In a small, snow-covered town in Belarus, a former English teacher manages to scrape a living distributing leaflets to people’s letterboxes. In the evening, he joins his wife in their dingy apartment, and together they reminisce about their son, a student in Minsk they rarely see. Possibly their only excitement of the week is buying a lottery ticket, which, for a few seconds, gives them a chance to dream. Yuliya Shatun’s camera, at first oddly focused on the white expanses along every roadside, then begins to scrutinise the teacher in his comings and goings – a precise recording with, however, a hint of the moroseness of a terrain so rare in today’s cinema. The teacher has stoically adapted to a degenerate world and a life fuelled by stifled shame. An odour of neglect wafts between the apartment blocks, the uttered words and the background noise of the television. A certain irony floats in the air too, and it needs Yuliya Shatun’s patience to grasp and take responsibility for it.
Title | Tomorrow |
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Year | 2017 |
Genre | Drama |
Country | Belarus |
Studio | |
Cast | Anatoliy Shatun, Oksana Shatun, Alexey Shatun, Nikita Alexandrov, Yuliya Shatun, Yana Taratun |
Crew | Yuliya Shatun (Director), Yuliya Shatun (Editor), Yuliya Shatun (Screenplay), Nikita Alexandrov (Director of Photography), Yuliya Shatun (Producer), Max Gavrilenko (Sound) |
Keyword | |
Release | Nov 09, 2017 |
Runtime | 75 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb | 5.70 / 10 by 3 users |
Popularity | 1 |
Budget | 0 |
Revenue | 0 |
Language | беларуская мова, Pусский |