An absolute waste of money
... View MoreThis film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.
... View MoreYes, absolutely, there is fun to be had, as well as many, many things to go boom, all amid an atmospheric urban jungle.
... View MoreA film of deceptively outspoken contemporary relevance, this is cinema at its most alert, alarming and alive.
... View MoreWhile I was watching the film I did not talk. When it was over I could not move, I felt completely frozen solid. The Tribe is not a movie that someone can forget the next day and it certainly requires attention. It is one of the films that leave you speechless because of their raw honesty, terrifying atmosphere and unique cinematography. Indeed, words are superfluous in this case. The Tribe delivers an original point of view and a powerful impact on the soul of the viewer. The director has made an unmatched achievement, in which music is not needed, voice recording is not needed. As paradoxical as it sounds the transaction that haunt us is the single sound of the door that slaps. Additionally, this movie has some very difficult to watch scenes. The harshness in which the story and the heroes evolve is indisputable, as there are some infrequent scenes of violence or pain. Powerful, straightforward and a testimony for a grouping of people that we come to understand rarely or never through the movies it describe better than anything else their story-only with them, the light and space-. Last but not least I believe, in contrast with some other reviewers, that this film stands up for its protagonists and that the director made a successful experiment, which theoretically is a new era in cinema today, trying to portray something different, with sensitivity and in contradiction with profitable cinematography and popular success stories. This film is about life itself and the need for survival and love. A little detail in the analysis of the frames is that camera never reach its actors with close-up. All frames include whole-body shots or waist. Hard light, hidden faces, angle from behind their back, we never watch their faces, their face characteristics and details from close enough to "observe them". Even in love scenes we watch their face expressions but mostly their body. The dynamic of the body is their way of communication and it has a symbolic role in the events. With this act, the distance of deaf-mute people and the part of the people that can hear or/and talk is translated into a cinematic angle which transfers feelings of isolation and loss better than any other way, making us feel and listen again for a first time.
... View MoreAs a credit to the film-makers the opening screen advises viewers that there is no dialog or sub-titles, the film is completely in sign language. Can you follow the film without knowing sign language? Absolutely, you will miss some of what they are trying to convey but other parts are perfectly clear, in some scenes there is absolutely no mistaking what the characters are talking about. The film starts off with a boy showing up at a rundown boarding schools for the deaf, the school seems to have a large population of students however the film focus on a small core group of 2 girls and 4 boys; following these students as they build their criminal empire with the help of their wood shop teacher they graduate from extorting money from other students, to theft, robbery, prostitution and murder. The new kid is jumped into "The Tribe" and works his way up the ladder and back down again, at first administering a few kicks to a shopper they rob and beat for some beer and wine, then moving along to become the pimp for the two prostitute classmates. Falling in love with one of the girls begins the downward spiral and exile from "The Tribe" out on his own to make money and survive he resorts to robbery and murder. The film takes place in the Ukraine but it could be anywhere, there is a total lack of supervision for the kids at the boarding school and they seem to have quite a bit of free time to spend on their criminal activities, our core group of students have keys to the school and come and go as they please, in the end the film is about a group of kids doing what they need to do to survive and their eventual failure.
... View MoreSergei arrives at an Ukrainian boarding school for the deaf. He's a shy new kid who gets picked on. He is recruited into the ruling gang. They pimp out two of the older girls. Sergei is tasked with being the suitcase pimp and falls for Anya. King rules the organization and decides to sell the girls. Sergei revolts causing chaos and bloodshed.There is sound but rarely any dialog. The sign language does not get translated into subtitles. One must guess at the plot but it's not impossible. The challenge of interpreting the story has some appeal. The question becomes what this is trying to achieve and what it actually achieves. It doesn't really put the audience into the shoes of the deaf. They actually know what's being said in the movie although it could give a sense of the deaf trying to understand the hearing world. There are some brutal graphic scenes. This is a shocking movie but I must admit that I fastforwarded some of the movie. It's too hard to watch such a quiet movie. One can't compare this to silent movies since those always have music. This is an interesting original experimental movie but I'm not sure what it achieves.
... View More"The Tribe" is a huge step backwards in the history of film: a silent movie without subtitles or music. Somehow or other this film has been hailed as some sort of masterpiece. It isn't. More like the Emperor's New Clothes.Here are my top ten reasons for avoiding it at all costs:1. Pointless 2. Depressing 3. Overlong 4. Confusing 5. Slow 6. Badly acted 7. Full of unlikable characters 8. Insulting to deaf people 9. Insulting to non-deaf people 10. Ridiculously violent.There is absolutely reason I can think of to see this film. You will not gain anything. You will not learn anything. You will only be depressed, and like seeing a car accident, you will wish you hadn't looked in the first place. "The Tribe" or "Plemya" is simply more evidence that Cannes juries go for anything that seems documentary-like and seems to capture some sort of reality -- despite a lack of sympathetic characters or a compelling story. And if there are no actual actors involved, no dialogue and no soundtrack, all the better. Congratulations, here's your prize.
... View More