My Russia
Mein Russland
Colour, 35mm
Austria, 2002, 91 min
Section: East of the West
| Director: | Barbara Gräftner |
|---|---|
| Screenplay: | Barbara Gräftner |
| Dir. of Photography: | Robert Winkler |
| Music: | Christof Kurzmann |
| Designer: | Verena Wagner |
| Editor: | Oliver Neumann |
| Producer: | Robert Winkler |
| Production: | Bonus Film GmbH |
| Sales: | Bonus Film GmbH |
| Contact: | Austrian Film Commission |
| Cast: | Andrea Nürnberger, Nathalia Baranova, Holger Schober, Wolfgang Gastinger |
Synopsis
Margit is a completely average Viennese woman. She’s 46 years old, works at a bank, is divorced and has two adult children. A strong woman at first glance. Work is going well and she’s building a house where she hopes that she and her children and grandchildren can all live someday. To round it all out, her boyfriend respects her, and it seems that she’s got her life firmly under control. But the impending marriage of her son to a Russian girl named Anna, who already has a little son, starts to shake Margit´s well-ordered life. Not only does her son refuse, under Anna´s influence, to live in the home Margit has been excited about for so many years, but Margit must also face an invitation of future Russian in-law - and they´re not all easy to deal with. Margit gets stuck in a strange cycle of flowing vodka, pickle munching, sparkling gold-capped teeth and partying till all hours. To make matters worse, Margit´s son blows a lot of cash on a pipe dream and even gets mixed up with Russian pimps. Margit is desperate. Her boyfriend leaves her, she’s lost all control over her son’s life and the Russian bride finally decides to leave with her little son, on whom Margit has become emotionally dependent.
About the director
Barbara Gräftner (b. 1964) studied medicine and architecture in Vienna. After taking a degree in medicine she worked in a hospital and later as a psychotherapist. In 1996 she was accepted to the film and television department of Vienna’s Academy of Art. She made the short films Winnetou (1997), Froschkönig (1999), Imagefilm Raika (2000), and the documentaries P. S. Mataschek (1997), Schwulsein im Ländle (1998) and W-Foto 99 (1999). My Russia is her feature debut. This noteworthy film, shot in twelve days on a shoestring budget, took this year’s main prize at the Max Ophüls Festival (young German film) in Saarbrücken.
No guests confirmed for this film
AUSTRIAN FILM COMMISSION
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Austria
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E-mail: festivals@afc.at
BONUS FILM GMBH
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Tel: 00 43 1 66 43 57 78 33
Fax: 00 43 1 91 49 82 875
E-mail: office@bonusfilm.at
| Supported by | General partner | Main partners | |||
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