Black Cat, White Cat
Black Cat, White Cat | |
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DVD cover | |
Directed by | Emir Kusturica |
Produced by | Karl Baumgartner |
Screenplay by | Gordan Mihić |
Starring |
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Music by |
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Cinematography | Thierry Arbogast |
Edited by | Svetolik-Mića Zajc |
Production companies | |
Distributed by |
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Release dates |
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Running time | 135 min. |
Country |
France Germany FR Yugoslavia |
Language |
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Budget | $4.5 million[1] |
Box office | $351,447 (North America)[2] |
Black Cat, White Cat (Serbian: Црна мачка, бели мачор; Crna mačka, beli mačor) is a 1998 Serbian romantic comedy film directed by Emir Kusturica. It won the Silver Lion for Best Direction at the Venice Film Festival.
The literal translation of the title is actually "Black cat, white tomcat". The movie characters speak in Romani, Serbian, and Bulgarian - frequently switching among them.
Plot
Matko Destanov, a small-time Romani smuggler and profiteer, lives with his teenage son Zare in a ramshackle house by the Danube River in eastern Serbia near the Bulgarian border.
He has plans to acquire a whole train of smuggled fuel, which he finds at cut-price. To obtain a loan that would subsidize the heist, he visits Grga Pitić, a wheelchair-using old gangster, who's an old friend of Zarije Destanov, Matko's father and Zare's grandfather. Matko then plots the details of the job with an ally named Dadan, a rich, fun-living, drug-snorting gangster who has a harem, juggles grenades, and cheats at gambling. However, Dadan double-crosses him and glitches up the deal by giving Matko a drink that is drugged, and carrying out the job while Matko is unconscious, which means that Matko owes Dadan a great deal of cash. Matko cannot afford to pay, so Dadan makes a deal whereby he would forgive the debt, thereby wiping the slate clean, if Zare and Afrodita, Dadan's midget sister whom he desperately wants to marry off, get married. However, Zare is in love with Ida, a barmaid who works in an establishment run by her Roma grandmother Sujka, and Afrodita is waiting for the man of her dreams. Dadan coerces Afrodita into marrying by dunking her in a well, while Zare first learns of the scheme to marry him off from Ida, who has overheard Dadan and Matko plotting it in the restaurant where she works. Meanwhile, Zare retrieves Zarije from the hospital where he is being kept, with the aid of a gypsy band. Grga Pitić is having problems of his own, as he wants his grandsons, including six-foot plus giant Grga Veliki, to get married.
The two reluctantly endure the wedding ceremony held at Matko's house, which Dadan refuses to postpone after the sudden apparent death of Zarije. They were not supposed to have a wedding while in mourning, but Dadan decides to delay the death announcement, so Matko and Zare hide Zarije's body in the attic, packed in ice. Zare is dismayed, since he wants to leave the place, and had hoped that the required mourning period for his beloved grandfather would give him the opportunity to get away, and thus avoid being married off against his will. Ida and Sujka provide the catering for the wedding, and Ida is upset at seeing her beloved married off to someone else. By contrast, Dadan is really enjoying himself, whether dancing to gypsy band music, bouncing on the bed with his harem, and juggling grenades. However, the bride runs away mid-ceremony, pursued by Dadan, Matko and Dadan's criminal cronies. Meanwhile, Grga Veliki is driving his father and brother to Matko's house so that they may visit Zarije's grave (Grga Pitić and Zarije are old friends). The fleeing bride then stumbles across Grga Veliki, and he stops the truck when he sees her crossing the road; he is willing to protect her from her villainous brother, and the couple fall instantly in love. Grga Pitić arrives on the scene, after his wheelchair had fallen out the back of the truck and rolled downhill, and he is delighted that Grga Veliki has found his mate. The old gangster forces Dadan, who had once worked for him, to accept the match.
The groom meanwhile conspires with Sujka and Ida to bring Dadan down a peg, and rigs the outhouse so that the seat will come apart. While the preparations for the wedding ceremony of Afrodita and Grga Veliki are being conducted, Matko and Dadan pass the time by playing dice, with Dadan cheating. Sujka comes in during the game, and serves the unsuspecting Dadan a drink spiked with something that would give him diarrhea. Furthermore, Grga Pitić apparently dies, and Dadan and Matko hide his body in the attic, where Zarije's body is also hidden. However, the two corpses soon both come back to life; they were not dead after all. They are surprised to find themselves together, as they had not seen each other for 25 years and each had thought the other was dead. During the ceremony, Dadan starts to feel uncomfortable and rushes into the outhouse ... and falls into the manure. His harem and cronies desert him, and as he tries to clean himself off on a goose, only Matko remains loyal, and he provides Dadan with a shower from the garden hose. Zare meanwhile grabs the wedding official at gunpoint and orders him to solemnize his marriage with his sweetheart, Ida, and the two sail off together on a riverboat set for Bulgaria with a fistful of cash stashed in his grandfather's accordion, the blessing of their respective grandparents and, as witnesses, a black cat and a white cat.
Cast
- Bajram Severdžan as Matko Destanov
- Srđan Todorović as Dadan Karambolo
- Branka Katić as Ida
- Florijan Ajdini as Zare Destanov
- Ljubica Adžović as Sujka
- Zabit Memedov as Zarije Destanov
- Sabri Sulejmani as Grga Pitić
- Jasar Destani as Grga Veliki
- Salija Ibraimova as Afrodita
- Stojan Sotirov as Bulgarian Customs Officer
- Predrag Laković as Priest
- Miki Manojlović as Priest
Production
In the aftermath of the worldwide success, as well as the controversy, of his previous feature, Palme d'Or-winning Underground, Kusturica was so hurt by the aggressive criticism coming from several French intellectuals that he publicly announced his retirement from movies at the age of 41.
He later changed his mind, deciding to come back with a project on Gypsy music which he originally envisioned as a documentary with a working title Musika Akrobatika. The idea further evolved and Kusturica decided to add narrative flourishes of his own, so Musika Akrobatika got transformed into a fictional feature Black Cat, White Cat.[3]
Recurring images
There are many recurring motifs throughout the film, for example a scene where a pig is devouring an old run-down Trabant, and the appearance of the titular two cats (a black one and a white one), who end up as the only witnesses to Zare and Ida's wedding.
Also, Grga Pitić is obsessed with the last line in the film Casablanca, "this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship", which he compulsively watches on his TV set and gets to say to Zarije at the end, looking at Matko washing Dadan.
Reception
Black Cat, White Cat received a positive response from critics, garnering an 85% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 34 reviews with an average score of 7/10.[4]
Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote a positive review, summing the film up as "a mad scramble through the Felliniesque realm of Mr. Kusturica's imagination". She further praised Srdjan Todorovic's portrayal of Dadan Karambolo as "a repetitive but irresistible turn" before concluding that "Mr. Kusturica so evidently adores all of the film's other characters that Black Cat, White Cat becomes a wild, warts-and-all celebration of their lives and like Fellini, Kusturica finds true grace where it's least expected and makes films utterly, uncompromisingly his own".[5]
In his review for the Los Angeles Times, Kevin Thomas refers to the film as a "raucous, knockabout comedy, a paean to love, freedom and friendship", before concluding that despite being two hours and nine minutes long, Black Cat, White Cat "gets away with it better than most over-long movies due to its beguiling rambling shaggy dog-story quality."[6]
In a generally positive review, J. Hoberman of The Village Voice refers to the film as "bravura moviemaking by any objective standard" and a "vehicle for the director's lowdown magic-realist fantasies about Romany gangsters, which has a velocity that belies its jerry-built mise-en-scène" concluding that "Black Cat, White Cat is determined to twist every character into an ideogram for vulgar humanity" while wondering if "these gypsies are a screen on which the Bosnian-born director can project his own feelings of ostracism and homelessness".[7]
Salon's Andrew O'Hehir wrote a positive review, describing the film as "manic, carnivalesque, and treating death as a minor (and temporary) inconvenience" and commends "Kusturica's convincing portrayal of his homeland as a social and architectural ruin, where everything is either falling apart or overbuilt in misbegotten grandiosity". O'Hehir concludes with "Kusturica strikes a half-ironic tone throughout this overcrowded, cacophonous masterpiece that’s almost impossible to categorize. In the tradition of Eastern European film, he’s satirizing the conventions of rural magic realism at least as much as he’s embracing them. But there’s nothing cynical or cold-hearted about Black Cat, White Cat. Like the waves of geese, pigs, goats, dogs and cats that sometimes threaten to overwhelm the human characters, it is recklessly, indescribably alive".[8]
Peter Stack of the San Francisco Chronicle praised the film's characters who "whether freakish or treacherous, come up wonderfully human."[9]
Web critic James Berardinelli praised the film as "something fresh and vibrant in an era when something as idiotic as Armageddon is the top-grossing movie of 1998 and films generally follow safe, comfortable patterns because that's what the studios' research shows that audiences want". He commended the film's "earthy feel as well as its charm that lies in it lacking the polished glaze of most big budget features although being expertly filmed", praised the performances of Bajram Severdzan and Branka Katic, and concluded that "while not a masterpiece, Kusturica's latest film is a real treat for those in search of a healthy dose of laughter set in a culture whose intricacies are rarely captured on film."[10]
Soundtrack
Original Soundtrack From The Film 'Black Cat White Cat' | |
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Soundtrack album by Various artists | |
Released | 1998 (CD) |
Genre | Soundtrack |
Length | 55:50 |
Label | Barclay |
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
Music has an important place in this picture, as it is present in almost every scene. Zarije is especially devoted to music as he's seen with the local band playing specially for him on the way from hospital and then at the fair near the lake.
- Track listing
- "Bubamara Main Version" – 3:57
- "Duj Sandale" – 2:49
- "Railway Station" – 2:33
- "Jek di Tharin II" – 3:55
- "Daddy, Don't Ever Die on a Friday" – 3:18
- "Bubamara" – 2:36
- "Daddy's Gone" – 1:07
- "Long Vehicle" – 6:01
- "Pit Bull Mixed by Pink Evolution" – 3:40
- "El Bubamara Pasa" – 3:20
- "Ja Volim Te Jos/Meine Stadt" – 3:14
- "Bubamara Tree Stump" – 0:33
- "Jekdi Tharin" – 2:42
- "Lies" – 0:30
- "Hunting" – 1:01
- "Dejo Dance" – 1:01
- "Bulgarian Dance" – 1:25
- "Bubamara Sunflower" – 3:10
- "Black Cat, White Cat" – 8:52
Other songs from the film, not included in the original soundtrack album:
- "Where Do You Go" - Performed by No Mercy (Scene at Dadan's house)
- "Nowhere Fast" - Performed by Fire Inc. (Ida is seen dancing to music video of this song)
- "Money, Money, Money" (ABBA) - Covered by Dadan
- "Ne dolazi" - Covered by Matko
- "Dunaveki vali" - Performed by music box
- "Lubenica" - Covered by Dadan
- "Jek Ditharin" - Performed by Braca Lavaci
- "Von cerena todikano svato" - Performed by Ljubica Adzovic
- "An der schönen blauen Donau" - Performed by the Belgrade Philharmonic Orchestra
- Personnel
- Vojislav Aralica – guitar, keyboards
- Saban Bajramovic – vocals
- Rade Kosmajac – keyboards
- Zoran Milosevic – accordion
- Bokan Stankovic – trumpet
References
- ↑ Kaufman, Anthony (9 September 1999). "INTERVIEW: Momentum and Emotion, Emir Kusturica's "Black Cat, White Cat"". Indiewire. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
- ↑ "Black Cat, White Cat (1999)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
- ↑ 'Black Cat, White Cat': Kusturica Returns to the Gypsy Life;New York Times, 5 September 1999
- ↑ Black Cat, White Cat;Rotten Tomatoes
- ↑ Janet Maslin (October 3, 1998). "Take Gypsies, Add the Danube And Mix Well With Jubilation". The New York Times. Retrieved November 8, 2013.
- ↑ Kevin Thomas (September 17, 1999). "'Black Cat' a Beguiling, Lighthearted Rom". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved November 8, 2013.
- ↑ J. Hoberman (September 7, 1999). "Chaos Theories". The Village Voice. Retrieved November 8, 2013.
- ↑ Andrew O'Hehir (September 23, 1999). "Black Cat, White Cat". Salon. Retrieved November 8, 2013.
- ↑ Peter Stack (September 17, 1999). "'Black Cat' Pokes Fun at Slovenian Mobsters". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved November 8, 2013.
- ↑ James Berardinelli (1999). "Black Cat, White Cat". ReelViews. Retrieved November 8, 2013.
External links
- Black Cat, White Cat at the Internet Movie Database
- Black Cat, White Cat at AllMovie
- Black Cat White Cat at Rotten Tomatoes
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