers have begun the spring sowing, following the guidelines issued by the Estonian Communist Party. However, the collective farm is in the middle of a realm of bogs and swamps, so the seeds are in danger of rotting if the rules are followed — a fact that the local farmers are well aware of, in contrast to the Communist party itself.

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When Kukemeri starts to understand the obstacles, he sends false reports to his chief in town. The authorities, however, became suspicious and sent another representative dressed in a leather coat to investigate the situation.

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The first full-length feature film directed by Peeter Simm is based on the story "The Deputy of Spring Sowing" by Karl Helemäe
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SN Retrospective, Pt. 1/2

Young Pensioner (Sulev Nõmmik, 1972) #CoMoEstonia

humorous aspect of the Soviet-style nihilist society so-so presented in a feel-awkward movie
The day has come when the successful and beloved ballet soloist Pukspuu is to be sent into retirement with ceremonial honors. As you know, a ballet artist's career can never be very long, so the young pensioner Pukspuu suddenly discovers that he has nothing to do with his life. So the former ballet artist begins to look for a new place in life. He tries several jobs, until fate brings him together with a naughty young girl whose pilot mother has long been looking for a tutor. Dizzying adventures begin that turn the lives of Pukspuu, the mother-pilot, her daughter, and several other characters upside down.
The film might be too silly for some tastes, but the fantastic dialogue is worth suffering through some silly monkeying. The genius of the writing actually lies in the punchlines that end every heavy slapstick scene with such a punch that after being annoyed by a couple of minutes of kick-in-the-but jokes you end up laughing your but off.
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I didn’t expect to find it as funny as I did. Lots of fun!
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Enn Vetemaa (from the book “Fragments of Legendary Estonian Films”): “Of the three films, I was the least involved in “Young Pensioner”, it turned out to be more Nõmmik's work. I did participate in writing the script, but in general, the whole story of the 35-year-old ballet artist being sent to retirement still interested and touched Sulev. He was also a former ballet dancer himself.
Nõmmik initially wanted to make it only as a silent film, so that my role would have been in the interludes, but in the end, two versions of it were still made.”

The film was first shown on Estonian Television on April Fool's Day, April 1, 1973.

20 years later, for some unknown reason, Nõmmik says: “The comedy “Young Pensioner” is one that I don’t want to watch myself. When it comes on, I run to the bathroom. Its silent version — the Chaplinade — burned down at the time. It was good.”
This means that the original version, the one they initially wrote down with Vetemaa, was close to the director’s heart and the later changes were made reluctantly because otherwise nothing would have come of the feature film.
In the interest of truth, it should be noted that the silent film version, which was thought to have been destroyed in the 1976 fire at the film warehouse, was later found, and it has also been shown on Estonian Television.
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Encyclopaedia Cinematographica Gentium Fenno-Ugricarum, Pt. 4/5

The Sons of Torum (Lennart Meri, 1989) #CoMoEstonia

Num-Torum → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Num-Torum
Bear worship → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bear_worship
The Khanty and Mansi believe that the bear is a descendant from the supreme god Torum (also known as Num-Torum), whose children are sent to the earth as a means of surveilling and communicating with people inhabiting it. Importantly, Ob-Ugrians also believe that they have also descended from the god Torum, a belief that forms the basis of these peoples’ social relationship with bears, which is that of a patrilineal kinship. That is, the bear acts as a genetic ancestor to the Ob-Ugrians.
Soviet control of the Russian state also led to repressive attitudes toward bear worship among indigenous Siberian peoples. Although religion was tolerated in theory, the socialist state sought to limit paganism as this practice was antithetical to the ideal of Marxist-Leninist atheism adopted as the official attitude toward religion and spiritualism more widely in the Soviet Union. Bear worship, and paganism more generally, was also perceived as a threat to Marxist-Leninist ideology with regards to humans’ relationship with their surrounding natural environment. According to Stephen Dudeck, an anthropologist specializing in indigenous Siberian cultures, "The opposition between the ideological place of nature as a force to be conquered according to Soviet ideology, and the complex and negotiated social relationship with the environment reflected in Indigenous rituals, should not have gone unnoticed. On a practical level feasting was blamed for distracting workers in the newly created state-controlled enterprises from disciplined work."
His (Meri’s) most famous film has been shot in a village of the taiga, where local people, after long years, performed one of their most peculiar rites, the bear’s feast, commemorating the killing of a bear. This ethnographic approach hided a deeper political message, which was at that time mostly Estonian-oriented: the stress on traditional worldview, on language kinship and on kinship tout court, were ideas able to arouse in Estonians consciousness of their roots and to strengthen their national awareness, while they lived under Soviet rule, which intended to merge all the people’s and the individuals into one single, Soviet culture.
in the same vein as the others (the other films by Meri), this one takes advantage of the glasnost policy to discuss the social and ecologic impact of the Russian oil industry on the natives and the lands they inhabit

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RH Retrospective

Papa Carlo's Theatre (Rao Heidmets, 1988, 9m) #CoMoEstonia
A totalitarian society destroys itself, sooner or later the people cannot take it anymore and then, over papa Carlos a path to the doors of freedom is laid.

Instinct (Rao Heidmets, 2003, 10m) #CoMoEstonia
This film artistically contemplates the consequences when creation escapes the control of its Creator and starts to act solely of its own will.

The Pearlman (Rao Heidmets, 2006, 12m) #CoMoEstonia
A smart leader can keep the culture of his nation homogeneous for a long time, but he is helpless against the interchange of genes.

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