Otago Daily Times Review – by Mark Orton ★★★

FILM REVIEW: ‘Russian Snark’

Sat, 18 Jun 2011

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> Russian Snark
3 stars (out of 5)Director: Stephen Sinclair
Cast: Stephen Papps, Elena Stejko, Stephanie Tauevihi, Peter Rowley
Rating: (M)
Shot on location in Auckland with a cast featuring a few familiar faces, Russian Snark is a film that doesn’t lend itself to easy categorisation or critique. Perhaps this has something to do with using Russian immigrants to ask questions about our cultural identity, but Stephen Sinclair’s script barely strays into that territory either.

Rather, from the moment when Misha (Stephen Papps) and Nadia (Elena Stejko) pull up in their motorised lifeboat, the film embarks on a quest to understand what it is to create art, be driven by art and eventually destroyed by it. When Misha states that as an artist he has to no time for conventional narrative, it is hardly likely thatRussian Snark will have one either.

Russian Snark could just as easily have been conceived from a quick-fire creative writing assignment to take the true story of a Russian couple who floated to New Zealand, and follow it to some form of conclusion.

Misha is an eccentric film-maker obsessed with completing a conceptual piece involving still nudes in outdoor settings. As the stress of completing the project starts to wear on Nadia, Misha spectacularly manages to lose both her, and his mind.

Drier than a mouthful of Weetbix, Russian Snark has oodles of wry pathos. Aided by some classy cinematography and a look that belies its modest budget, Stephen Sinclair’s daring concept will be lauded by fans of cult cinema, but is likely to be a little too obscure for the great unwashed.


Best thing:
The dynamic between Papps and Stejko.

Worst thing: Clunky story beats.

See it with: Industrial-strength Russian vodka.

 

http://www.odt.co.nz/entertainment/film/165287/film-review-russian-snark

Published June 18th, 2011 at 9:46 am

Stephen Sinclair – Dilemmas of an Artist

Herald Film Reviewer Peter Calder talks about art and film with Russian Snark writer/director Stephen Sinclair

Stephen Sinclair: Dilemmas of an artist

By Peter Calder

5:30 AM Saturday Jun 18, 2011

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Writer and director Stephen Sinclair had no creative restrictions on himself in his depiction of a self-exiled Russian film-maker’s obsession with his craft. Peter Calder writes.

Stephen Papps' accent was so convincing that his Ukranian co-star would often speak Russian to him in between takes. Photo / Supplied

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Stephen Papps’ accent was so convincing that his Ukranian co-star would often speak Russian to him in between takes. Photo / Steve Latty

When Boris Bainov and Renata Pavlenko sailed into Huia in November 1999, they would not have imagined that they would one day come to occupy a small niche in the history of New Zealand cinema.

The Russian couple had crossed the notorious Manukau Bar – not to mention the Pacific Ocean, from Vladivostok via Vanuatu – more by good luck than good management, one suspects, since their craft was a 30-year-old, 8m aluminium lifeboat. Bainov had bought the craft, which a gobsmacked yachtie called a floating beer can, for a few dollars from a steamship company.

Bainov and Pavlenko called their boat the Fore Tiv, an obscure reference to the fact that Bainov was 44 when he finished it, but the screen version of it is called the Snark – or CHAPK in Russian’s Cyrillic characters. And the two adventurers on board in the film Russian Snark are entirely figments of film writer and director Stephen Sinclair’s imagination.

The co-writer, with Anthony McCarten, of the 1987 hit play Ladies’ Night, who also penned some of the second film in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, says the real story was “just a starting point, really”.

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The quixotic nature of the sailors’ undertaking sparked the creation of a character, Misha, an experimental film-maker utterly and obsessively devoted to his art, who has to confront the cost of his obsession.

“I was interested in the dilemma of the artist,” says Sinclair, “that what’s good for the art may not necessarily be good for the person.”

It spoils little to say that Misha decides that it is better to be a good man than a good artist.

It seems like a strange thing for an artist to say, I suggest to Sinclair, given that the history of art is littered with people (mainly men) who did not reach the same conclusion.

“I’ve heard that Nabokov is a really nice person,” says Sinclair with a chuckle, “though he’s always cited as an exception to the rule. But Misha – I don’t want to give too much away – certainly takes it to the end of the line. He has to re-evaluate what actually is the point of what he does.”

The improbable story improbably gets under your skin, thanks to a charmingly eccentric performance by the lanky Papps, best known for his role as the loopy Firpo in Ian Mune’s film of The End of the Golden Weather. Among his other achievements, Papps speaks a good proportion of his lines in Russian and gives a fine impression of a native speaker.

His co-star, Elena Stejko, a Ukrainian, says she was “absolutely smitten by his devotion” and that he was so convincing that she often caught herself speaking to him in Russian between takes.

At times as oddball as its main character, Russian Snark was never the kind of project that would have attracted Film Commission support: the commission came in with some post-production funding and Creative New Zealand’s Screen Innovation Production Fund chipped in as well, but the film was predominantly self-funded.

“That was pretty liberating,” says Sinclair. “I didn’t have to get anyone to agree with my ideas or talk to committees. I could just be as eccentric and unusual as I wanted to be.”

The mixed tones of the result – a faintly tragic love story with a strong thread of satire – may not be for all tastes (one of our cinema’s few truly iconic images is deliciously lampooned) but Sinclair is unrepentant.

“Films like this are usually made by very serious artists who feel so strongly about their subject that humour might compromise their vision. I think that’s bullshit. There is nothing so serious that you can’t have humour in it as well.”

And he laments the pressure against the iconoclastic and offbeat in today’s tight funding environment.

“There is enormous pressure for everything to be mainstream and successful and the funders and networks are all second-guessing what they may be. But if your motivation is solely to get as many people as you can into the theatre, you are usually going to get it wrong anyway.

“My experience has been that if something really excites me, that’s the best chance it will interest other people.

I’ve tried to write stuff with a view to turning a dollar and the stuff that I come up with is really second-rate.”

By Peter CalderEmail Peter

 

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=10732909

 

Published June 18th, 2011 at 5:30 am

Russian Snark: Sets Sail

Russian Snark: sets sail 

Screen Hub
Friday 17 June, 2011

An art film about art films, or at least an art film filmmaker, went on release yesterday with the filmmaker and lead actors fronting for a Q&A in Auckland.  

Writer Stephen Sinclair (Ladies Night, LOTR 2) adds a feature directing credit withRussian Snark, a story inspired by the real event of a Vladivostok couple turning up in NZ in 1999, having made the journey from Russia in a lifeboat.

Sinclair started on the script in 2007, and shot the film mostly in two blocks the following year during May and September, which a lot of the exterior shooting covered off in the first block. “It wasn`t fair to expect people to crawl around on a beach naked, covered in mud on a winter`s day.”

He`d always seen it as an independent piece, deciding going in not to apply for funding. At a Script To Screen Writers Room early in 2009, he spoke about the decision and the importance of retaining some control over the material as it didn`t easily tick boxes for NZFC support. The story centres on two Russian characters who speak their native language a good amount of the time.

Sinclair also wanted to treat making the film “like writing a novel”, and to have the freedom to go back and revise as it developed – an approach he now describes as a little naïve. There was some luck in that people remained available when it came time to do pickups and add in new scenes, but making the film in that way was always the plan.

The development of the film after a rough cut, with the addition of new scenes, makes it a more coherent piece than it apparently was early on.

The film is not easy, although it`s peppered with humour, not only in some of the referential scenes but also, occasionally, unintentionally. One scene where a character attempts suicide was greeted with laughter at festival screenings last year. It wasn`t what Sinclair expected, but he`s relaxed about it, happy to let audiences take the film as they find it.

Sinclair wrote the piece for the two main actors, Kiwi Stephen Papps and Russian native Elena Stejko. Papps does a great job with both the Russian language and Russian-accented English. The two actors had worked with Sinclair previously, on a short film. Their work on that was the driver for Sinclair to write a feature for them.

Sinclair described NZ`s acting fraternity as having “depth, but not great breadth”, which he felt was another good reason to write for specific actors rather than hoping that someone out there will fit the characters created.

He said, “With this film I’ve sought to create an eccentric comedy drama, which is artistically engaging and accessible; thought-provoking and entertaining.”

It`s a crafted statement, befitting of a writer, but nonetheless an accurate description of what he`s achieved. The film isn`t entirely straightforward. Certainly Misha (Papps) is not the most loveable protagonist you`ll find on screen, but between Sinclair`s writing and direction and Papps` performance, Misha is impossible to hate which – given the story`s denouement – is an important if difficult line to tread.

A year on from its premiere at last year`s NZFF, the film is still screening on the festival circuit internationally, where it`s picked up many competition nominations and won Best International Film at the Garden State Film Festival.

Here at home it won Stephanie Tauevihi the Best Supporting Actress at last year`s Qantas Film & TV Awards, and was nominated in five other categories.

There`s plenty of art for the arthouse crowd, and film students can sit up late discussing the symbolic and metaphorical importance of the imagery, the lifeboat in which the couple arrive, the chickens with which Misha bonds, as well as reflecting uncomfortably on the alienation of artists from society.

For the less self-obsessed, it`s a very entertaining story with entertaining characters and deserves a wider audience than it might find.

For himself, Sinclair is busy with other work as well as bobbing around the country for the next few weeks to attend screenings. He has a play opening at Devonport`s Victoria in August and is working on other film scripts. He`s recently completed a draft of an adaptation of his children`s story Bartholomew’s Birthdayfor Peter Jackson, and is currently developing “a hallucinatory thriller” Distant Fires with Snark producer Liz DiFiore.

A list of Russina Snark screenings and Q&A sessions in various centres is here. More information about the film can be found here.

http://www.screenhub.com.au/news/shownewsarticle.php?newsID=38381

“Humour, whimsy and visual beauty turn Stephen Sinclair’s Russian Snark…into something near-poetic”

Humour, whimsy and visual beauty turn Stephen Sinclair’s Russian Snark from a typical migrant tale into something near-poetic. As Russian artists Misha and Nadia struggle to find their feet in Auckland, Sinclair gently takes shots at artistic pretentiousness (Misha’s making a black-and-white film of naked bodies in the landscape), exposes the painful choices migrants have to make and draws fine, natural performances from Stephen Papps and Elena Stejko as the couple, and especially Stephanie Tauevihi as their wise and compassionate neighbour.

 

Helene Wong, NZ Listener, 25/6/11

 

Published June 17th, 2011 at 8:19 pm

Russian Snark opens in Auckland – Q & A

A great opening night! Fabulous feedback – with lots of superlatives being bandied around. The very thing to warm the cockles of a director’s heart. And it was nice to watch it with an audience without the nerves I experienced at the screening at the Film Festival in Auckland last year. That time it had never been shown to a general audience and I didn’t know how they’d take it; this time I had enough confidence in it working to relax and enjoy the event myself.

Several people remarked how they saw new things in the movie on a second viewing.  And I myself find it interesting how it seems subtly change with each successive audience.

I’m off to New Plymouth tomorrow for another Q and A at the Arthouse Cinema. I’m curious to find out how it will go down in the provinces. There’s no reason to think they won’t enjoy it. The film is a curious beast – an art movie that is accessible to the general public (if I don’t say so myself!)

Published June 17th, 2011 at 2:11 pm

Opening Night at the Rialto

A great opening night! Fabulous feedback – with lots of superlatives being bandied around. The very thing to warm the cockles of a director’s heart. And it was nice to watch it with an audience without the nerves I experienced at the screening at the Film Festival in Auckland last year. That time it had never been shown to a general audience and I didn’t know how they’d take it; this time I had enough confidence in it working to relax and enjoy the event myself.

Several people remarked how they saw new things in the movie on a second viewing.  And I myself find it interesting how it seems subtly change with each successive audience.

I’m off to New Plymouth tomorrow for another Q and A at the Arthouse Cinema. I’m curious to find out how it will go down in the provinces. There’s no reason to think they won’t enjoy it. The film is a curious beast – an art movie that is accessible to the general public (if I don’t say so myself!)

 

Published June 17th, 2011 at 2:02 pm

Kiwi Fm – Radio Wammo – Review

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mGecm2Ucty4

Check out this review – after Bridesmaids!

Published June 17th, 2011 at 8:04 am

Radio One 91 FM interview with Stephen Sinclair

http://www.r1.co.nz/

Check out Stephen Sinclair’s interview on Radio One 91 FM today at 9:15am

 

Published June 16th, 2011 at 9:09 am

Peter Calder Review Russian Snark in The NZ Herald – 3.5 Stars!

Movie Review: Russian Snark

By Peter Calder

7:00 AM Thursday Jun 16, 2011 

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Stephen Papps impresses in his role as a Russian film-maker. Photo / Supplied 

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Stephen Papps impresses in his role as a Russian film-maker. Photo / Supplied

“Art,” intones Misha, one of this movie’s two main characters, “is way of seeing; it is both gift and curse.”

He should know. Misha (Papps) is a Russian film-maker in self-imposed exile from the Motherland and his determination to pursue his art form leads to very little pleasure and quite a lot of pain.

Looking for an artistically sophisticated country where a narrative-averse experimental film-maker might be appreciated, he rather unwisely lands in New Zealand, where his obsession and self-obsession drive him slightly crazy and his wife Nadia (Stejko, excellent) to distraction.

The film is inspired by the story of Boris Bainov and Renata Pavlenko who arrived at Huia in November 1999 after crossing the Manukau Bar – not to mention the Pacific, from Vladivostok via Vanuatu – in an 8m enclosed aluminium lifeboat.

But it doesn’t tell their story. After a faintly Herzogian opening in which Misha howls at the mist while swinging from his makeshift mast, the movie traces the struggle of Nadia (like Pavlenko, a dancer) and Misha as they work out how they might pay the rent and resolve the conflict between being an artist and a human. In his self-funded feature debut, Sinclair, who co-wrote Ladies Night and the second Rings movie, turns this flimsiest of pretexts into an unusual love story which is far more engaging than it promises to be.

In large part that’s down to the irrepressibly eccentric performance by Papps. He convincingly chews some pretty complicated dialogue in Russian and the intonation of his Russian-English accent is just right, but he also nails the essence of the doggedly unworldly and quixotic Misha. When he quotes Nietzsche’s idea that if you stare long enough into the abyss, the abyss stares back at you, he makes it sound like it’s rapture, not despair he’s feeling.

Stars: 3.5/5
Cast: Stephen Papps, Elena Stejko, Stephanie Tauevihi
Director: Stephen Sinclair
Running time: 78 mins
Rating: M (violence, offensive language, nudity) In English and Russian with English subtitles
Verdict: Unexpectedly engaging

- TimeOut

By Peter CalderEmail Peter

 

Published June 16th, 2011 at 7:05 am

Elena Stejko Photos

Published June 15th, 2011 at 9:18 pm