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The Stars' Caravan

Taivasta vasten

2000  |  Documentary  |  58 min

A story about dreams and the manipulative power of films in a chaotic Kyrgyzstan, seen through the eyes of two cinema projectionists.

The Kyrgyz town of Naryn is preparing for the 1000-year anniversary of Manas, their national hero. The complicated preparations are upset as a group of Islamic rebels invade Kyrgyzstan. The work and dreams of the film's protagonists, projectionists named Zarylbek and Murat, epitomise the present and the past in Kyrgyzstan, struggling through a process of transition. Through their eyes, we see a story that reflects the manipulative power that films exert on a colourful people influenced by socialism, the market economy, the Islamic faith and their nomadic culture.

The Stars' Caravan

    Crew

    Original idea: Richard Manin, Carlo Cresto-Dina
    Director and screenwriter: Arto Halonen
    Cinematography: Pini Hellstedt
    Camera assistant: Kalle Penttilä
    Editor: Olli Soinio
    Assistant editor: Vesa Meronen
    Sound designers: Jyrki Rahkonen, Jussi Olkinuora
    Sound assistant: Heikki Kossi
    Sound mixing: Olli Pärnänen
    Executive producer: Kristiina Pervilä
    Production company: Millennium Film

      DISTRIBUTION

      - Theatrical distribution in Finland
      - International distribution American Fox Lorber Winstar Inc.

      FESTIVALS

      Selected for 20 international film festivals, including:
      - Joris Ivens Competition, International Documentary Festival Amsterdam (IDFA), The Netherlands, 2000
      - Nordic Film Competition, Hot Docs - Canadian International Documentary Festival, Canada, 2001
      - Göteborg International Film Festival, Sweden, 2001

      AWARDS

      - The Finnish State Quality Production Award, 2001

      Full crew

      Full-length synopsis

      The situation in Kyrgyzstan

      The national hero Manas

      Thoughts from the heights of Tibet and Kyrgyzstan

      The last composition of Edward Vesala

      The last film of Halonen’s Asia series

       Review by Vadim Rizov (on movievault.com)