A deliciously light touch characterises this dry, deadpan comedy set in the stark and sparsely inhabited steppes of Kazakhstan.
Tulpan (2008)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:61
Fresh:59
Rotten:2
Average Rating:7.8/10
Consensus: Kazakh sheep herders get their cinematic due in this lovely, unsentimental debut from director Sergei Dvortsevoy.
Runtime: 1 hr 40 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
US Box Office: $0
Synopsis: Acclaimed documentarian Sergey Dvortsevoy's debut narrative feature, TULPAN, is a work of extraordinary filmmaking bravado, an exhilaratingly alive and sweet-natured fairytale set in the barren... Acclaimed documentarian Sergey Dvortsevoy's debut narrative feature, TULPAN, is a work of extraordinary filmmaking bravado, an exhilaratingly alive and sweet-natured fairytale set in the barren landscape of a Kazakh steppe, an environment where only shepherds live. Asa (Askhat Kuchinchirekov) returns from military service to live with his sister, Samal (Samal Yeslyamova), her husband, Ondas (Ondasyn Besikbasov), and their three children. Asa's dream is to have his own flock of sheep, but his boss tells him that until he gets married, his wish will never be granted. The only trouble is that in this particular case, the candidates for potential wife can be counted on one finger. Her name is Tulpan, and though he's never seen her entire face, Asa is certain that she is the one for him. Unfortunately, she doesn't appear to feel the same way, complaining that his ears are too big. Yet Asa remains hopeful, envisioning the day when his dream will come true. Dvortsevoy's background as a documentary director is put to masterly use here. He refuses to be anything but authentic, to the point where he captures some of the most miraculous footage the screen has ever seen. The highlight is a transcendent 10-minute lamb birth that occurs in an unbroken take. But this is just one of the many extended shots in which Dvortsevoy appears to be controlling the most difficult to wrangle forces of nature: weather, animals, and children. Four years in the making, TULPAN is filmmaking of the highest order, a Herzogian display of directorial bravado. [More]
Starring: Askhat Kuchinchirekov, Samal Yeslyamova, Ondasyn Besikbasov, Tulepbergen Baisakalov
Starring: Askhat Kuchinchirekov, Samal Yeslyamova, Ondasyn Besikbasov, Tulepbergen Baisakalov, Bereke Turganbayev
Director: Sergey Dvortsevoy
Director: Sergey Dvortsevoy
Screenwriter: Sergey Dvortsevoy, Gennady Ostrovskiy
Producer: Karl Baumgartner
Studio: Zeitgeist Films
Reviews for Tulpan
When a film arrives on our shores from this far away, you can almost guarantee it's a good one and Tulpan doesn't disappoint.
Highly acclaimed at festivals, Tulpan is wondrous and fascinating, with a gritty, true-to-hard-life tone.
The central story is both comical and poignant. She is but an illusion who peers at him from behind a curtain and despite the offer of 10 sheep and a chandelier as a suggested dowry, he is rejected on the grounds of having big ears
Perceptive and humorous, this gentle drama is uplifting and resonant.
Dvortsevoy exhibits the storytelling composure and technical proficiency of a veteran, while his keen eye for a pastoral poetic flourish places ‘Tulpan’ firmly among the year’s most endearing cinematic experiences.
Investing the ethnographic documentary with sly wit and wry absurdity, Sergei Dvortsevoy’s Tulpan is a quiet revelation.
An irresistible mix of whimsical and raucous humour that leavens the bleakness of that environment
The film is irresistibly human and funny, and properly momentous when calamity strikes.
Feels more like something from National Geographic than a feature film. For some, the lamb-birthing scene will be a steppe too far.
An emotionally engaging drama that succeeds thanks to its combination of offbeat humour and intriguing characters, set against an almost impossibly bleak landscape.
Features situations that are recognisable simply because the people involved are so realistic.
While it is no documentary, this lovingly made film captures a culture and a rural way of life with a mix of realism and poetry.
With this harsh and beautiful backdrop so attentively rendered, at once otherworldly and palpable, the desires of Tulpan's characters become almost metaphysical imperatives.
A coming-of-age story that also examines the pull and push of the modern and traditional, Tulpan is a striking, unique, narrative feature debut for director-writer Sergei Dvortsevoy.
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