Close to Eden

(Redirected from Urga (movie))

Urga (Russian: У́рга — территория любви, Urga — territoriya lyobvi; "Urga — Territory of Love") is a 1991 Russian adventure drama film by Russian director, screenwriter and producer Nikita Mikhalkov. It was released in North America as Close to Eden. It depicts the friendship between a Russian truck driver and a Mongolian shepherd in Inner Mongolia.

Urga
Close to Eden
DVD cover
Directed byNikita Mikhalkov
Written byRustam Ibragimbekov
Nikita Mikhalkov
Produced byMichel Seydoux
Jean-Louis Piel
René Cleitman
StarringBayaertu
Badema
Vladimir Gostyukhin
CinematographyVilen Kalyuta
Edited byJoëlle Hache
Music byEduard Artemyev
Production
companies
Distributed byMiramax
Release date
  • 1991 (1991)
Running time
118 minutes
CountrySoviet Union
LanguagesMongolian
Russian
Mandarin

The film was an international co-production between companies based in Russia and France. It received generally positive reviews from critics, winning the Golden Lion and the European Film Award for Best Film.

Story

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Gombo, a Mongolian shepherd, lives in a yurt in Inner Mongolia with his wife, three children, and mother. Gombo desires sexual intercourse with his wife, which puts his wife ill at ease: having a fourth child would break Chinese law. Meanwhile, Sergei, a buffoonish Russian truck driver falling asleep at the wheel, stops after a close call and attempts to awaken himself. His stretching turns to frolicking, and he wanders off. He discovers a corpse and quickly returns to his truck, accidentally driving into the river in his haste. Back at the yurt, the family is portrayed as unsophisticated and traditional people. They work together performing simple tasks like weaving by hand and using a horse cart to work leather. Gombo's drunk, horse-riding relative rides through the scene, stopping along the way to give them a movie poster for Cobra, which displays a muscular, gun-toting Sylvester Stallone.

Shortly after, Sergei is rescued by Gombo and taken to his family's yurt. Gombo's young son is stunned by the tattoos on Sergei's back, which include music notes. A comedic scene unfolds as Gombo, together with his family, goes about the usual and tidy work of slaughtering and cooking a sheep, much to Sergei's horror. We continue to be entertained as Sergei courageously consumes sheep and sheep broth. At some point, we find out that the carrion birds were not eating a human corpse. Gombo shows off the movie poster. Gombo's young daughter plays the accordion while Sergei takes on a distant look as he remembers fighting in the war. The next morning, Gombo's drunk, horse-riding relative rides by, stopping to give Gombo and his wife an apple and a hard-boiled egg.

Gombo and Sergei go into the nearest city together, where Gombo is supposed to buy condoms; instead, he chooses to wander the town. Elsewhere, Sergei spends time with his girlfriend, and they have sex. Gombo's drunk, horse-riding relative rides through the hallway outside their room, stopping to peek above the door and chuckle. He gives an apple to the woman's son, who is stranded in the hallway until the couple finishes. Later, Gombo, Sergei, and a friend meet at a nightclub. Sergei, a former army bandsman, becomes drunk and convinces the band to play the song from his tattoos, "On the Hills of Manchuria," while he sings along. He is arrested and bailed out of jail by Gombo's uncle who lives in the city.

Gombo returns home, and along the way, stops to eat. We see that he has bought a bicycle and a TV. He falls asleep and has a strange dream featuring his drunk, horseback-riding relative as Genghis Khan and his wife as the Khan's wife. The Khan flies a black flag with a white eagle. In the dream, both he and Sergei are captured and killed, while the TV set is destroyed.

Gombo awakes from his dream and arrives home with the TV and other items. The family members interact with the new objects in stereotypical ways: Gombo gives his mother bubble-wrap from the packaging, and she proceeds to pop one single bubble at a time; his daughter plays with the bell on the bicycle, and his son pops out of the box the TV arrived in. Gombo ignores his wife, so she remains sitting and kneading dough in preparation for dinner. Gombo, together with his children, sets up the TV and a small wind turbine.

He and his family switch between watching a news broadcast, the presidents of the US and Russia officially agreeing to peaceful interaction, and a badly sung variety show. The TV sits under the movie poster. Gombo's wife, saddened when learning that he bought no condoms, leaves the yurt. We then see her on the TV, and she invites her husband to follow her with a gesture. Gombo follows and leaves the yurt, appears on the TV, and follows her out onto the steppes, sticking an urga (a long stick with a lasso on the end used to capture animals) into the ground in a traditional signal that a couple is being intimate. There are shots of the happy family members and Sergei. The scene returns to the urga, and a voiceover from Gombo's fourth son, who was conceived at this time, concludes the film. The urga is replaced by an industrial chimney belching smoke.

Cast

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Reception

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Critical response

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Urga has an approval rating of 100% on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 5 reviews, and an average rating of 6.9/10.[1]

Accolades

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Urga won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival and Best European Film at the European Film Awards. It was also nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Film,[2] and for a Golden Globe in the same category.

Influence

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The film is credited with sparking Czech writer Petra Hůlová's initial interest in Mongolia, leading to study, then an exchange year in Ulan Bator, and then to her first novel, Paměť mojí babičce (2002; literally "in memory of my grandmother"), in English translation published as All This Belongs to Me (2009, Northwestern University Press).[3]

In the first section of Michelangelo Antonioni's film Beyond the Clouds, the two protagonists reunite at a screening of Close to Eden.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Urga". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 12 October 2023.
  2. ^ "The 65th Academy Awards (1993) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  3. ^ Allen, Lisette, "Telling a foreign tale in a foreign tongue" Archived August 5, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Prague Post, September 30, 2009. Retrieved 2011-06-27.
  4. ^ "Return to Beauty [BEYOND THE CLOUDS] | Jonathan Rosenbaum". www.jonathanrosenbaum.net. Archived from the original on 2016-12-02.
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