#ermek shinarbaev
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Revenge (1989), dir. Ermek Shinarbaev
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"My son, you came into this world for one reason: revenge."
REVENGE (1988) dir. Yermek Shinarbayev
#revenge#worldcinemaedit#filmgifs#filmauteur#userkino#Yermek Shinarbayev#soviet cinema#kazakh cinema#revenge 1990#revenge 1989#Месть#central asian cinema#ermek shinarbaev#Ermek Bektasuly Shynarbaev#anatoli kim#kazakh new wave#koryo saram#myfilmgallery#ellisgifs#queue
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Revenge | Yermek Shinarbayev | 1989
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#revenge#mest#film#review#criterion collection#criterion channel#martin scorsese’s world cinema project#ermek shinarbaev
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REVENGE (’89) concerns a vengeance that cannot be contained by time. It floats through the centuries, traveling from 17th century Korea to 20th century Sakhalin Island, a much fought over spit of land squabbled over by Russia and Japan. A free-form mass of condensed hate emerges during this period, one which causes the death of a little girl and the mission of her doomed half-brother, who is conceived and raised only to avenge her murder. A major work of what became known as the Kazakh New Wave, Revenge is elusive and incantatory due in part to the script by the Korean-Russian poet Anatoli Kim that does not provide as much of a narrative as it does a striking collage of decay. Add to this the fact that director Ermek Shinarbaev was born in Soviet controlled Kazakhstan, but after Revenge was filmed the Soviet system collapsed and Kazakhstan became a sovereign state. The film reflects the rootlessness, uncertainty and bitterness of no longer having a place to call home. Restored in 2010 thanks to the efforts of Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project, it is available on DVD and Blu-ray from Criterion (in Volume 2 of their World Cinema Project series), and is now streaming on FilmStruck.
Read More On StreamLine: Eternal Recurrence: REVENGE (’89)
#Revenge#Ermek Shinarbaev#Anatoli Kim#Soviet Cinema#Criterion Collection#World Cinema Project#StreamLine Blog#FilmStruck
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Knight of Cups (Terrence Malick, 2015) Revenge (Ermek Shinarbaev, 1989)
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I got Yermek Shinarbayev (also translated as Ermek Shinarbaev; Kazakh: Ermek Bektasuly Shynarbaev) is a Soviet film director.[1] Born in 1953 in Alma-Ata, Soviet Union (now Almaty, Kazakhstan), Shinarbaev is sometimes categorized as a member of the Kazakh New Wave. He is especially well known for his collaboration with the Korean-Russian writer, Anatoli Kim, resulting to three films.[2] The last of Shinarbaev-Kim film Mest (Revenge), was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1991 Cannes Film Festival[3] and won the grand prize at Sochi Open Russian Film Festival in 1990.[4]
ur government assigned gender for the day is the first thing u get when u click this link to a randomised wikipedia article. NO REROLLS . i am the trollsteineggje mountain in norway
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Mest (1989, Ermek Shinarbaev)
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Revenge | Ermek Shinarbaev | 1989
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Mest | Revenge (Ermek Shinarbaev, 1989)
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Revenge. Ermek Shinarbaev. 1989. Kazakhstan. World Cinema Foundation.
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Revenge - Ermek Shinarbaev - 1989
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Mest (1989, Ermek Shinarbaev)
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