- Actors: Adam Bakri, María Valverde
- Director: Asif Kapadia
- Format: Color, NTSC, Widescreen
- Language: English
- Region: Region 1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Not Rated
- Studio: MPI HOME VIDEO
- DVD Release Date: March 21, 2017
- Run Time: 101 minutes
There
is something very old fashioned about Ali
and Nino, Asif Kapadia’s sprawling epic based on the true star-crossed
romance between a Muslim Azerbaijani man and a Christian woman from Georgia
during World War I. This classic style of filmmaking could have been nostalgic,
but instead ends up feeling a bit stale. Though there was certainly potential
for inserting modern relevance into the story, especially given the unity
between Christian and Muslim characters, Kapadia’s film stays tied to the past
in a way that is almost obtuse.
Prior to the
start of World War I, Ali (Adam Bakri) and Nino (María Valverde) are teenagers
both living in the city of Baku, despite being from different cultures. At the
time Azerbaijan was a part of the Russian Empire, and the start of the war
pulled Ali into the conflict. The Russian surrender then exposed the Baku
people to the attacks of the Bolsheviks, further complicating the lives of Ali
and Nino.
The difficulties
brought by the war are actually less of a hindrance to the romance between Ali
and Nino than other factors. Even their religious differences are not as much
of a problem as one might expect from the initial premise and modern political parallels.
The larger issues come from far more common situations involving jealousy, when
a friend of Nino’s parents (Mandy Patinkin and Connie Nielson) abducts her in
an effort to take Nino as his own bride. Even though Ali rescues her in time,
Nino’s reputation is damaged by the possibility that she was raped. Ali does
not care about her tarnished image, but the pair still must elope in the
secluded Persian countryside to avoid the controversy and objections of their
parents.
Nino must also
adjust to the lifestyle adjustment, going from being a Western woman to an
Eastern bride. Unable to leave the home uncovered, and largely treated like a
foreigner in her own home, Nino eventually convinces Ali to move them back to
civilization. They go from having cultural difficulties to problems finding
peace in a world at war. Rather than giving the lovers at the center of this
romance just one problem, the narrative seems to have an endless supply of
struggles to force upon them. While it creates an ever-changing landscape, the
film also lacks a cohesive theme to carry through each section.
The romance and
period drama of the film has all of the makings of a classic, but it feels a
bit too emotionally detached to ever be truly effective. Although all of the
pieces are there, the story just seems to go through the motions. Whether it is
a lack of chemistry between the leads or simply an unsentimental screenplay, we
never truly feel the stakes of their romance. Intellectually, the film doesn’t
have much to say, and emotionally it feels more perfunctory than personal.
The DVD release
is without special features.
Entertainment Value:
5/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 6/10
Historical
Significance: 4/10
Special Features: 0/10
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