谢尔盖一名陷入困境的应征者,他的最好的朋友路易,一位迷人有野心的基地指挥官秘书,以及一个胆大的年轻战斗机飞行员罗曼,三者之间如何形成危险的三角恋爱关系。
在好奇心的驱使下,他们开启了禁忌之恋,在暧昧与欺骗之间,爱情与友谊的界限开始模糊。
随着罗曼的职业生涯受到威胁,谢尔盖被迫面对自己的过去,而路易莎也努力使家人团聚。
在围城之内,他们冒着失去自由和生命的危险,面对克格勃不断升级的调查,他们之间的命运会走向何方?
可惜没有如果第一次劫后余生
第一次,关系的深入。
在边境突遇北约巡逻兵后,初次亲密接触,两人迅速站上“一垒”和“二垒”
“死里逃生”的Roman主动寻求爱吻,谢盖尔最初闪躲,最后十指紧扣深情拥吻
谢盖尔迎来了人生第一场波罗的海的“春雨”
海滩边 礁石后
两人赤身裸体,“坦诚相对”
两架飞机同时横空“发射”,迫不及待奔上“三垒”一切都来得那么迅猛,让人根本无法招架热恋带来的悸动。
第一次被迫疏离回到营中,却因匿名举报信被少校“盘问审查”,两人关系被迫第一次疏离第二次死里逃生
第二次,关系的恢复。
谢盖尔,寻找到“劫后余生”独处的Roman。
Roman深情得吻着谢盖尔的手,像只无助的小动物,寻求安慰
两人关系进一步升华至“本垒”
开启彻底的肉体欢愉
灵与肉的结合,“负距离”的体验
连蹦跶带小跑,马上过上了二人夫夫甜蜜生活第二次被迫疏离少校的“突击检查”,却让两人的关系再次迅速冷却。
第三次双向奔赴
婚后,Roman对谢盖尔的“念念不忘”
双向奔赴
终于等来了两人,索契旅行的“终有回响”
此刻便是永恒边境巡逻敌兵、执行飞行任务的险象环生、Roman世俗生活的“圆满”,一步步推动了两人关系和感情的深入。
少校的一次再一次威胁、Roman妻儿的“回归”,一次次使两人关系面对思考和时间,恢复理智后,两人的感情却无处安放。
终语如果浴火鸟在自由的天空得以重生,Roman和谢盖尔的关系是不是会再度“升华”到极致,“死生契阔”,让他们再也不会分离。
就让他们定格在人生第一次约会的剧场里,彼此一见倾心,互相陪伴
人生若只如初见--分割线--“因为经典故事里的角色不是完全理智的他们是鲜活的、呼吸的、有感受的生灵他们细腻而脆弱也会因为一些事心潮澎湃我希望你们能够捕捉住这份悸动用心和灵魂去感受”正是电影里这样令人起鸡皮疙瘩的一段旁白,也是我最爱的一段台词,成就了Roman和谢盖尔最美丽的“双向奔赴”,成就了彼此人生的高光时刻。
有温度的共同生活
”那片天空,是最后的自由之地“可是没有那个人能一直飘在天上看这个电影的过程,就觉得是很多人的真实写照尽管生活背景不同,可是这样的路却大差不差影片中的环境压抑,处处都是都同性的监控,甚至欺压这是摆在明面上的在当下呢?
不过是阴在暗处罢了甚少有人敢把那双十指相扣的手,暴露在阳光下这是长久长久以来的共同之处而这份爱而不得的伤憾,又何其相似小男主多帅啊,一眼万年的那种可是当他在婚礼上苦苦哀求的时候,说出那句”我用了很多方法,想要忘记你“这又是多少人的曾经呢其实很难评判,到底该不该与好友的男人走在一起该不该又踏上火车,坐在对面去重复过去,去加深伤害这很难评因为我们不是他们,因为我们也幻想过他突然出现面前,在一辆去往曾经的火车上等着我可是,绝大多数人没有我们都走散在人海里了
到底什么才是对的呢我不知道,至少现在不知道因为没有谁给我答案,也没有谁告诉我这条路该走向何方,或者该从哪截断我一直在自己找,自己定毕竟,这是自己选择的路,不怪什么人只是,看着这样的电影,看着男主在雪地里独行的背影很难不想到自己若世事太难,那自由之地又在何方?
You have sense enough,said father zossima.don't give way to drunkenness and incontinence of speech.don't give way to sensual lust and to the love of money.and above all don't lie to yourself.the man who lies to himself and listens to his own lie come to the point that he cannot distinguish the truth within him or around him. and so loses all respect for himself and for others.and having no respect he ceases to love.
如果你有幸在简短的一生中遇到真爱,你会发现真爱是永远不会忘记的人。
毫无疑问,谢尔盖是罗曼的真爱,之所以选择不了妻子儿子和谢尔盖任何一方,是因为对真爱撒谎的人会迷失自我,他已经没办法选择哪一边了,无论站在哪边,他都会受到伤害,会伤害爱他的人他爱他吗?
爱的,爱到无法自拔,爱到只要留在妻子身边就会痛苦万分。
正如最后给谢尔盖的信中说的,说话和做事,思考和生活,是完全不一样,他无法分裂自己,最终只会选择天空。
Tom Prior and Oleg Zagorodii in FirebirdDirector Peeter Rebane and leading actor Tom Prior (The Theory of Everything and Kingsman: The Secret Service) fought to bring Sergey Fetisov’s memoir of a secret love affair between two soldiers in the Soviet Air Force to the big screen. Co-written and co-produced by the pair, Firebird is a sensitive if not slightly melodramatic true story of gay love in Soviet-occupied Estonia. Firebird opens in 1977 with Sergey (Prior) serving his last few weeks of conscription. His girlfriend Luisa (Diana Pozharskaya) has started planning their life together, but Sergey soon becomes distracted by dashing fighter pilot Lieutenant Roman Medveyev (Oleg Zagorodnii).Looking like silver screen icons of the bygone age of Hollywood, the two men bond over their shared interest in the arts. Sergey once had dreams of becoming a stage actor and a night at the ballet seeing Stravinsky’s ‘Firebird’ brings the pair closer together. Their relationship is all clandestine late-night encounters and longing glances. Luisa hasn’t spotted their connection, obviously placing herself as the third member of a love triangle.An anonymous report exposing Roman’s indiscretions is a reminder that sexual relations between two men wasn’t just frowned upon, it could be punished by five year’s hard labour. The pair must make a decision between risking their lives in the face of escalating KGB investigations, or hiding their feelings. It’s desperately romantic, even if the film chooses melodrama over realism.Firebird’s narrative does take the most obvious turns. The weakness of this film is its reliance on obvious twists and cliched character development. Sergey embarks on an acting career, whilst Roman continues in the military. Tensions heighten when Roman embarks on married, domestic life with a woman whilst Sergey is more relaxed about his sexuality. Firebird leans less on the perilous action of being gay in the Soviet era, but instead on more clandestine affair cliché. Despite the obvious journey, it’s a beautifully realised account of love flourishing against a cold, loveless background. Prior and Zagorodnii look good together, Prior sweet and wide-eyed whilst Zagorodnii is handsome and chiselled. The camera zoom is on their faces, every micro-expression of longing picked up by the lens. The choice to use an international cast speaking English won’t please everyone. Using Estonian dialogue with subtitles may have added an authenticity because at times the Eastern Bloc accents are a little distracting;Parasite proved that if a film is good enough, people will happily read the subtitles.
Still from firebirdFirebird looks visually stunning. The intimate scenes are romantic, with late-night swims and dimly lit lovemaking. Some may criticise that the romance is sanitized with the camera moving away when the mood heats up. This is a film about stolen glances, not steamy nights. For a debut feature director who is famed for music videos and tour documentaries (he was also a Eurovision producer), Rebenae knows how to create an atmosphere. The production design should also be commended. The story can be told between any two men, in any part of the world, in any era in history. It is clear through sets, costume, and sound that this is a Soviet-occupied state in the 1970s. What Firebird lacks in originality, it makes up for in atmosphere. The threat this will all be taken away from them lingers over every scene together. In the daytime, the coldness of military life is reflected in the grey colour palette. The scenes transform from a sterile greyness to a warmness as they meet under dim lights, and in the reflection of the moonlight by the river.Firebird will be familiar to many romantic film fans. It relies on well used tropes that were better executed by Call Me by Your Name and Brokeback Mountain. Anyone looking for that uplifting gay love story should move elsewhere. While it’s a beautiful film, it brings nothing new to the library of LBGTQ+ movies.Yet somehow, it will be enough if someone watching this film can resonate with the story.
作者by Amelia HarveyAmelia is a freelance writer, frustrated novelist and occasional wrangling of international students. She is especially interested in LBGTQ culture and 1960s and 70s music. She also writes for Frame Rated, The People’s Movies and Unkempt Magazine, amongst others. Her favourite films include Eternal Sunshine of a Spotless Mind, Moulin Rouge and Closer. You can find her on Twitter @MissAmeliaNancy and letterboxd @amelianancy
首先我是一个退役军人,有感而发,希望看完🤲不知道大家有没有感觉这一类的电影看完给人的感受都基于、延伸于《call me by your name》。
我上学期大学里一个语文老师说为什么现代作家总喜欢写耽美文,就是因为男孩子和男孩子的爱情无论放在这个爱站队的当下社会,还是从前都是百般受挫的,结局基本上都是不美好的,这样的文字,比起甜甜的撒狗粮更能触动人心弦,所以导演估计也是为了冲掉观看电影后的受虐感,在电影中很多地方还是安排了一些令人会心一笑的桥段,这一点我觉得很好,因为电影确实很需要不同的情绪来提高受众群体的观影感,毕竟是这是电影,并不是像电视剧那样可以一件小事讲一集的。
其次,这是一个很长的真实的爱情故事,电影本身就已在尽善尽美的把故事的完整性和细节二者融汇贯通。
再说说角色的演技,个人看来三位主角演技都是在线的,有一些说人角色演技很直男,没有共情感,我觉得这是抛开环境去评论演员,首先我们要知道,时间是上世纪70年代,地点是苏联又是在部队,但凡把这三个要素随便换一个更自在一点的不那么压抑的,我都觉得主角就不会有被人说没有演技了。
不知道大家有没有观察过很多细节,电影中频繁的来演习,上校说不准男主讲那种笑话等等很多,这说明什么?
我以亲身经历告诉你,这是准备要dz了,这是一种很压抑环境,要去dz了!
兄弟,更何况他们是上下级关系,一个是高高在上的军官,一个是默默无闻的义务兵,期间的鸿沟,很难一时逾越,没有去部队的人也许真的很难感受这种等级制度极度森严的上下级关系,所以才会对他们的情感产生疑问,综上所述,演员所演的关系真的是恰到好处。
还有一些涉及伦理问题的,我不好评论,但是我觉得还是要去看他们当时所处的环境和人物的真实性格。
总之这部电影给我的感觉就是 捡到宝了
这是真实故事改编,俗套这种字眼不适合落在这个作品上面。
成年人也有纯爱。
罗曼说自己没办法分裂自己,说不想让自己心爱的人受伤。
所以,他往天空去。
《小王子》的作家圣埃克苏佩里也是飞行员。
那个年代飞机的安全性同现在的飞机,是无法比拟的。
那种冒着生命危险,依旧要像鸟一样展翅高飞。
为什么?
天空与圣埃克苏佩里而言,就是一场叛逆。
而对罗曼来说,天空是自由。
是独属于真正自己的片刻宁静。
至少他们都曾有过一时半刻不违背内心的选择,这就够了。
参考采访(豆友发的一篇影评)这部电影希望告诉我们,大胆的爱。
你的爱若坚定,则丝毫不比任何人逊色。
谢尔盖,没有路易莎的身份。
也没有和罗曼组成过家庭。
但他愿意在罗曼来找他的时候,放下身边的一切,坐上那辆和罗曼一起去远方的火车。
人生若是尽兴过,散场时也可以无憾。
最后路易莎的拥抱又代表什么呢?
和解?
同悲?
你心里的答案我就不得而知了。
黎明之美就在于它脱胎于最深的黑暗。
既然你都耐心翻到这里了~那我就再说几句吧你在妄想去批评他人之前,首先做的比你所评价的对象好。
不然会有人伤心的。
Firebird is an epic Queer love story set in a tense Soviet Union. This unconventional film followed the romance of Sergey, played by Tom Prior, and Roman, played by Ukrainian hunk, Oleg Lobykin.
Set in the 1970's Cold War, Firebird is an incredibly stylish film. The visuals feel authentic and true to its setting. But surprisingly, there are bouts of action, adding more thrill to a story that is already anxiety inducing. Another twist is that the film explores a love triangle between Roman, Sergey, and Roman's partner, Luisa- played by Diana Pozharskaya. This part of the world has always been incredibly hostile to LGBT+ people. It is common to see an attempt to erase Queer people from the histories and identities of post-Soviet countries. From the 'LGBT free zones' in Poland; the Gay Propaganda Laws in Russia - to the toxic political discourse in Hungary - 'Firebird' is a symbol of Queer existence throughout history. It is a statement that Queer love is not a modern and Western construct, but it is imbedded in the fabric of humanity. And this piece of history- beautifully shown in the film- is a shining example that the #TheNewEastisQueer, and it always has been.In this interview, the writer/lead actor, Tom Prior and director/writer Peeter Rebane talk about the true story of 'Firebird', its making, and what it was like to meet the real Sergey. EAST: Where did you first meet each other? TOM: I was doing some work in Los Angeles, and a film financier that I was meeting- by coincidence- mentioned that she heard about the story of Firebird- which was under a different name at the time- and promised to introduce me to Peeter. Then we basically connected and I read the script, and fell in love with it instantly. It was when the draft of the screenplay was at a very early stage, and that’s really where it began. EAST: Peeter, when did you first discover the story?PEETER: That was over 10 years ago. A friend of mine- who founded the ‘Black Nights Film Festival’ in Tallinn- she received the original story from a Russian journalist showing it around at the Berlinale, and she knew that I was looking for material for my first film. So I read it over a weekend at home, I literally cried and decided that I have to turn this into a film and then started writing for the first time ever.
EAST: ’The New East is Queer’ is a campaign to debunk the myth that Queer people don’t exist in Eastern Europe and Post-Soviet States. Yet here is a queer love story set in Soviet Russia. Were you conscious of this when deciding to make the movie? Did you feel a sense of duty to tell the story?PEETER: Foremost, I was taken a back by the universal love story. I was also fascinated and really surprised when I read the original manuscript that such a relationship could have actually existed in the Soviet airforce. Then we went on to interview people who served in the Soviet military in the 1970’s and found out that many such relationships existed, and we were also fortunate enough to interview Sergey in Moscow. But at the same time I do feel also that it is important to share this story in light of the real horrors that are going on in Russia and especially in Chechnya today. It is important to remind people about the importance of love and how such relationships have existed throughout the ages. TOM: For me its really important to share these messages. But we were very true when we said we made this film- not for political reasons- but for about love, love wins. Sergey’s character in the film is really about following his heart. There are terrible atrocities happening, but being able to make movies like this, we are effectively being that very change that we want to see in the world. EAST: How was Roman cast? PEETER: That was a really long process. We set a very clear intention to find the most authentic actors that are believable to the true story. So we did a world wide casting, and got 2,500 submissions for the role of Roman. For months we were casting in Europe and the UK, to Moscow. One day in Moscow, Oleg walked in the room and everyone was like: “That’s our Roman”. EAST: How was it working with Oleg?TOM: It was a really fascinating process as Peeter said. We just knew from the minute he walked in the room that it was right, this kind of presence. When you talk about casting in a film, you really are casting a person as you are a performer. He had this real presence and he was the nearest person that we felt was Roman, and so, our journey began. Because he is not a native speaker, at all, in fact he had a very small amount of English when we began the project. It has its challenges, and in some ways it actually helped, to a degree, because it meant that we couldn’t communicate as freely as we would, say in a modern day context in English- which serves the story in an amazing way. Because at the time there was no language around the subject matter. Today we are in a very liberal society where we can begin to scale that in a very easy and transparent way, but at the time there wasn’t that. So it bought a really interesting dynamic to the film. Working with Oleg was a real pleasure but it of course it had its challenges as well: cultural background differences, and things like that. But it was a really beautiful working relationship. EAST: Tom, you were a writer as well as an actor in ‘Firebird’. How did this come about?TOM: When Peeter and I met- and fell in love with the story- at that time we didn’t have the financing in place to make the film. So we made a teaser for the film, and the scenes that we selected for the teaser. I made some suggestions about how we might improve the script a bit, and the lines and the nature of the lines. I have a real sensitivity to being able to produce texts or language of how people actually speak- as oppose to how people one would think people speak- this is something I am quite sensitive to. So I made these few suggestions on how we might improve the script and that ended up several pages of notes and ended up as several weeks of work, which ended up being overall significant rewrites and redrafts and restructures- and doing lots and lots more research. Then by that point, the script was completely a different animal to what I first came to. So we took the strong elements of that and then imbedded in a lot more research.
EAST: Thats an interesting point. After stalking your Instagram its quite clear that you are a spiritual person and quite centred. Did these qualities help you in your writing or acting?TOM: Most definitely. For me this project has been quite extraordinary, in the sense of the level of depth that I have been able to get to. Writing the content, for sure, is a whole other level as a performer. Then also meeting the real Sergey, we interviewed him in Moscow, we also very tragically went to his funeral. He passed away in the time that we were developing the story, and it was a very surreal moment for me, to be at the funeral of a person whose life you have extended in the literary form, and who you will play in real life. So there were very strong moments during the time filming that there was this awareness that Sergey was with us, or certainly the energy. For me, having a real level of emergence within the project meant that the emotion came easily, or the stream of conscienceless, lets say. It was very profound and beautiful for the opportunity to do that as a performer. EAST: And when you met Sergey Fetisov, what were your impressions of him, and did these impressions influence the way you played or wrote about him? TOM: Very much so. It was an honour to meet him, and he was so very full of heart. He was a very heart-led man. You could tell that he had such a sunny persona, and despite having had a lot of trials and tribulations in love, he was bold and happy. So I bought that level of following your heart, and that bounciness to the performance- where I could - without making it seem to out of context at the same time. EAST: And for you Peeter, how was it meeting Sergey Fetisov, and did this impact the way you directed the film?PEETER: As Tom said, he was an amazingly warm and heartfelt person, considering what he had gone through in his life, and how these experiences had made him loving and not hating. I think he definitely informed how we developed the character, and it was an amazing treasure trove speaking to him about actual details, like: what were their favourite pieces of music; what were their favourite foods; which music they would play to each other; which books would they read; which theatre plays they went to see. It all kind of built a world, and helped us to be very authentic in directing and staging the film.EAST: Peeter, being from Estonia, was there anything about your heritage and personal identity that you bought to the project?PEETER: Definitely, when I was a very young boy I still recall the Soviet occupation, and our summer house was actually the airforce base where this story takes place. I have this distinct memory of my friend being on this bicycle and these two MiG’s (Mikoyan-Gurevich) flying overhead at maybe 150 feet, and us literally falling off the bicycles because the noise was so deafening. So I have a very strong personal connection, besides having grown up with this feeling of shame about ones sexuality, having to hide your true identity, and the surrounding environment lacking understanding and being ignorant. So, a lot of parallels for me. EAST: How much history is in the story?PEETER: I think its, well I don’t dare to say 100%, but I think its 99% historically correct. The events happening, the small details of the airforce base, the setting, we really made our upmost to make a film that looks and feels like the 1970’s could have looked and felt like.
EAST: And there seems to be a big military presence in the film. PEETER: From the directing perspective, we had amazing consultants. We had a retired airforce base, a retired Soviet airforce base commander, flight pilot, a person who worked in the command centre, who directed all the flights. We had a lot of people who literally went through the script, went through the dialogues, who were on the set with us, telling us to do it like this, or do it this way. We put trust in not making a Hollywood version of what someone envisages, but in thorough research. TOM: The intricacy of the details is very particular, I mean, even when it comes to the radio announcements, and things like that, and the calling in’s to the planes and the lights from the command centre and everything- its all very accurate. We did the best research to our knowledge, to make sure that it was as real as possible, and the same really with the job titles, the job roles. The military consultants in particular were very useful and an intrinsic part of the training for the performance: the way we would walk; the hand salutes; all this military realism that actually happened, and making sure that the attention to detail- our costume department were really great around that also. So, the military aspects of the film, even this accident, there was an accident sequence within the film as well, which was in the original story, and I was absolutely adamant we had to put it into the film, to give it this military flare, instead of having it simply as a backdrop, but actually as an action sequence, this was really paramount and important to me, to ground it into the real world. EAST: Any personal highlights from onset?Peeter: I think for me one of the most amazing shots was the last shot of the film. Without giving away too much, it lasts about 1.5 minutes, and the camera is going into Sergey, and technically it was huge challenge for our team to pull it off, but also performance wise, for Tom to act out all the different emotions, truthfully, being surrounded by 50 or 60 extras, and knowing that we can’t cut, and that this is all real time, one very long take. TOM: Its a very unforgiving shot, lets put it that way. I’m very proud of that moment, and what came through. It was one of those moments that I was speaking out earlier, where there was this profound connection. I started experiencing some very curious things, emotionally. It was like being show the end of ones life, but I was experiencing it in the real time, which was quite curious. For me, the highlight and more significant highlights of the film was really my personal growth. That to me is a huge success. As a measure of success, it challenged me emotionally, physically, spiritually, and now its a sort of standing point, as a physical manifestation of what one can achieve when there are so many odds against you and challenges and time limiting factors, and all those kind of things. So yeah, we can have a whole other discussion of that for the highlights. But we were so blessed, to have such a wonderful committed and loyal team who were willing to go way above standard hours, the commitment was astounding. EAST: Peeter, did you learn anything about yourself personally or professionally during this project?PEETER: Absolutely, first of all it was my first full length feature. I have done documentaries, but that’s a whole different game. Learning all the nuances of directing on the set of the feature, and actually doing a pretty challenging script. We shot in the air, under the water, in the baltic sea, staged Hamlet in theatre, staged the full production of Firebird, including costumes and choreography, dancers and sets- a lot of very specific scenes. It was very challenging and I had a lot of personal growth during this process, over the last couple of years. TOM: I think for me also, as I mentioned, the physical challenges, the stamina, keeping up your health, mental clarity and sharpness through longer days, and resilience through that. Some days there would be, 5, 6, 7, 8 costume changes, multiple different set environments, we would have to change them very quickly as well. I would be sitting on the train, where we would shoot the train sequences, and moving from one emotional state to another, within minutes, and the whole world of the character has changed and gone upside down in that time. So, to be able to tune in to that energy, that emotional change very quickly, was really amazing. And to also play a lead in a film, there is this overwhelming pressure that you can put on yourself, and to scale that, was for me, a real joy and a real challenge, at times. To stay centred, to stay focussed, and to know what we have got to do and what we are there to do, and yeah, this was a really beautiful example of change and growth, and long hours, knowing that you can do it, and you have got to get through it.
EAST: How relevant do you think the story is for todays audience?Tom: For me, the story is very relevant in terms of following your heart. We live in a world which is probably more divided than ever, with regards to health, with regards to beliefs and perceptions. It is a standing point for following your heart. Actually, if you choose to walk that path, its not necessarily going to be the easiest route, but its probably somewhat the most rewarding- in terms of being able to feel and develop as a person. The film is about following ones heart and ones desires against all the odds, and against the laws of the country and the environment in which somebody grows up in. I hope this is a standing point of inspiration to follow your heart, to love daringly, that would be my wish and hope for its relevance today. EAST: Do you have any plans to show this to Eastern audiences? Peeter: Absolutely, we will distribute the film across the world. We trust we will be at some festivals in the summer, also Autumn, late October- and end of the year we will have a wider distribution across the region. So, I guess we will see how the world is as we open, and depending on how much we will be in cinemas. But definitely, we will be on all major platforms across Europe. 'Firebird' premiered at the 2021 BFI Flare Festival on 17th March 2021 and is available to stream on the BFI Player until 28th March 2021.
电影是真实事件改编,所以,更令人哀痛无比。
看完电影是深夜了,心压着山一般的沉重。
虽然自以为是修行人,我却连一部电影都久久走不出来。
很惭愧。
片尾有Sergey的黑白照片,下面有一行字: In loving memory of Sergey Fetisov。
电影最后的字幕是:Please share this true story with those you love. 再一次再一次,忍不住潸然,泪水泛滥。
一部电影,别人的人生,让我看见的是人生的苦。
求不得,爱别离,放不下。
到最后,Roman和Sergey阴阳两隔,Roman在阿富汗的蓝天里找到自己的自由,Sergey则怀着Roman炽热的爱孤独走完自己的一生。
爱沙尼亚电影「浴火鸟」(Firebird),是以斯特拉文斯基谱曲的芭蕾舞剧The Firebird为片名。
电影是在Sergey观看这部芭蕾舞剧至高潮时结束,Sergey流着泪,Sergey淡淡地笑,他和Roman至死不渝的爱在烈火中涅槃。
他们在暗室里潜滋暗长的情愫;在树林里终于深情的相拥;在Sochi的海边沐浴于阳光中,宛若出世般的纯净与幸福。
一切转瞬即逝。
一年过去了,四年过去了,几十年过去了,不知不觉的时节如流,爱,从未曾改变。
但昔年的你,又去往了何方?
天空中那飞翔的蓝色鸽子啊。
乌克兰演员奥列格·扎戈罗德尼 Oleg Zagorodnii饰演的Roman帅出了新的高度。
他就是Roman。
罗曼对得起谁,因为懦弱抛下爱人去骗婚,又放不下过去让谢尔盖抛下一切和他同居,他想要的自由和爱就要用别人的幸福来成全吗,路易莎的一生都被毁掉了
故事情节略典型,讲述的也有些琐碎,可惜了这么好的背景年代,导演功力再强些,洋洋洒洒的就是一篇苏联同志史,那些高压下的禁忌之恋,暗处涌出的无法抑制的激情,拍好了如霸王别姬蓝宇般留名史册也不是没可能的。但话说回来,这两个主演选角实在太好了,简直就是漫画里走出来的一样,年轻的脸庞,紧实的身体,一个黑直发,一个金卷毛,一个两眼炯炯有神,一个双眸梨花带雨,这样的cp请再来一百个,我还能磕。
我一直不懂为什么一个讲冷战时期苏联空军的片全程讲带口音的英语,太不符合时代设定,好出戏,看完查了一下,发现原来Tom Prior是英国演员,这片是他和他男朋友共同制片共同编剧,他男朋友导,难道就选不出一个俄罗斯演员吗?Oleg就是乌克兰人,Diana就是俄罗斯人,明明就是Tom自己想演吧,说不了俄语,就变成所有人一起陪他说英语,虽然Tom颜值够高,演得这个的小受太楚楚可怜了。剧情好直白也好俗,三角恋真狗血,看得我一直翻白眼,直到最后Sergey去找Luisa,把飞机模型留下的时候,我才有点鼻酸了。
7分。冷战时期,苏联空军里的禁忌之恋。在我看来,中尉就是个渣男,“有事钟无艳,无事夏迎春”那种,对士兵的欲望大于爱。军队里风声紧了就马上撇清关系,风声一松,就又去找士兵重燃旧情。这期间还结婚生了娃,结婚期间老实了几年,后来又瞒着妻子与士兵同居。妻子和士兵他都对不起,渣得不能再渣。那么,为什么会感动呢?主要还是因为士兵的爱与勇气。他重来没有因为外界原因而减少对中尉的爱,随时随地,只要中尉召唤,他就飞奔而去。无论多长时间,他都愿意飞蛾扑火,哪怕明知相聚必定是短暂的。其实对于士兵,也有怒其不争的情绪。可是最后一幕,士兵一个人去看了歌剧,多年前中尉就陪在他身旁,如今,身边人已不再。看到这里,还是感动了一下。不理智,恰恰就是爱的真谛。如果再有永恒的遗憾,爱也能随之永恒。
烂故事
如果有一天我能在大银幕上看到这个电影该有多好啊,我好像还从来没有在大银幕上看过属于我们的爱情。。。。如果他也能因之看到,他是否会因之念及到我呢。他会否和我一样流下无声的眼泪呢。还是不要看吧。金刚经的启示说,一切有为法,如梦幻泡影,如露亦如电。慧极必伤,情深不寿。我宁愿他淡忘我。
2.5,完全没有惊喜,本来也没什么期待看到后面觉得,何不跟姐妹共享一个男人呢(笑死)就是很无聊的一个故事,女主演得挺好,应该是里面的唯一一个亮点了……
我该说什么,LGBT红利?
这不叫三角恋谢谢,这叫一对恋人和同妻。自从飞行员开始骗婚他那张俄式复古60年代绝顶美脸都变得像憨豆了艹,和断背山还没得比别来沾边。
故事讲得也太无趣了 ,居然花了十年准备这部电影,是十年了终于骗到投资了么……
并不觉得老套。至少在故事层面,我以为用老套这个词去评价前苏联和第三世界国家的LGBT电影,背后隐含的是一种傲慢,何况体制监控不同于宗教或伦理压力,其下的事理人情自然亦有所别。其实我倒是庆幸导演无甚野心,始终保持着爱情片的成色,没有去重复那种自由主义阵营的冷战腔调,非把一腔私密情愫拧成一篇政治檄文。若是那样,怕才真成了老套。
——左右我们命运的不该是星星——而是我们自己
Moscow大剧院依然演奏着火烈鸟终曲,但是Sergey再也等不到to be to not be的结果,这一切永远定格在了阿富汗湛蓝、忧郁的天空与Moscow那温暖而又无奈的小窝中,还有Sochi、Tallinn、Base……(私奔到瑞典的念头(最后那段蒙太奇杀人诛心啊。
Oleg Zagorodnii简直是基片颜值天花板。
C 6.9/10: 即使是一部偏向纪实的影片,也未免拍得过于平铺直叙吧。 学术框架泛滥,缺乏导演个人的风格浸透以及创作探索。显然未能展现出电影可企及的高度
以冷战为背景基于真实事件改编,说英语的爱沙尼亚人,摄影和调色特别精美,故事本身虽然没什么新意但讲的细腻动人,CP的颜值都好高,中尉最后那句“只有在天空中,我才能感受到自由”特别好虐心。
三人关系中还存在一些Frame&Focus的游移,双人关系就实在缺乏视觉变化。
骗婚gay真下头
不喜欢人家姑娘还要跟人家结婚让别人给你生小孩,那个1结婚了有了小孩了还来找那个0一起美美去小岛快活😅,谁流下同妻泪就是说😅😅😅这无关同性恋异性恋,就是一个骗感情的故事,还有小三插足别人家庭的故事。总结:1骗同妻感情,0插足别人家庭横批有病
或许是故事基于单方面的回忆,罗曼的挣扎与痛苦直到最后那封再次逃避回蓝天的信,才得以窥见;谢尔盖能够如此无畏,因为爱、自我与梦想不曾冲突,而罗曼却一生都被这三者切割。结尾路易莎的话,刀刀致命,据说现实中的谢尔盖后来终生未曾再爱过任何人;也许,那年,他本不该奔赴那场明知是饮鸠止渴的旅行。