Aferim! | |
---|---|
Directed by | Radu Jude |
Written by | Radu Jude Florin Lăzărescu |
Produced by | Ada Solomon |
Starring | Victor Rebengiuc Luminița Gheorghiu |
Music by | Dana Bunescu |
Distributed by | Parada Film Micro Film Big World Pictures (USA) [1] |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 108 minutes |
Countries | Romania Bulgaria Czech Republic France |
Language | Romanian |
Box office | $350,110 [2] |
Aferim! (English: Bravo!) is a 2015 Western comedy-drama film co-written and directed by Radu Jude and produced by Ada Solomon. [3] It was screened in the main competition section of the 65th Berlin International Film Festival, where Radu Jude won the Silver Bear for Best Director. [4] It was selected as the Romanian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards. [5] [6]
The film is set in Wallachia in the early 19th century, when a local policeman, Costandin (played by Teodor Corban), is hired by Iordache, a boyar, to find Carfin (played by Toma Cuzin), a Roma slave who had run away from the boyar's estate after having an affair with his wife, Sultana. [7]
While the structure and the narrative had little in common with existing Romanian literature, the dialogue is often based on works by: Iordache Golescu , Anton Pann, Ion Creangă, Budai-Deleanu and Nicolae Filimon. [8]
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 98% based on 76 critics, with an average rating of 7.9/10. The site's critics consensus reads: "Smart, visually arresting and scathingly funny, Aferim! depicts a world that many American filmgoers have never seen – but will still, in many respects, find utterly familiar". [9] On Metacritic, the film have an above average score of 84 out of 100 based on 17 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". [10]
Publication The Hollywood Reporter describes Radu Jude's film as "a harsh lesson of history, relieved by overlooked humor and classic Western elements". Variety magazine writes that Aferim! is "an exceptional and extremely intelligent insight into a crucial period of history, a film equally inspired and furious". [11]
According to Jordan Hoffman of The Guardian , "this [film] with all its full-frontal historical horror, is still loaded with laughs". [12]
A.O. Scott of The New York Times called Aferim! "brilliant" and "sublime", [13] while Kit Gillet of the same periodical went as far as calling it "an Oscar contender". [14]
Romanian literature is the entirety of literature written by Romanian authors, although the term may also be used to refer to all literature written in the Romanian language or by any authors native to Romania.
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The House of Cantacuzino is a Romanian aristocratic family of Greek origin. The family gave a number of princes to Wallachia and Moldavia, and it claimed descent from a branch of the Byzantine Kantakouzenos family, specifically from Byzantine Emperor John VI Kantakouzenos. After the Russo-Ottoman War of 1710–11, a lateral branch of the family settled in Russia, receiving the princely status. In 1944, Prince Ștefan Cantacuzino settled in Sweden, where his descendants form part of the unintroduced nobility of that country.
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Dinicu Golescu, a member of the Golescu family of boyars, was a Wallachian Romanian man of letters, mostly noted for his travel writings and journalism.
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Andrei Blaier was a Romanian film director and screenwriter. His 1958 film The Ball was entered into the 1st Moscow International Film Festival.
This is a list of 2014 events that occurred in Romania.
The following lists events that happened during 2015 in Romania.
Radu Jude is a Romanian film director and screenwriter.
There were numerous protests against the Romanian Government between 2017 and 2019. In January 2017, days after the government of the Grindeanu Cabinet was sworn into office in Romania, protests took place throughout the country against ordinance bills that were proposed by the Romanian Ministry of Justice regarding the pardoning of certain committed crimes, and the amendment of the Penal Code of Romania. At the heart of these protests is the community Corruption Kills, founded by Florin Bădiță, who alongside other civic groups organized what proved to be the largest protests since 1989, thus realizing the "Revolution of our generation".
Alecu Filipescu-Vulpea, also known as Aleco Filipescul, Alecsandru R. Filipescu or Alexandru Răducanu Filipescu, was a Wallachian administrator and high-ranking boyar, who played an important part in the politics of the late Phanariote era and of the Regulamentul Organic regime. Beginning in the 1810s, he took an anti-Phanariote stand, conspiring alongside the National Party and the Filiki Eteria to institute new constitutional norms. Clashing with the National Party over the distribution of spoils, and only obtaining relatively minor positions in the administration of Bucharest, Filipescu eventually joined a clique of boyars that cooperated closely with the Russian Empire. His conditional support for the Eterists played out during the Wallachian uprising of 1821, when Vulpea manipulated all sides against each other, ensuring safety for the boyars. He returned to prominence under Prince Grigore IV Ghica, but sabotaged the monarch's political reform effort and also seduced his wife Maria. She was probably the mother of his only son, Ioan Alecu Filipescu-Vulpache.
Mihai Tudose is a Romanian politician, jurist and academic, deputy in the Parliament of Romania, a former Minister of Economy in 2017 and a former Prime Minister of Romania in 2018. On 16 January, 2018 he resigned from his position as Prime Minister after his own Social Democratic Party (PSD) retracted its political support for his government. He subsequently switched from PSD to Victor Ponta's party PRO Romania in 2019.
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Radu Golescu-Știrbei, historically known as Radul or Răducanul Golescul, was a Wallachian statesman, entrepreneur and philanthropist; he was the maternal grandson of Spatharios Radu Leurdeanu Golescu, as well as the father of the writers Iordache and Dinicu Golescu. His life, as well as his participation in government, coincided with the Phanariote reigns, by Greek or Hellenized Princes acting under Ottoman suzerainty. Himself educated in Greek, Golescu was a native boyar, and, like his sons, tended to side with the early manifestations of Romanian nationalism; he was especially prone to economic nationalism—though he alternated this commitment with episodes of participation in Phanariote spoliation, and was vilified as such by Wallachia's taxpayers. Before his political ascent, he established reputation as a businessman and early capitalist, investing in lucrative exports and helping to expand his family manor in Golești. Especially in his final decade, Golescu reinvested much of his wealth into the social uplift of peasant communities, building several rural schools and sponsoring the printing of books.
Radu Jude: În ce priveşte structura, povestea şi anumite situaţii narative, literatura mi-a folosit mai puţin, temele abordate în film nu prea există în literatură. Dar replicile pe care personajele le spun sunt luate într-adevăr din surse literare: Iordache Golescu, Anton Pann, de la Creangă am mai luat câte ceva. Şi de la Budai-Deleanu, din mulţi scriitori. Şi din Nicolae Filimon, de la Filimon chiar mai mult.