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Review: Absurdistan

A ripe, magic-realism-lite tale of life
By GERALD PEARY  |  March 4, 2009
2.5 2.5 Stars


VIDEO: The trailer for Absurdistan

Delicatessen sort of meets Borat in Veit Helmer's visually ripe, magic-realism-lite tale of life in a mythical Eastern European country that time forgot after the dissolution of the Soviet Bloc.

Temelko (Maximilian Mauff) and Aya (Kristýna Malérová) are childhood sweethearts, but their lovy-dovy relationship is disrupted when the ladies of Absurdistan, who include the now-teenage Aya, go on a sex strike. They're peeved because the men have been too lazy to repair a municipal water pipe, and that's left the mini-country as parched as a desert.

Helmer's film is nice to look at, with an unusual palette of lush, saturated colors, but the story, amid a barrage of sight gags, is more thin than absurd.

Related: A Thousand Years of Good Prayers, Review: Katyn, Gesellschaft Zur Emanzipation Des Samples | Circulations, More more >
  Topics: Reviews , Communism, ABSURDISTAN, ABSURDISTAN
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ARTICLES BY GERALD PEARY
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