Whispering Pages, also transliterated as Tikhiye Stranitsy (Russian: Тихие страницы), is a 1994 Russian film directed by Alexander Sokurov. The film was a Russian-German co-production.[1]
Whispering Pages | |
---|---|
Directed by | Alexander Sokurov |
Written by | Alexander Sokurov |
Cinematography | Alexander Burov (cinematographer) |
Music by | Mariinsky Theater Orchestra |
Distributed by | Lenfilm Studio |
Release date |
|
Running time | 76 minutes |
Country | Russia |
Language | Russian |
Plot
editA man wanders slowly through the catacombs of a wrecked city, passing by ruins, listless denizens milling about, unruly mobs, and acts of mass suicide. He agrees to do some paperwork to move a dead body, but the bureaucrat who manages the forms ensnares him in Kafkaesque questions. He admits, perhaps not honestly, to a murder, and confronts a prostitute about sin, shame, and God. At the end of the film, he sits down under the statue of a lion and then disappears.
Reception
editThe film has won acclaim from The New York Times,[2] Variety,[3] the Chicago Tribune,[4] and the Chicago Reader.[5]
Cast
edit- Alexander Cherednik - wanderer
- Elizaveta Korolyova - prostitute
- Sergei Barkovsky - bureaucrat
References
edit- ^ Whispering Pages at Allmovie
- ^ New York Times review
- ^ "Whispering Pages". Variety. 1994-07-25. Archived from the original on 2023-05-06.
- ^ Chicago Tribune review
- ^ Chicago Reader review
External links
edit