Loading...
Loading...
We use strictly necessary cookies to run ShowSeeker, and — only with your consent — optional cookies for analytics and session replay that help us improve the app. Read our Privacy Policy
Sergey Dvortsevoy makes his international debut with this astonishingly intimate portrait of a nomadic family on the Kazakh plains. Several scenes in this slow, elegant film betray a certain dry humor -- a child devouring the last of a bowl of yogurt and then crying; a cow getting its head stuck in a pail; and a woman singing to herself, accompanied by her snoring husband. Other scenes capture the nomads' hardscrabble lives -- drunken herdsmen in the grips of existential despair, growling dogs, and a camel enduring a rather grim septum piercing. By the end of the film, the family pulls up stakes and herds its sundry four-legged beasts -- camels, cattle, goats, dogs, and horses -- to a more fertile plain. This film was screened at the 1999 Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival.

Sherman's March

The Class of ‘92

My Mom Jayne

Naqoyqatsi

Downloaded

As I Was Moving Ahead, Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty

Fuck

Directed by John Ford

180° South

Ex Libris: The New York Public Library

Spider-Man: All Roads Lead to No Way Home

Brother's Keeper
Silent Bombs: All for the Motherland

Tien Shan Dream

Zembla - The Dubious Friends of Donald Trump Part 1: The Russians

Thirteen Sector

Feathered Cocaine

Le peuple de l'aigle et moi

Let me circle around you

J2-8243: Son Uçuş
The Making of “The Fall of Otrar”

On a Clear Day You Can See the Revolution From Here

About the Little Camel

Together