In the autumn of 1917, Doctor Poliakov (Leonid Bichevin) takes over a medical practice deep in the Russian countryside. Well schooled in theoretical knowledge, he is soon required to demonstrate his practical abilities by dealing with a breech birth, an amputation and a tracheotomy. Poliakov becomes progressively addicted to morphine, and his assistant and lover Anna Nikolaevna (Ingeborga Dapkunaite) is soon drawn into his addiction. Their remote existence is only broken by a request for morphine from Poliakov’s rival, Gorenburg, which ends in an accidental visit to the local (liberal) aristocrat’s household during a snowstorm. Based on autobiographical stories by Mikhail Bulgakov and directed by Alexei Balabanov, the script was written by the late Sergei Bodrov Jr (star of Balabanov’s two Brother films). While the historical recreation and its setting can be described as lyrical, Poliakov’s medical encounters and addiction are predictably graphic, resulting in an ‘over-21’ rating in Russia. The ongoing Revolution forms a remote background until the burning of the local aristocrat’s mansion and the film’s dramatic final scenes when Poliakov seeks a cure in the district capital. —bfi
Aleksei Balabanov was born on February 25, 1959 in Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg). In 1981 he graduated from Translation Faculty of Gorky Teachers’ Training University. From 1983 to 1987 Alexei worked as an assistant of a film director at Sverdlovsk film studio. Later Balabanov studied at the experimental course “Authors’ Cinema” of the High Courses for Scriptwriters and Film Directors, graduating in 1990.
Balabanov started his creative career in “big cinema” in 1991 with directing his first full-length feature Shchastlivyye dni (Happy Days) after his own script. In the same year he became the co-author of the script Pogranichniy Conflict (Frontier Conflict) by the young film director Nadezhda Khvorova. In 1992 Aleksei Balabanov together with producers Sergei Selyanov and Vasily Grigor’ev established the STV Film Company, which later participated in creation of almost all of his films.
In 1994 the film director released Zamok (The Castle) after the famous novel by Frantz… read more
does anyone know anything about the soundtrack of this movie? Balabanov is always good at selecting the right tracks!
Whoever likes to read Dostoyevsky and Kafka will probably like this one. It can be very disturbing, because of all operations, but it's a film where nothing is made by chance. Great direction, acting and photography.
Russian Film Critics and Press Guild announced this year's nominees for the "White Elephant". "Morphy" is nominated in the following categories: Best Director, Best Cinematography, Best Art Direction and Best Female Lead. The results will be announced on Dec 21. http://www.kinopressa.ru/news/586.html
“Morfijum/Morphine” by Aleksy Balabanov was the festival’s opening night film. The Russian director really connects with the material, taken from the autobiographical novel Notes of a Young Doctor… read review