Three Stories | |
---|---|
Directed by | Kira Muratova |
Produced by | Igor Tolstunov |
Written by |
Sergei Chetvyortkov Renata Litvinova Vera Storozheva |
Starring | Sergey Makovetskiy |
Cinematography | Gennadi Karyuk |
Production
company |
NTV-Profit
|
Release date
|
|
Running time
|
105 minutes |
Country | Russia Ukraine |
Language | Russian |
Three Stories (Russian: Три истории, translit. Tri istorii) is a 1997 Russian-Ukrainian comedy film directed by Kira Muratova. It was entered into the 47th Berlin International Film Festival. The picture won the Special Jury Prize at Kinotavr.
The film consists of three novellas the plot of which is based on criminal stories that do not have usual logical motives. The people who become killers in all these episodes are the ones who at first glance seem to be completely incapable of murder.
A modest employee brings a cupboard to the boiler room for his friend, Tikhomirov. He works as a stoker, writes poetry in his spare time and rents out a place for intimate pleasure to local homosexuals.
During a normal conversation between old acquaintances, Tikhomirov time after time returns to the story of his unbearable neighbor who does not let him live in peace and even comes to his workplace in order to compromise him ... Tikhomirov gets interrupted and is not able to get to the point of his request by frequenters of the depraved corner, who by the way also see him as an object for pleasure and even offer money to him...
In the closet lies the naked corpse of Tikhomirov's neighbor (she walked around the house like this), which he intends to burn in the boiler room.
Ofa works in a hospital archive. She does not like men, women, or children: "I would rate this planet as zero." Her attention is especially directed towards those mothers who abandon their children in a maternity hospital.
A gynecologist makes advances towards Ofa whom she uses for an alibi at the moment she commits the murder of a disowning mother.
Her literary ideal is Shakespeare's Ophelia, whose fate Ofa arranges for a single woman – her own mother, Alexander Ivanovna Ivanova, who many years ago gave her up.
An elderly man in a wheelchair operates a coffee grinder. A little girl who lives nearby plays with him, irritating and annoying the old man from time to time. From the mouth of the baby resonates the neighbor's expectation, that after his death she together with her mother will get his room.