The Dark Night

  • 90'
  • Russia
  • 2001
The Dark Night takes Oleg Kovalov a little closer to his target: to write a complete history of the twentieth century in the language of film. Not a documentary or chronological history, but a lyrical, subjective and poetic history. In Sergei Eisenstein - An Autobiography, we witnessed the stormy 1920s and the blossoming culture of that era, in Scorpion's Garden we saw the paranoia of the Cold War and the thaw that followed. The Dark Night, just like Concert for a Rat before, is on the subject of the dictatorial 1930s. Kovalov has little faith in the documentary as a means to find truth. He does not think that the truth can be found within existing genres. So his films transgress those genres. Documentary and fiction are just as difficult to distinguish in his work as fictional characters from concrete people in old newsreels and other archive footage. That also goes for The Dark Night. The film combines archive footage from the Third Reich with a script that is loosely based on the fantasies of Fritz Lang: a lyrical thriller with horror elements. As the stylised black & white images have all been shot in reconstructed studio sets, the film has the mood of the 1930s cinema.
  • 90'
  • Russia
  • 2001
Director
Oleg Kovalov
Premiere
World premiere
Country of production
Russia
Year
2001
Festival Edition
IFFR 2001
Length
90'
Medium
35mm
Language
Russian
Producer
Lenfilm Studios
Sales
Lenfilm Studios
Screenplay
Oleg Kovalov
Director
Oleg Kovalov
Premiere
World premiere
Country of production
Russia
Year
2001
Festival Edition
IFFR 2001
Length
90'
Medium
35mm
Language
Russian
Producer
Lenfilm Studios
Sales
Lenfilm Studios
Screenplay
Oleg Kovalov