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The Mark of Cain

Russia, United States

2000

73 Min
Color
Russian
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
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DIR Alix Lambert

EXEC Robert Bingham

PROD Lalou Dammond, Alix Lambert

DP Anastasi Mikhalov

ED David Ritsher

Synopsis

The Mark of Cain documents the fading art form and “language” of Russian criminal tattoos, formerly a forbidden topic in Russia. The now vanishing practice is seen as reflecting the transition of the broader Russian society. Filmed in some of Russia’s most notorious prisons, including the fabled White Swan, the interviews with prisoners, guards, and criminologists reveal the secret language of “The Zone” and “The Code of Thieves” (Vor v zakone).

The Mark of Cain examines every aspect of the tattooing, from the actual creation of the tattoo ink, interviews with the tattooers and soberly looks at the double-edged sword of prison tattoos. In many ways, they were needed to survive brutal Russian prisons, but mark the prisoner for life, which complicates any readmission to “normal” society they may have. Tattoos expressly identify what the convict has been convicted of, how many prisons he’s been in and what kind of criminal he is. Tattoos, essentially, tell you everything you need to know about that person without ever asking. Each tattoo represents a variety of things; cupolas on churches represent the number of convictions a convict has, epaulets tattooed on shoulders represent the rank of the individual in the crime world and so on and so forth.

The unflinching look at the Russian prison system is slowly woven into the film. Cells meant to hold 15 hold 35 to 45 men. Drug resistant tuberculosis runs rampant through the prison populations and prisoners are served three meals a day of watery slop. There are allegations of brutality by the guards. As these men deal with pestilence, violence and grossly substandard living conditions, the prison guards and administration put on a talent show.

The film served as source material for David Cronenberg’s 2007 dramatic movie, Eastern Promises. He commented, “This is a very courageous documentary on the tattooing subculture in Russian prisons. I don’t know how it ever got made, but it’s beautiful, scary, and heartbreaking.” ––Wikipedia

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dschank

11May12

a fascinating descent into the social stratas of russian prison life, with unembellished prisoner commentary along the way. equal parts history and art history - expect antecdotes about communism and long shots of adorned bodies. i'm not sure which compelled me more... the complex hierarchies or the beautifully abject art processes?

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JESCIE

6Mar12

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s9JDJdaMs-Y

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Justin Oakey

11Sep11

A brutally honest look at some of Russia's most hardened criminals and the institutions in which they dwell. More importantly, this film explores the past importance of prison tattooing and its relevance today. Chilling footage from inside the prison leaves me wondering how this was ever made.

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