Despite its comedic limitations, this film is up to more than its American adolescent counterparts.

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Absurdistan (2008)
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Reviews Counted:19
Fresh:17
Rotten:2
Average Rating:6.8/10
Theatrical Release:Feb 6, 2009 Limited
Synopsis: Veit Helmer’s inventive, allegorical comedy introduces us to Absurdistan, a once beautiful, now utterly desolate, land. In a water-starved village, two childhood sweethearts, Aya and Temelko, await... Veit Helmer’s inventive, allegorical comedy introduces us to Absurdistan, a once beautiful, now utterly desolate, land. In a water-starved village, two childhood sweethearts, Aya and Temelko, await the date (foretold by Aya’s grandmother) that a perfect celestial alignment will bless their first night of love. An intrepid inventor, Temelko plans to repair the aging water pipe, but the apathetic older men scoff at his designs. The women, fed up with the men’s inaction, take matters into their own hands and declare a strike. No water, no sex. The gender lines are drawn, reinforced with barbed wire, and our young lovers find themselves on opposite sides of a fast-escalating feud. The imprint of Helmer’s imagination is ubiquitous. He directs like a kid tearing through his toy chest. Mechanically obsessed, Helmer filters life through outlandish, homespun contraptions. If Aya’s first night of love is to elevate her soul, in Helmer's world, the flight comes courtesy of a rickety scrap-heap rocket atop rusty barrels of kerosene. Brilliantly satirical (here are villagers who build an elaborate aqueduct, and then collectively forget how it works), ever witty, and dipping self-reflexively into a myriad of cinematic styles, Absurdistan contains the signature theatricality of Helmer’s many shorts and earlier feature, Tuvalu. It’s a philosophic parable that glides weightlessly along (no doubt suspended by pulleys and ropes hooked to a donkey). Welcome to Absurdistan. --© Sundance Film Festival [More]
Starring: Kristyna Malerova, Maximilian Mauff, Nino Chkheidze
Starring: Kristyna Malerova, Maximilian Mauff, Nino Chkheidze
Director: Veit Helmer
Director: Veit Helmer
Screenwriter: Zaza Buadze, Veit Helmer
Studio: First Run Features
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Reviews for Absurdistan
Absurdistan moves with confidence and grace with a genuine romantic and erotic drive.
'Borat' meets 'Lysistrata' in a delightful, surreal tale filmed in Azerbaijan and Georgia.
A simplistic, straightforward tale that's beautifully staged with the same wave of the magical-realism wand that powers Jeunet & Caro's Delicatessen.
An attempt at comic allegory that stretches a thin premise to feature length.
Absurdistan lives up to its name with its virtual nonstop drollery. And in Malerova the film has a most appealing leading lady.
Absurdistan doesn’t have a ton of high-voltage laughs, but it’s a nonstop charm machine.
Refreshingly offbeat, delightfully funny and irresistibly entertaining without a dull moment.
Sometimes the village looks like an antique postcard come to life, at other times like outtakes from a lost Marx Brothers film or an overly precious PBS documentary.
As in "Tuvalu," Veit's style is reminiscent of both France's Marc Caro & Jean-Pierre Jeunet ("Delicattessen") with their whimsical machinery and surreal worlds and Canada's Guy Maddin's use of silent film standards...
Absurdistan has more than a little bit of magic at its heart; it's a tale of love and perseverance, gently winking at its happy viewers.
A funny and bawdy fable that playfully deals with community, a battle between the sexes, the preciousness of water, and the joy of young love.
A lighthearted charmer, one of the most spirited and enjoyable comedies to hit ... theaters so far this year.
Veit Helmer's latest is a delightful fable sans dialogue...is too enjoyable to go unappreciated offshore.
The film isn't much more than light slapstick bookended by a sweet if lust-driven romance.
Writer-director Veit Helmer creates a wildly imaginative world worthy of Gabriel Garca Mrquez at his most playful, drenching it in vivid color and a Slavic sense of bleak humor.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie | Date |
|---|---|---|
| 83% 83% | The Princess and the Frog | 12/11 |
| 89% 89% | A Single Man | 12/11 |
| 55% 55% | The Lovely Bones | 12/11 |
| 89% 89% | Invictus | 12/11 |
| | Avatar | 12/18 |
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