Moral Rating: | not reviewed |
Moviemaking Quality: |
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Primary Audience: | Adults |
Genre: | Dark-Comedy (satire) |
Length: | 1 hr. 47 min. |
Year of Release: | 2017 |
USA Release: |
January 19, 2018 (festival) March 9, 2018 (limited) April 13, 2018 (wide—330 theaters) DVD: June 19, 2018 |
The many great evils committed by Josef Stalin
Evil dictators
The former Soviet Union
Russian history
The appalling history of Communism and totalitarian socialism
What is historically accurate and inaccurate in this film?
Featuring |
Steve Buscemi … Nikita Khrushchev Jeffrey Tambor … Georgy Malenkov—the deputy Adrian McLoughlin … Josef Stalin Rupert Friend … Vasily Stalin—the son Jason Isaacs … Field Marshal Zhukov—the General Olga Kurylenko … Maria Veniaminovna Yudina—a Soviet pianist and an uncompromising critic of the Soviet regime Field Marshal Zhukov Andrea Riseborough … Svetlana—the daughter Tom Brooke … Sergei Paddy Considine … Comrade Andreyev Justin Edwards … Spartak Sokolov - Conductor 1 Simon Russell Beale … Lavrenti Beria—the spymaster/secret police chief Michael Palin … Vyacheslav Molotov—Soviet diplomat and politician Paul Whitehouse … Anastas Mikoyan—the schemer Dermot Crowley … Lazar Kaganovich See all » |
Director | Armando Iannucci — “Veep” TV series (2012-2017), “In the Loop” (2009), “The Armando Iannucci Shows” TV series (2001) |
Producer |
Quad Productions [FR] Main Journey [Canada] Gaumont [France] France 3 Cinéma [France] Compagnie Cinématographique, La [Belgium] Panache Productions [Belgium] Canal+ [France] Cine+ [France] France Télévisions [France] Free Range Films [Great Britain] Title Media [Belgium] |
Distributor | IFC Films |
Here’s what the distributor says about their film: “When tyrannical dictator Joseph Stalin dies in 1953, his parasitic cronies square off in a frantic power struggle to become the next Soviet leader. Among the contenders are the dweebish Georgy Malenkov, the wily Nikita Khrushchev and Lavrenti Beria—the sadistic secret police chief. As they bumble, brawl and back-stab their way to the top, the question remains—just who is running the government? This film satirically follows the Soviet dictator's last days and depicts the chaos of the regime after his death.”
This film is based on a graphic novel by Fabien Nury.
See list of Relevant Issues—questions-and-answers.
PLEASE share your observations and insights to be posted here.
Based on real events, if in a compressed time frame, Iannucci skewers the fools and knaves as they accommodate to power and then try to seize it. After an amazingly absurd sequence where radio announcers must record a concert that Stalin heard broadcast and wants a copy of, by forcing the orchestra to stay late and play it all over again (with a substitute conductor dragged in in his pajamas and peasants hauled off the streets to stand and applaud. “No one is going to be killed here, it is just a musical emergency”), the dictator is felled by a stroke.
His underlings at the Central Committee (a marvellous ensemble case with Steve Buscemi and Michael Palin being the best known, but Simon Russell Beale and Andrea Risenborough standing out as well), can not figure out whether to call a doctor (most have been murdered or sent to the gulag) as they plot how to survive his potential recovery or take over after his demise.
After Stalin’s death the villainous Beria seeks to manipulate the figurehead Malenkov while assigning rival Khrushchev to the insignificant job of planning the funeral and choosing the curtains.
Gulags, roundups and shootings are never far from the scene and, particularly at the end with coup, countercoup and kangaroo court the thick of it is very thick indeed. Ultimately the film is a mix of the horror of dictatorship with Iannucci’s typical political shenanigans from less malevolent systems. Since today’s headlines are full of North Korea, Syria and other authoritarian systems, whose inner workings we often fail to understand, it may be good to laugh at the various banalities of evil as set forth here.
Ultimately Christians, who have an uneasy relationship with government, how its leaders operate and how to choose between “evils” in the interest of a greater good, should recognize the importance of rights for all and restrictions on the powers of the mighty. The film is a reminder of what happens when that is not the case and how easily people can find reasons to justify it, whether from ideology or ambition. Evil is and has been real and looks bad.
Religion does not play much part in this film (Beria has allowed the Orthodox bishops in their traditional dress and beards, to attend Stalin’s funeral, mostly to curry public favor) and there is plenty of cussing, although less than in Iannucci’s other works, and generally representing the venality of the characters.
Beria turns out to have pedophilia in addition to his other evils. And as happens among the kings of ancient Israel and since, transformations of power can easily be accompanied by violence and murder.
Hopefully readers of this site will be reminded of why democracy and human rights need to be realities.
My Ratings: Moral rating: Better than Average / Moviemaking quality: 4½