Los Angeles Times by Katie Walsh
Klondike is certainly not an easy watch, but it is a profound one — a film that feels both prescient and retrospective about Ukraine, locked in what seems a never-ending existential conflict with its neighbor.
Critic Rating
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Director
Maryna Er Gorbach
Cast
Oksana Cherkashyna,
Sergey Shadrin,
Oleg Scherbina,
Oleg Shevchuk,
Artur Aramyan
Genre
Drama
This drama follows a Ukrainian couple living near the Ukraine-Russia border during the breakout of war in the Donbas region in 2014. When Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 is shot down nearby and the conflict around them escalates, they must decide whether to stay or leave as they await the birth of their first child.
Los Angeles Times by Katie Walsh
Klondike is certainly not an easy watch, but it is a profound one — a film that feels both prescient and retrospective about Ukraine, locked in what seems a never-ending existential conflict with its neighbor.
The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
The director favors absurdist tableaus . . . placid camera moves counterpointed by brutality and shots held so long that it almost seems as if the filmmaker is the one being cruel. It’s a grimly effective strategy for a harsh but powerful movie.
Movie Nation by Roger Moore
The shocked inability to focus on what one must do despite the pull of pretending, saying and repeating “it’ll all be over soon” is vividly recreated in this small-scale version of a larger scale tragedy to come.
RogerEbert.com by Christy Lemire
Qhile this particular story takes place nearly a decade ago, it remains unfortunately timely as Russia’s horrific war in Ukraine rages on; Klondike helps put a specific, vivid face on a faraway conflict.
IndieWire by David Ehrlich
This visceral portrait of life during wartime is at its most harrowing and unshakeable when it confronts the heightened reality of its conceit with the apathetic naturalism of its drama.
The Guardian by Leslie Felperin
Unsurprisingly, it all builds to a bleak conclusion, and the film as a whole is a powerful statement that lingers in the mind long after the final credits roll.
Variety by Guy Lodge
Without undue contrivance or melodrama, Er Gorbach overlaps escalating marital tension with the larger war closing in on the couple to claustrophobic life-or-death effect, building to a finale of staggering savagery.
The Film Stage by David Katz
Klondike stands as one of the stronger dramatizations of this crucial moment in recent history.
Screen Daily by Lee Marshall
Klondike is both despairing – sometimes in a blackly comic vein – and empathetic in the way it sees the incident from the ground up rather than from the sky down.
Film Threat by Alex Saveliev
Klondike plunges you into the midst of a nightmarish life, on the brink of utter and complete collapse, leaving you wrung and dry. Not a light weekend watch, then, nor a particularly original or subtle one – but artfully produced, deeply affecting cinema nevertheless.
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