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| Semyon Serzin |
Kirill Serebrennikov's Petrov's Flu is the most inspired Russian film I've seen since Beanpole. Released in Russia in 2021, the film is an adaptation of Alexey Salnikov's novel Petrov In and Around the Flu, a better title but one that does not fit snugly on a marquee. Salinikov has written a number of novels, but none have been translated into English. Both film and book center around Petrov (Semyon Serzin), a cartoonist who lives in the southeastern Russian city of Yekaterinburg. The film is mostly set in 2003 or so, but the film flits back and forth in time and space. We see the childhood memories of Petrov's, but also his fantasies and those of his estranged wife, Nurlinsa (Chulpan Khamatova). Nurlinsa's fantasies are chiefly the grisly kind, but are of a piece with the very dark and Russian humor of the film.
We first meet Petrov on a grim and crowded bus during Christmas time. The garish ticket taker is done up seasonably as the Snow Queen, which we will soon learn is a link to Petrov's childhood memories. The central motif of the film is sickness. Petrov is coughing and hacking on the bus and throughout the film. The child he shares with Nurlinsa is also badly ill with the flu, worrying the couple to no good end. The film invokes this by shooting the 2003 sequences in a blue green blear, as if sickness permeates the land. Sickness is a common motif in Russian literature, most prominently in Dostoyevsky where the ills of crowded urban centers infect the populace. All this miasmic swampiness might get tedious, but the film shifts gears half way through and we witness the back story of a woman named Marina (Yulia Peresild) who played the Snow Queen in a holiday pageant that Petrov witnessed in 1971. These are shot in crisp black and white and include Marina's fantasies of what the objects of her desire look like naked. Other repeated motifs in the film are those of UFOs and the Soviet space program, the former suggesting a desire to escape the homeland and the latter a reminder of the faded glory of the USSR.
Petrov's Flu is going to be too much for some people at a nearly two and a half hour length. I found the animation sequence disappointing and would have pruned some of the tedious arguments between Petrov's parents. However, I was stunned by the invention displayed by Serebrennikov in the film's many transitions from consciousness into unconsciousness. Though it is extremely disjunctive and digressive, Petrov's Flu unspools relatively seamlessly. I was caught up in the film's momentum all through the film and loved the entire cast, including supporting performance by Yuri Kolokolnikov as the twisted Hades and Aleksandr Aleksandrovich as Marina's drunken, but philosophical brother. An imaginative treat for mature viewers.


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