The Long Farewell

(Dolgie provody)

The Long Farewell also screened Sunday, April 9 without an introduction by Stanislav Menzelevskyi.

  • Introduction

    Stanislav Menzelevskyi is the former head of the Research and Programming Department at the Oleksandr Dovzhenko National Center and is currently a PhD student at the Media School, Indiana University, Bloomington.

Muratova’s daring 1971 psychodrama . . . deserves the accolade of best restoration of the year.

James Quandt, Artforum
featuring

Zinaida Sharko, Oleg Vladimirsky, Yuriy Kayurov, Svetlana Kabanova,

The relationship between mother and son forms the crux of Kira Muratova’s ephemeral second feature, which by simply prioritizing the messiness of human connections over the glories of the socialist state wound up banned for sixteen years. Slipping through middle age with an assortment of wigs, desultory lovers, and panic attacks, a party bureaucrat and divorcée has only her teenage son to lean on, but soon she may lose him through both the usual youthful rebellions and her own insecurities. Muratova conveys their life together and lives apart through elliptical, poetic fragments, forging a film of tenderness and sorrow, and a tribute to unconventional, independent women.

—Jason Sanders

Event Accessibility

If you have any questions about accessibility or require accommodations to participate in this event, please contact us at bampfa@berkeley.edu or call us at (510) 642-1412 (during open hours) with as much advance notice as possible. More information on accessibility services.

FILM DETAILS 
Screenwriter
  • Natalya Ryazantseva
Cinematographer
  • Gennady Karyuk
Language
  • Russian
  • with English subtitles
Print Info
  • B&W
  • DCP
  • 97 mins
Source
  • Janus Films