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Leviathan(Левиафан)

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Russia · 2014
Rated R · 2h 21m
Director Andrey Zvyagintsev
Starring Aleksey Serebryakov, Elena Lyadova, Vladimir Vdovichenkov, Roman Madyanov
Genre Drama

Kolya is a mechanic who lives in a small Russian fishing town. When the mayor threatens to demolish his home, he calls in a lawyer friend to help, which only complicates things more for Kolya and his family in this gorgeous and powerful piece of political filmmaking.

Stream Leviathan

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

88

Slant Magazine by Chuck Bowen

Andrey Zvyagintsev never loses sight of the humans, who're allowed to display improvisatory behavior that deepens the majesty of the rigorously orchestrated tableaus.

100

IndieWire by Eric Kohn

Rather than building towards the finality of a single climax, Leviathan injects several of them into the tapestry of its elegant design.

100

CineVue by John Bleasdale

Zvyagintsev's pessimism is leavened both by his comedy and his sense of beauty. Mikhail Krichman's cinematography captures the sublime grandeur of the landscape against which the nasty, brutish and short lives are played out.

100

The Hollywood Reporter by Leslie Felperin

Simultaneously a modern essay on suffering, an open-ended thriller, and a black social comedy, it is most importantly of all a thinly-veiled political parable drenched in bitter irony that takes aim against the corrupt, corrosive regime of Vladimir Putin.

100

The Playlist by Oliver Lyttelton

If there was ever any doubt as to Zvyagintsev's position as one of world cinema's foremost auteurs, it's put to rest here. His filmmaking has always been superb, but he's never taken on the state of his nation in the way he does here. And that makes "Leviathan" not just masterful but also hugely important.

100

The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw

Leviathan is acted and directed with unflinching ambition, moving with deliberative slowness and periodically accelerating at moments of high drama and suspense. It isn't afraid of massive symbolic moments and operatic gestures.

100

Variety by Peter Debruge

This is the director’s most accessible and naturalistic film, using everyday characters to test how well modern-day Russia is maintaining the social contract with its citizens.

88

Rolling Stone by Peter Travers

Why should you suffer through a 140-minute Russian film that is basically a contemporary remake of The Book of Job? Because it's a stupendous piece of work, that's why, and because it represents the kind of challenging, intimate filmmaking that transcends language and borders.

100

Empire by Phil de Semlyen

Frustrating, funny at points, heartbreaking and quite magnificently shot throughout, Leviathan is one of the films of the year.

80

The Telegraph by Tim Robey

It’s a bleak but compassionate, glancingly comic and often satirically incendiary work about the pyramid structure of Russian corruption, with the little guy crushed helplessly beneath, and God, or at least the orthodox Church, perched at the top.

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