The Guardian by Phil Hoad
Aguzarova is quietly phenomenal, never more so than in the sex scene where, holding her curled-up hands away from Tamik’s body, she manages to be coy, conflicted, detached, expectant and amused all at once.
Critic Rating
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Director
Kira Kovalenko
Cast
Milana Aguzarova,
Alik Karaev,
Soslan Khugaev,
Khetag Bibilov,
Arsen Khetagurov
Genre
Drama
Ada, a young woman living with her father and younger brother in North Ossetia in Russia, hopes to leave her strict, overprotective family just as her older brother did, but finds that escaping is more complicated than she thought in this intense, realistic coming-of-age drama dealing with patriarchy and trauma.
The Guardian by Phil Hoad
Aguzarova is quietly phenomenal, never more so than in the sex scene where, holding her curled-up hands away from Tamik’s body, she manages to be coy, conflicted, detached, expectant and amused all at once.
Variety by Guy Lodge
A frenzied vocal tone and wild, untethered physicality connects all the performances, with every character seemingly eager to burst out of their own body, and by extension, the life in which it’s stranded.
TheWrap by Steve Pond
The film is a dark slice of neorealism with a palpable sense of claustrophobia that Ada feels in her life and in her family. But her relationship to what is essentially imprisonment is odd and complex; she seems desperate to get out and exercise some control of her life, but there are strange cracks in that desperation, signs that she’s terrified of what even a modicum of freedom and control might bring.
Slant Magazine by Diego Semerene
Unclenching the Fists is a tale of how the desolation of a nation inhabits and engraves a woman’s body.
The Playlist by Robert Daniels
Unclenching the Fists isn’t perfect. Rather it’s a daring and complex leap by Kovalenko.
IndieWire by Ryan Lattanzio
Unclenching the Fists turns out to be hardly the neorealist dip into misery that some of the film’s more disconnected camerawork from DP Pavel Fomintsev promises.
The Film Stage by Rory O'Connor
The experience is nothing if not grueling, and Fists‘ willingness to heap misery on characters who are already truly down ultimately leaves a callous taste in the mouth.
Los Angeles Times by Noel Murray
This is a different kind of prison escape picture, focusing on the stifling confines of a life devoid of possibility.
The New York Times by Beatrice Loayza
Ada’s psychological tumult is captured in intimate close-ups and fluttering camera movements, while the absence of a score complements the film’s uneasy mood of pent-up rage and stifling despair.
Screen Daily by Demetrios Matheou
Overall, the film’s treatment of a sensitive scenario lacks subtlety, making for a tough and taxing viewing experience.
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