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Father and Son

Play trailer Poster for Father and Son Released May 23, 2003 1h 23m Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist Tomatometer Popcornmeter
68% Tomatometer 41 Reviews 65% Popcornmeter 1,000+ Ratings
In this dreamlike film, a nameless father (Andrei Shchetinin) and his son, Aleksei (Aleksei Nejmyshev), live together in an apartment in St. Petersburg. Aleksei's mother has died and consequently the two have a very close relationship. When Aleksei acquires a girlfriend, she refuses to take a back seat to his bond with his dad, and breaks up with him. Aleksei is also experiencing nightmares, dreading separation from his father to be a part of the military as his father was.

Critics Reviews

View All (41) Critics Reviews
Empire Magazine Rated: 3/5 Feb 17, 2007 Full Review John Hartl Seattle Times Although Father and Son is never as deep or wrenching as Mother and Son, the careful casting and Sokurov's unique visual style continue to make this a series worth following. Rated: 3/4 Aug 20, 2004 Full Review Desson Thomson Washington Post Here was my question for most of this movie: Wha-? I was clueless. Did not understand. Aug 13, 2004 Full Review Paul Sherman Boston Herald Rated: 1/4 Feb 17, 2007 Full Review Daniel Kasman d+kaz. intelligent movie reviews Rated: C+ Feb 17, 2007 Full Review Michael E. Grost Classic Film and Television Visually remarkable look at a gay relationship; one of the richest inside looks at gay love and tenderness. Aug 13, 2005 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (62) audience reviews
Audience Member Haunting and sensual. Can a father and son really relate that way? Can anyone? Confronting and inspiring. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/10/23 Full Review Audience Member Strange and bewildering, yet somehow beautiful. The poetic atmosphere keeps it going. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/15/23 Full Review Audience Member Although the film is quite complex for an average movie watcher, I'd say that it's able to deliver a beautiful portrayal of absolute love of a son towards his father. I would recommend to watch this film with an open-mind... Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/20/23 Full Review Audience Member Avant-garde to the extreme, this film plays out like it really wants to be a smart, artistic film with beautiful imagery and little dialogue, but it really just comes off banal and a half-assed attempt at something truly poetic. Everything symbolic feels trite or so dense that Sokurov's metaphors are lost within everything else. Only a couple of moments did I feel like I was starting to understand what he was trying to say before he went and lost me again. Honestly, it felt like I was watching a foreign meldorama disguised as a foreign art film. There's a great deal of talk about the homo-erotic qualities to it; there are moments, but I could feel what he was trying to do was comment on the relationship of a father and his son and what that ultimately means, but all that needed to be subtext wasn't and all that needed to be said wasn't said at all. Whatever he was trying to convey, it got lost in his passion for trying to say it in the first place. The only thing I came out of it with was some nice cinematography. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 01/29/23 Full Review Audience Member Alexander Sokurov made a big name for himself with "Russian Ark" a.k.a. that film that was done in a single take. His next film "Father And Son" is a disappointment, intended to be the 2nd part of a trilogy with his eloquent 1997 film "Mother And Son" and a future film yet to be made, this one focuses on the titular relationship. It's a nice looking film concerning the love/hate relationship between military student Alexei and his lonely father, however there are a few scenes which added little to nothing, the acting was OK the dialogue feels a little forced and the alleged homoeroticism (a term which only comes up whenever two men have their shirt off) has put plenty of people off. Even for a relatively short film it seems to drag quite hard, that lack of focus doesn't help either. It works OK as a visual poem/psychological study, watch "Mother And Son" instead, or Andrei Zvyagintsev's "The Return". Rated 2 out of 5 stars 01/18/23 Full Review Audience Member I wasn't going to review this, but seeing the comments below I was kind of forced to. This film works brilliantly on a number of levels, but I'll limit myself to just two; 1. For those looking for plot and missing it, trying looking at this as the story of Jesus Christ *before* he was born on Earth. That is the father and son relationship inherent and repeating itself since God 'created' Adam (was anyone ever bothered by Michelangelo's representation of that fatherly and sonly love?). That same story is the story of a son growing up, finding his own shoes instead of trying to step into his father's and, no, this story does not have an ending in a classical sense. but it has a beginning where the ending should be and I take that any day. 2. For those looking for substance, just look past the symbolism (which btw draws masterfully on the legacy of Tarkovsky, Felini, etc.) and think that this story has never (to my knowledge) been told like this before. Sure, Russian literature and film are full of examples of father-son relations (too many examples to mention), but for me this was the first time it had been explored from this unique viewpoint of mutual tenderness, love and compassion. In short, whatever your relationship with your father was or is, think whether you would not want to dwell on the experience of 'Father and Son' when dealing with your own possible fatherhood. And I'm not being sexist here - current, future and potential mothers may discover a side of masculinity here that they may not even have know that they were missing. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 01/18/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Father and Son

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Cast & Crew

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Movie Info

Synopsis In this dreamlike film, a nameless father (Andrei Shchetinin) and his son, Aleksei (Aleksei Nejmyshev), live together in an apartment in St. Petersburg. Aleksei's mother has died and consequently the two have a very close relationship. When Aleksei acquires a girlfriend, she refuses to take a back seat to his bond with his dad, and breaks up with him. Aleksei is also experiencing nightmares, dreading separation from his father to be a part of the military as his father was.
Director
Aleksandr Sokurov
Producer
Fernando Centeio, Roberto Cicutto, Igor Kalyonov
Screenwriter
Sergei Potepalov
Distributor
Wellspring Media
Production Co
Isabella Films B.V.
Genre
Drama
Original Language
Russian
Release Date (Theaters)
May 23, 2003, Original
Release Date (DVD)
Oct 26, 2004
Box Office (Gross USA)
$38.1K
Runtime
1h 23m
Sound Mix
Dolby SR