Carbon; satire / black comedy, Moldova / Romania / Spain, 2022; D: Ion Borș, S: Dumitru Roman, Ion Vântu, Igor Caras-Romanov, Adriana Bîtca, Viorel Cornescu, Ion Coșeru
A small town in eastern Moldova, August 1 9 9 2. The country is preparing for its first independence day after the collapse of the Soviet Union, but Goreshist Russia ordered war criminal Igor Smirnov to carve up a puppet state, Transnistria, which leads to war. Dima, an unemployed lad, decides to enlist to the Moldovan army because veterans will receive an apartment, and he wants to settle there with his girlfriend. Dima persuades a former Afghan war veteran and now farmer, Vasea, to drive him in a tractor to the battlefront. However, along the way, they find a burned corpse of a man on the ground. Vasea insists they must burry him properly, but in the hospital they say to get a certificate from the priest, who in turns tells him to get a certificate from the police, who in turn sends them to the mayor. When a fake rumor spreads that the corpse is actually of Smirnov, four Russian mafia thugs capture Dima, Vasea, the mayor and the policeman, but let them go when Smirnov turns out to be alive. Dima takes care of the corpse, a separatist, while Vasea gives him the keys to a new apartment.
The higest-grossing Moldovan film in Moldovan cinemas at that time, with over 150,000 tickets sold at the local box office, "Carbon" is a moderately interesting satire on the country's specific past, in this case the Transnistrian War. The director Ion Bors does not have that much inspiration, nor a sense for how to conjure up a good gag, but its symbolic story touches the nerve of the country's collective consciousness, depicting the bitter time of the Transnistrian separatism in a comical, absurd way through the story of two clumsy men who want to burry an unknown, burned corpse, but only encounter bureaucracy and sloppiness, which also says a lot of about the mentality of their society—a nurse tells them to first get a death certificate from the police station, but once there, Vasea finds the doors locked, as the policeman is in his back yard, preparing pork for a wedding, so Vasea has to take a knife and shave the pig from the sides. Dima and Vasea then go to a priest, but he is more preoccupied with blessing a new car with holy water, as its owner shoves him money in the pocket. Dima and Vasea finally call the mayor to give them a permit for a burrial, and the first thing when he arrives at the policeman's back yard and sees the corpse covered by a blanket, is to think it is the pork. Several absurd situations appear in the second half: in one of the best, as the Russian thugs appear to search for the corpse in an Orthodox church, Dima, Vasea and another man hide it under a cloth, kneel in front of it, and claim it contains the holy remains of Saint Ictirian. Despite the wacky and ridiculous situations, they are still grounded: especially memorable are little clips from Russian TV, accusing Moldovans as "fascists" to try to cover for the Russian-controlled puppet state of Transnistria, which rings even more true as the film was released during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, with similar imperialist cliché excuses. "Carbon" never truly ignites into some outstanding moment, and thus feels more like lukewarm fun.
Grade:++








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