THE POSTMAN'S WHITE NIGHTS (Andrei Konchalovsky, Russia, 2014)

Postman Tryapitsyn is locked into the same cycle of drinking and TV watching as the
other inhabitatnts of the isolated lake community, for whom his mail launch visits are the only source of brown bread and light bulbs. At least he gets to put moves on the blonde fishing inspector and take her young son riding in his boat until someone steals the motor.
A bus ride gets him to the rail connection and the army base with the rocket launch pad. If he quits will that make the spectre of the spooky grey cat go away?
It’s the same indignation against change found in the director’s Gloss (Glyanets, 2007) and an interesting comparison with the vicious isolated community in his Siberiade(1979) and maybe not as good as those but this one has a quiet conviction of it’s own. Top points for atmosphere.
PRICE OF FAME (Le rancon de la gloire, Xavier Beauvois, France, Switzerland, Belgium, 2014)

Comes the trial climax and the defence convincing us that the lead duo are Chaplin characters pulls it all together. Nice touches - Michel Legrand on the ‘phone to go with the clip of a TV Demoiselles de Rochefort, the car snaking along the highway at night to the Limelight theme, Zem and Mastroianni from Beauvois's first movie, Nour from Caramel, Peter Coyote singing and speaking French, the beautiful quality Chaplin clips, his great looking grand-daughter and Benoit and Noirjean doing the circus clown act I remember from the fifties, not to mention the snappy post end titles gag.
Great cast on form and smooth production.
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