Climbing the 'Mountains'
Making of Russia's Oscar-nominated film proved to be a battle itself.
© Kevin Thomas, "Los Angeles Times", Fevruary 13, 1997
Since Sergei Bodrov's "Prisoner of the Mountains," an inspired transposition of
a Tolstoy story to the Chechen conflict, won the jury and audience prizes at
Cannes, it has gone on to become nominated for the best foreign language Oscar
as Russia's official entry. It is also almost certainly the only film to be
screened in both Russia's Parliament and, thanks to the recommendation of poet
Yevgeny Yevtushenko, the Library of Congress.
"Prisoner of the Mountains," an antiwar tale in which a young Russian soldier
(Sergei Bodrov Jr.) becomes caught up in a risky prisoner exchange involving
Chechens and Russians, opens Friday (at the Westside Pavilion, the Sunset 5 and
the Town Center 4, South Coast Plaza). The film, being released by Orion, was
No. 1 at the box office last summer in Russia, where it is still playing.
Bodrov said that at first he did not want to use his son, who is very affecting
in the film, in the role of the Russian soldier.
"He was working as my assistant, and it was a last-minute decision because I
couldn't find a good young professional actor to play the role," Bodrov said.
"He has said that I was awful to work with and that he would never work with me
again! I was tough with him, sometimes too much! Yes, I was happy with his work
but worried what he would do next. But I've created a monster! He's the star of
'Look,' the most popular TV show in Russia."
Yet it is clear that Bodrov, 48, is proud of his son, 24, who holds degrees in
art history from Moscow State University.
Slim and handsome enough to be a movie star himself, Bodrov talked while sitting
in his backyard in Venice, Calif., where he and his wife, former San Francisco
photographer Carolyn Cavallero, have lived for nearly three years (they divide
their time between the United States and Russia).
The vivacious Cavallero, who is hoping to direct her own film, "Garden of Eden,"
set in San Francisco in the late '60s, met Bodrov at the San Francisco Film
Festival in 1990, where his "Freedom Is Paradise," about a 13-year-old runaway,
was shown. "Both of us were divorced, and we got married right away and went off
to Moscow. I told her, 'We don't have time to get to know each other.'"
When independent filmmaker Alexandre Rockwell asked Bodrov to collaborate on the
script for "Somebody to Love," last year's amusing and heart-tugging valentine
to Rosie Perez, Bodrov decided that he should take his salary "to buy a piece of
America."
He said "Prisoner of the Mountains" is based on a 150-year-old story written for
kids. "A few years ago, when I was a professor at the Moscow Film School I had a
student, Boris Giller, who became a good businessman. He came to me and said, 'I
was thinking what a wonderful film this story would make.' It's a universal
story." Giller became the film's co-producer and one of Bodrov's collaborators
on the script.
"I started to work with a Muslim, Arif Aliev, in 1994, because his point of view
was important to me. Shooting was an amazing experience. We shot in a remote
village, Arecha, in the tiny republic of Dagestan, along the border with
Chechnya. In Dagestan, there are 36 Muslim nations speaking 36 different
languages, and they don't understand each other. It was two hours by foot from
the nearest town. There was no plumbing, no running water, no Holiday Inn and
electricity only sometimes.
"I think I got incredible stuff, but it was tough, maybe the most difficult film
I ever made." Bodrov risked coming to Arecha not having cast the pivotal role of
a 12-year-old Muslim girl, with whom Bodrov Jr.'s soldier strikes up a
friendship. "I knew I needed a local girl, she had to be of this culture - I
couldn't fake it." There he discovered the remarkably poised little Susanna
Mekhralieva.
Oddly enough, it was Mekhralieva who innocently became the cause of the one
serious incident, near the end of shooting. "We had hired security people,"
Bodrov said. "We were in a dangerous area, with drug trafficking and a war going
on nearby. We had hired this group of professional wrestlers from the nearest
town to Arecha--they are like world champions--and somebody told their leader
that this wonderful 12-year-old girl was getting a little bit more money than he
did--maybe $200 more. I paid my son $1,000, and I think I paid the girl the
same.
"So this guy says, 'You're not leaving. You really insulted me. You paid her
more.' It was not about money but pride and honor. It was a 24-hour negotiation,
back and forth, but I wasn't scared. It did become a big scandal. It was half my
fault, because you have to know the psychology and mentality of such
situations."
When Bodrov first read Tolstoy's "Prisoner of the Caucasus," he was being raised
by his grandparents near Vladivostok. "I had a wonderful, unbelievable
childhood," he said. "I was so blessed. My grandparents were doctors, and my
mother was off to medical school."
He joined her and his stepfather in Moscow when he was 12. As an adult, he
finally met his natural father, whom his mother divorced when Bodrov was 3 and
whom he describes as "a great guy. He was this big, blond guy. He was a
construction boss, a hard-working, 24-hours-around-the-clock tough, tough guy.
Now that he's retired, he writes poetry and goes to museums." (Married three
times himself, Bodrov has a 10-year-old daughter, studying music in Kazakstan.)
Bodrov currently has lots of projects in mind and said that "I think I have to
make a Russian 'Godfather,' about the present-day Russian Mafia in America."
Last year at the Salonika Film Festival, Bodrov participated in a press
conference with Jan Sverak, director of the official Czech Oscar entry "Kolya,"
and like "Prisoner of the Mountains," a strong contender for the best foreign
language film Academy Award. "Jan said, 'I make my movies because I love them.'
I had the advantage of following him, so it was easy for me to say, 'I make my
movies because I don't like them.' But in a way it's true: You know they always
could be better."
Submitted by Anni Nikolova
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