FRI JUN 2, 2023 7:30 PM

COME AND SEE / THE ASCENT

$10.00 (member) ; $15.00 (general admission)

Ticket prices for paid events include a $2.00 online booking fee. Booking fees do not apply to free RSVP events.

Aero Theatre | Introduction by filmmaker Karyn Kusama

Bleak Week: Cinema of Despair – Year 2′

Annual Klimov / Shepitko Double Feature

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ABOUT THE FILMS:

COME AND SEE, 1985, Elem Klimov, 142 Minutes, Janus Films, Soviet Union

In Belarussian, Russian and German with English subtitles

This widely acclaimed film from Soviet director Elem Klimov is a stunning, senses-shattering plunge into the dehumanizing horrors of war. As Nazi forces encroach on his small village in present-day Belarus, teenage Flyora (Aleksei Kravchenko, in one of the screen’s most searing depictions of anguish since Renée Falconetti’s Joan of Arc) eagerly joins the Soviet resistance. Rather than the adventure and glory he envisioned, what he finds is a waking nightmare of unimaginable carnage and cruelty—rendered with a feverish, otherworldly intensity by Klimov’s subjective camerawork and expressionistic sound design. Nearly suppressed by Soviet censors who took eight years to approve its script, COME AND SEE is perhaps the most visceral, impossible-to-forget antiwar film ever made.

FORMAT: DCP

THE ASCENT, 1977, Larisa Shepitko, 111 Minutes, Janus Films, Soviet Union

In Russian and German with English subtitles

Shepitko’s emotionally overwhelming final film won the Golden Bear at the 1977 Berlin Film Festival and has been hailed around the world as the finest Soviet film of its decade. Set during World War II’s darkest days, THE ASCENT follows the path of two peasant soldiers, cut off from their troop, who trudge through the snowy backwoods of Belarus seeking refuge among villagers. Their harrowing trek leads them on a journey of betrayal, heroism, and ultimate transcendence.

FORMAT: DCP