Plot
The film consists of two parts: the first part is shot in black-and-white and the second in color. In the first part Natasha, the main character, was in her husband's funeral when she suddenly lost control over her states of extreme rage and despair. She walked away from the funeral and began to treat everybody provocatively and aggressively. After resigning from the hospital where she was a doctor, she seeks sex from two random strangers. The first is met with confusion and anger, but the second results in a fling that she regrets, panicking once he goes to kiss her. At the end, Natasha finally regains herself and is able to accept an act of kindness from a stranger. We then realize that the first part was a film screening in a theater as the second part starts. Shot in color, the second part has its protagonist an exhausted and disillusioned school teacher Nikolai who fell asleep at the screening of the black-and-white film. The audience ignores the screener's plea to stay for the Q&A with the film’s actress ("Olga Serghjevna") and leave the theater disorderly and raucously. (Muratova ironically mocks the general public’s response to her own films.) This sleeping schoolteacher awakens and leaves the theatre, but falls asleep again in the overcrowded subway and then at a meeting at school. The film suggests that as a result of personal predicaments and problems at work Nikolai has gotten the Asthenic Syndrome – he falls asleep at the most inappropriate times. (“Asthenia” means “a lack of strength, diminution of vital power, weakness, debility,” according to the OED.) He is admitted to the hospital for the mentally ill where he gains the understanding that the people around him there are not any crazier than those who live in freedom. After some time he is released and he ends up falling asleep on the subway. The empty wagon takes away the sleeping man into a dark tunnel.Cast
* Olga Antonova as Natalia Ivanovna * Sergei Popov as Nikolai Alekseevich * Galina Zakhurdayeva as Masha (Blonde) * Natalya Buzko as Masha (Brunette) * Aleksandra Svenskaya as Teacher * Pavel Polishchuk as Iunikov * Natalya Ralleva as Mother * Galina Kasperovich as Nikolai's Wife * Viktor Aristov as School Principal * Nikolai Semyonov as Head Doctor * Oleg Shkolnik as the owner of the canaries *Theme and style
Masha Sotskaya writes in ''The Legacy Of Kira Muratova’s “The Asthenic Syndrome”'' thatThe Asthenic Syndrome, often described as “the last Soviet and the first post-Soviet film”, begins with depiction of a black-and-white drama centered on a recently widowed woman and her desperate and self destructive protests against the world. This section concludes quickly and is revealed to be part of a Post-Modern film-within-a film sequence , and as the images change from black-and-white to color the scene shifts to a crowded cinema screening this black-and-white movie. The films of consists of two parts that are barely connected. This technique is one that Muratova has used in many of her films over the decades.Film scholar Jane A. Taubman sees in many "unpleasant" scenes an attempt by the directors to lead the audience out of the "moral apathy" in which Soviet society finds itself in its last years. She compares the image of nudity with the film ''
... her most important film, ''Asthenic Syndrome'', made in 1989 and released in early 1990. Two-and-one-half hours long and extremely complex stylistically and thematically, .... The medical syndrome from which the film takes its title is a condition of absolute physical and psychological exhaustion, a metaphor for Soviet society in its final years. The hero, Nikolai, a secondary school teacher (Sergei Popov), keeps falling asleep at inappropriate moments, such as a parent-teacher meeting. But his narcolepsy is a psychological defense against a world whose moral degradation has become unbearable. Though the horrors with which Muratova assaults her viewer were those of contemporary Soviet society,... Asthenic Syndrom expressed deep despair at and moral disintegration of Soviet personal and public life. Those who could not, or would not, see the prophetic, Tolstoyan moral vision in the film tarred it epithet "chernukha," a new slang word for "an excessively black depiction of reality.... Asthenic syndrome ... used an aesthetic that Muratova finds intriguing: "the aesthetic of garbage, trash, eclectic combinations of rubbish, but the construction site expresses laconically what I have in mind." Critic Andrei Plakhov has the look of this film as "contemporary kitsch, picturesque sots-art rowing out ofthe atmosphere of our towns and hamlets, and their continual construction sites: building, unfinished-building, re-building, migration of masses of humanity, the interface between village and city, the traditional neglect of public culture and the poetic cult of the romance of the road. ... A kind of socialist Desert."About the Tolstoyan moral vision mentioned above, Muratova also states that
I could dedicate this film to Tolstoy. This is the key to my film. He says things about the naivety of the intelligentsia who believe culture and art can transform the world… I believe we can only draw attention, provoke, make people think. Try to refine the soul and raise the mental level. But the essence of what is inside cannot be changed. This film is a tragedy consecrated to that fact.
Reception
The film was awarded two prizes:References
External links
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Asthenic Syndrome 1989 films 1989 crime drama films Soviet crime drama films 1980s Russian-language films Films directed by Kira Muratova Films partially in color Silver Bear Grand Jury Prize winners