The
Thief Movie Review:
The
Thief is a Russian film from a couple of years ago. The
title has a few shades of meaning, as "the thief" is not
merely a swindler of material items, but also of happiness,
stability and trust.
The
movie takes place sometime after World War II. A mother,
Katya, and her young son, Sanya, travel about, with seemingly
no home or any other place to go or people to stay with.
Katya's husband and Sanya's father was killed in action
before Sanya was born. One day, Toljan, a solider, enters
the train they are taking and almost deliberately moves
into the lives of these two people. In almost no time, they
masquerade as husband and wife with child, and they move
into a cheap boarding house. Later on, however, he uproots
everybody without notice or delay. It is at this point where
we learn the secret; he is a fraud. He is not really a solider,
and has stolen the identity for an unknown reason; he also
steals things from the place in which he is just about ready
to leave. He doesn't seem to have to do this; he must just
lack responsibility. In any case, his criminal activity
affects Katya and Sanya, as they, too, are not able to settle
in any one place for long, and he expects them to remain
with him.

'The
thief' is quite a nasty and cunning character. He represents
machismo to the nth degree. He is a brute, and is willing
to teach Sanya lessons in brutish behaviour, especially
in a chilling moment when the kid sees him push his mother
around, and instinctively threatens him with a knife, only
to have the jerk actually dare him to use it. Actually,
I don't know if "dare" is the right word; I think he wants
comforting evidence that Sanya is a chip off the old block
at least in attitude. He is also a bit of a womanizer as
well, which comes as no surprise. Just as he easily seduces
the mother, he later eases his way into another woman's
affections, and, in one shot, just to show that he is such
a charming stud, he gives all the women in the building
chocolate.
Sanya
is very confused. He needs a father figure, and this man
is the closest thing he's got. But the kid knows two things,
he is not his real dad, and this fake dad is a complete
idiot. Often the kid acts as if he hates the guy, but there
are a number of scenes where, just like many little boys,
he is fascinated by some of the stuff he is told by him.
A good example is when Toljan says that he is, in fact,
one of Stalin's sons (there is a nice shot of the kid regarding
a propagandist painting of Stalin and some children after
being told this fact), and that it is their little secret.
But there are moments in which Sanya dreams of his father,
who seems to suggest that he ought to avenge his father
somehow, and we all know, then that something will happen
between Sanya and Toljan.
Katya
is a mystery to me, because I really don't know what she
sees in him. For much of the film, it seems to be all about
sex. Later on, we think that she will leave, and she is
certainly no longer enamoured of him, yet she never quite
gets separated from him, except near the climax, where separation
may very well occur, but not by choice.
I
will give this movie three stars, since much of the material
involving Sanya and Toljan is very interesting. To be sure,
the story is very melodramatic, and sometimes it goes a
little too far over the top. The final sequence is most
definitely the worst, as, years later, he encounters Toljan.
His reactions to this (a shadow of a earlier scene) gets
a bad laugh from me, and his subsequent actions are all
too typical. The beginning of the film is equally over the
top. I do not know how often a man and a woman screwing
each other against the wall after only meeting hours earlier,
unless they were drunk and met at a bar. I doubt that it
happens too often on the train, but then what do I know
about life?
But
the most glaring flaw, in my view, is the fact that the
director deliberately butchered his own ending. I just found
out from the Internet Movie Database that the ending, in
the original Russian version, is substantially different,
and about 15 minutes longer. From what I read, the ending
seems to be both more melodramatic and more ironic, and
I think that it is unfair for the director to feel that
somehow we non-Russians wouldn't understand. I hope that
there is a Directors' Cut, just so we will have returned
to us the spoils of this cinematic theft.
David
Macdonald
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