http://www.russiablog.org/2006/03/tycoon_the_new_russian_oligark.php
Tycoon: The New Russian" (Oligarkh)
Charles Ganske
Real vs. Celluloid Oligarch
Tycoon is my first foray into the post-Soviet Russian crime genre, and it proved to be disappointing. Of course, at Russia Blog, we don't like to describe the post-Soviet oligarchs as "tycoons" in the mold of Rockefeller or Carnegie, because unlike these historic capitalist figures, the oligarchs did not create new wealth, they only acquired existing state-run industries for themselves.
What may interest students of recent Russian history more than the movie is the English-subtitled DVD's extended interview with Tycoon's Franco-Russian director, Pavel Lungin. In this exchange, recorded in French (with English subtitles), Lungin describes how the obsession with money has hit post-Soviet Russia like "an A-bomb - with invisible rays" and that this condition has destroyed "what was the real strength of Russia...the special friendships that held an important place in our lives...now those friendships are dissolving like cubes of ice in a glass." Western critics looking for a Scorsese-inspired psychological picture instead saw a film about a close knit fraternity's rise to wealth and power with some themes borrowed from gangster and detective movies.
Makovski and "brothers" enjoy the fireworks
Pavel Lungin also describes meeting the oligarch Boris Berezovsky, whom the protagonist Platon Makovski is loosely based on, "Makovski is and isn't Berezovsky...for one thing, although he was a womanizer, Berezovsky was not attractive to women, he had to work harder at it...to be charming." Lungin says that Berezovsky has "a devilish look about him (see the above cover)...he was the favorite target of the anti-Semites...here was the devil of ruthless capitalism personified." Lungin added that Berezovsky "is not a violent man." The late Paul Klebnikov's book Godfather of the Kremlin differs on this account, providing strong evidence that Berezovsky had literally dozens of people killed during his rise to power. Berezovsky became the godfather of "the Family", a clique of Kremlin insiders who manipulated President Yeltsin's favorite daughter, Tatyana Dyachenko, to dispense state contracts and punish their rivals.
Lungin describes the oligarch of his creation, Platon Makovski, as "a romantic hero...who slowly loses his friends and his soul, by betraying and being betrayed." In real life, Berezovsky was less charming than Lungin, who still travels between Paris and Moscow regularly, describes him. As for the plot, there are too many similarities to Berezovsky's life to list here, but the most important parallel between fantasy and reality is Makovski's early career as a brilliant mathematician in the perestroika years (1985-1989).
One day in 1985 Makovski joins some childhood and university friends on a train ride to an important academic conference. On the train he meets Masha (Maria Miranova, who plays Yegor's mother in Night Watch), the beautiful young wife of Koretsky (Aleksandr Baluyev), an older Communist Party official. Masha becomes Platon's lover and then leaves him and her husband for several years. Not surprisingly, Koretsky becomes Platon's nemesis.
Makovski and his friends, in spite of their advanced degrees, soon find themselves struggling through the perestroika years, so they ghost write thesis for rich kids at $1,000 a pop. Makovski sells Western designer knock off stone washed jeans and befriends "Larry", a Georgian who manages a car factory in the Volga region. With a stroke Makovski and his friends become the owners of the plant and also find a Uzbek mob "fixer" to settle their turf dispute with a gang of Georgian thugs. Suprisingly for Western audiences weaned on the violence of Goodfellas, Makovski and his immediate associates never have to get their hands dirty, in contrast to real life oligarchs who killed their rivals. The killing only comes later, when Platon's success attracts a gang of racketeers who hold a special customs exemption from the Kremlin, trading as a "non-profit" for crippled Afghan war veterans. Platon decides to fight back against a corrupt government shaking him down by purchasing a news media channel and buying a Siberian governor as "his" presidential candidate. Unfortunately, by this point Platon's arrogance and the pressure exerted by his enemies in the Kremlin turn the governor into one of his fiercest foes.
Makovski and Nina
Americans who enjoyed The Aviator may compare Makovski to Scorsese's version of Howard Hughes. One of Platon's business partners describes the rapacious Kremlin to a detective, "it's like a Hindu goddess with dozens of arms...". Just as a corrupt Senator in The Aviator tried to destroy TWA, most audiences will sympathize with Makovski's showdown with the biggest crooks and criminals of all, those who were running the Kremlin during the Yeltsin years.
Without giving away the ending, the climax is not really much of a shocker and resolves almost nothing. The director Lungin spoke of creating "history...when people look back fifteen years from now the movies will be the story they will remember...", but for understanding the rise of the oligarchs, ordinary people will likely turn to Brigada and other Russian TV shows and films before they watch Tycoon. Lungin's "romantic hero" oligarch is too sympathetic to ring true, more like Jay Gatsby than Boris Berezovsky.
比预想中好看很多。
寡头的兴起和覆灭。穿插结构的叙事线有意思。俄式电影,硬硬的。
有点公民凯恩的意思
弗拉基米尔·马什科夫,是有点欠抽的感觉在他身上
以别列佐夫斯基为原型的回忆性电影。数学家出身,走私汽车起步,随后染指能源,成为叶利钦时代的七大寡头之一。现在被普京逼迫,流亡英国。
权力争夺与兄弟义气几场死亡设计很好
三星电影,给马老师加一星
这不是教父么
看过
认为这样子的翅膀比较可爱的
很喜欢
这是一部好电影。很想看带中文字幕的。
俄罗斯往事
俄罗斯九十年镇痛疗法催生的寡头们
俄罗斯往事,说真的整得不错。喜欢这部电影,叙事上和公民凯恩有点类似,通过调查和某人回忆来展开,时间线两条,以马什科夫的死亡为界限,往前回忆和调查。事件多时间跨度大,但人物都塑造的不错,最后的结局让我不太满意,如果点出拉里是叛徒,普列东惨死我觉得更有悲剧气氛。我莫名想到了李佩甫的《生命册》,给4.5。这段时间了解了不少俄罗斯历史文化
寡头故事像电影bgm一样深沉起伏 有利益与权力之争 有兄弟情义与爱情穿插 可惜对他们攫取财富和权力的刻画未免有些轻描淡写
有些人可真搞笑,这电影也没给寡头唱赞美诗吧?怎么的盗国行为还应该歌颂一下?大家最后都是吃蜡烛下岗的苏联工人,就别幻想自己能当时代弄潮儿了(马什科夫真可爱,他眼角的每条鱼尾纹简直都长在我心上(嗷嗷嗷嗷嗷嗷可爱!
认为这样子的翅膀比较可爱的
马什科夫好帅 然后我还是看不懂 寡头的事情一团糟
俄罗斯往事