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Chris Knipp
07-07-2008, 11:59 PM
http://www.cinescene.com/knipp/mongol.htm

SERGEI BODROV: MONGOL (2007)

To the right of who?

Mongol, the Russian-directed semi-historical epic (big emphasis on the semi- here) shot for $20 million in China (and Mongolia and Kazhakistan) with a multi-national cast and crew and Japanese and Chinese stars, purports to depict the first thirty-five years of the life of the emperor Genghis Khan. I say "purports," because not much is known of this period and even in depicting legend, Bodrov chooses to leave out many of the essential connectives that make a good story (or fairy tale or legend). Temudjin, as the young super-Khan is called, is a yoked prisoner, for example, awaiting execution; then, inexplicably, the yoke is off and he's free. He sinks through thin ice deep into the frozen water below; then, inexplicably, he's lying on land and getting rescued. He is languishing in a Chinese prison--his face seeming to acquire a patina of dust and sand (I liked that part: Bodrov excels at faces and tableaux); then he's miraculously found by his faithful wife Borte. She throws him a key and sets him free. Then, inexplicably, he is leading a vast army to defeat his arch rival. Over and over, how we get from point A to point B is left on the cutting-room floor. This is enjoyable as spectacle but unsatisfying from other standpoints.

How Genghis Khan got to be Genghis Khan, in short, is one thing this movie doesn't begin to try to explain. Could anyone? That I don't know; but Mongol presents a its biographical narrative without the connectives that make sense of a life. Despite lots of dramatic scenes with snappy dialogue, striking images, and above all computer-assisted battles with crunching bones and crackling arrows and ringing swords, the film has an epic style without epic themes because its great issues are not so much resolved as abruptly, magically removed. This may in fact be more an epic love story than anything else. It is that in the backhanded way the Odyssey is a love story, because, though Temudjin is away from Borte a lot of the time as Odysseus is mostly away from Ithaka, Mongol's opening sequence gives Borte a primary importance, because she (as played by Bayertsetseg Erdenebat), belonging to another tribe, a liberated young woman of the twelfth century, isn't chosen by but chooses Temudjin when he's nine years old and she's ten. It's not supposed to be that way--and maybe it wasn't; it seems a bit implausible. Temudjin is traveling with his Khan (tribal chieftain) father (Ba Sen) on their way to placate another tribe by choosing the boy's wife from their girls. When they don't, the father is promptly poisoned by the other tribe. And its leader, Targutai (Amadu Mamadakov), vows to kill Temudjin--but not for a year or so, because "Mongols don't kill children."

Well, what Mongols do or don't do seems up for grabs, and probably at the time, historically, "Mongol" itself must have been a rather vague concept. In fact that is another running theme: what's a Mongol? What are their primary values? There is no satisfactory answer, though killing and stealing are advanced as major concepts.

Surprisingly, since not too many are "to the right of Genghis Khan," and since he succeeds in wiping out all his enemies, Temudjin as played (as an adult) by the imposing Tadanobu Asano is a gentle-faced, zen-like fellow who's a strong advocate of fair play. Tadanobu, along with the somewhat over-histrionic Chinese actor Honglai Sun as Jamukha, his childhood blood brother and eventual arch rival, are both impressive. But the real star, with some substantial help from computer-generated effects, is the vast landscape of steppe, snow, mountain, and sky that dominates many scenes. With effective use of lenses and light, the filmmakers have created an epic look, and it's this, plus the authoritative acting, that make this film worth viewing--but only if you like this kind of thing and if you don't mind that you're not going to emerge from it with any historical knowledge. Said to be the first of a trilogy. One will approach the sequels with a certain reserve.

I tried to see this at the SFIFF but wasn't able. In limited US theatrical release including the SF Bay Area since June 6 2008.

oscar jubis
07-12-2008, 07:58 PM
MONGOL

Mongol was submitted by Kazakhstan for Oscar consideration in 2007 and became one of five films that received a nomination. It was written and directed by Russian auteur Sergei Bodrov_his Prisoner of the Mountains and Nomad are well worth seeking out on dvd. Like those predecessors, Mongol, the first of a planned trilogy about Genghis Khan, evinces the helmer's majestic eye for landscape and ethnic detail and his expert handling of action scenes. The latter serves the film particularly well in that the subject, referred at this early phase of his life as Temudjin, was reportedly a master strategist. Mongol's battle sequences possess the spatial clarity and immediacy required for the viewer to grasp their strategic logic and their brutality.

The film strives to depict how Temudjin became the legendary warrior that founded the Mongol Empire. The assured performances by Odnyam Odsuren and Tadanobu Asano as the child and adult Temudjin are worthy of note, as well as Bodrov's direction of the largely inexperienced cast and hundreds of extras. Taken as historical document, Mongol cannot be factually accurate because decisive, conclusive records simply do not exist. Those looking for something strictly based on whatever historical records exist, should probably opt for one of those documentaries shown in the History Channel or the Biography Channel. Mongol, however, establishes with some authority the social conditions of the nomadic people of Mongolia during the 13th century and depicts with brio the serial persecution, imprisonment, slavery, and betrayal suffered by Temudjin after his father was poisoned. That these calamities had formative impact, shaping the character of the controversial leader, is the central theme of Mongol.

The filmmakers desire to limit Mongol's duration and to maintain a rhythm that won't tax mainstream audiences is quite apparent. Mongol's forward momentum delivers epic adventure but detracts somewhat from its potential for biographical nuance. The plot involves a few narrative ellipses, one of which is particularly jarring. However, Mongol will ultimately be evaluated as part of a longer work, assuming the trilogy is completed as planned. This first installment is an engaging, visually ravishing serving of epic cinema that deserves to be seen in a theater.