CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.2/10
18 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Mientras un tren avanza hacia el Círculo Polar Ártico, dos desconocidos comparten un viaje que cambiará su perspectiva de la vida.Mientras un tren avanza hacia el Círculo Polar Ártico, dos desconocidos comparten un viaje que cambiará su perspectiva de la vida.Mientras un tren avanza hacia el Círculo Polar Ártico, dos desconocidos comparten un viaje que cambiará su perspectiva de la vida.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 20 premios ganados y 26 nominaciones en total
Yura Borisov
- Lyokha
- (as Yuriy Borisov)
Yuliya Aug
- Natalia
- (as Julia Aug)
Stasya Khomeriki-Grankovskaya
- Juhlavieras
- (as Stasya Grankovskaya)
Natalya Drozd
- Juhlavieras
- (as Natalia Drozd-Makan)
Opiniones destacadas
A Finnish romance of sorts about a woman whose first negative impressions of her fellow train compartment passenger make way for warmer feelings as she gets to know him.
I think "Compartment No. 6" is a lot about the importance of being open to new experiences and the rashness inherent in instantly forming judgements about people. The female protagonist in this movie studies anthropology because she feels like knowing our history is important to understanding who we are now. But is it really? In a cultural and sociological sense, probably. But at the individual level, when does attachment to the past interfere with living in the present?
There's a great scene in this movie that takes place after a fellow Finn, a tall strapping guy with a guitar no less, is crooning songs to the woman as he crashes in their compartment for a bit, and she looks out the window to see the off-kilter Russian who has set her on edge standing out on the train platform punching and kicking snowballs. In that moment, we get what she's feeling, because we feel it to. Yeah, the Finnish guy is good looking and "safe," but he's also boring. The Russian guy is weird and maybe crazy, but he's different, and sometimes different is exactly what you need.
Grade: A-
I think "Compartment No. 6" is a lot about the importance of being open to new experiences and the rashness inherent in instantly forming judgements about people. The female protagonist in this movie studies anthropology because she feels like knowing our history is important to understanding who we are now. But is it really? In a cultural and sociological sense, probably. But at the individual level, when does attachment to the past interfere with living in the present?
There's a great scene in this movie that takes place after a fellow Finn, a tall strapping guy with a guitar no less, is crooning songs to the woman as he crashes in their compartment for a bit, and she looks out the window to see the off-kilter Russian who has set her on edge standing out on the train platform punching and kicking snowballs. In that moment, we get what she's feeling, because we feel it to. Yeah, the Finnish guy is good looking and "safe," but he's also boring. The Russian guy is weird and maybe crazy, but he's different, and sometimes different is exactly what you need.
Grade: A-
Only finnish director that has won that before this was Aki Kaurismäki with The Man Without a Past 2002.
So i was very excited to see this one.
I'm always little skeptical with finnish movies.
But this ended up being very delightful movie.
Very good and beautiful story about finnish woman who travels across Russia to see petroglyphs in Murmansk.
Main part of movie is when she travels by train.
She meets russian guy and they are completely different peoples.
Their unique friendship develops beautifully.
There are also many other very different peoples who she meets in her journey.
Good and little less good peoples.
This movie has many sweet and funny moments in it.
It's mostly spoken in russian but it was very fun to hear finnish language in it too.
Very good performances from two leads definitely.
I also heard that this was chosen to be Finland's Oscar runner for foreign category.
So best of luck with that too.
So i was very excited to see this one.
I'm always little skeptical with finnish movies.
But this ended up being very delightful movie.
Very good and beautiful story about finnish woman who travels across Russia to see petroglyphs in Murmansk.
Main part of movie is when she travels by train.
She meets russian guy and they are completely different peoples.
Their unique friendship develops beautifully.
There are also many other very different peoples who she meets in her journey.
Good and little less good peoples.
This movie has many sweet and funny moments in it.
It's mostly spoken in russian but it was very fun to hear finnish language in it too.
Very good performances from two leads definitely.
I also heard that this was chosen to be Finland's Oscar runner for foreign category.
So best of luck with that too.
Let's put one thing to rest. Anywhere at all where there are night trains, the sexes are mixed. Even in Muslim countries - the night sleepers in Morocco, for example, are not single sex cabins. Not knowing this is not a reason for giving low marks just because they find the situation unbelievable!
As for relationships in the film, ideas of distance and travel played a huge part. The further from Moscow, the more the lesbian lover receded and rejected. But the nearer to the petroglyphs, the deeper the bond between the ill matched compartment mates became.
However, the script didn't go overboard - there was no sentimentality in the refusal to swap addresses.
90s Russia was portrayed perfectly. Not yet a consumer society, there were hangovers from the communist times, notably in the appalling service offered on hotels and restaurants as well as the train itself.
As a speaker of (very poor) Finnish, I loved the joke about the terrible swear word in that language that framed the narrative on the train. It means a lot more than the tame subtitled translation that was offered.
I loved this film. The actors were perfect as were the locations. I personally enjoy train journeys and would now want to go on this one.
As for relationships in the film, ideas of distance and travel played a huge part. The further from Moscow, the more the lesbian lover receded and rejected. But the nearer to the petroglyphs, the deeper the bond between the ill matched compartment mates became.
However, the script didn't go overboard - there was no sentimentality in the refusal to swap addresses.
90s Russia was portrayed perfectly. Not yet a consumer society, there were hangovers from the communist times, notably in the appalling service offered on hotels and restaurants as well as the train itself.
As a speaker of (very poor) Finnish, I loved the joke about the terrible swear word in that language that framed the narrative on the train. It means a lot more than the tame subtitled translation that was offered.
I loved this film. The actors were perfect as were the locations. I personally enjoy train journeys and would now want to go on this one.
Aah, the pleasures of traveling by long distance train! Admiring the scenery from the compartment window, enjoying nice meals in the restaurant car, and dozing off at night to the clickety-click sound of the wheels.
Everybody who once took a long distance sleeper knows the reality is different. Those people will enjoy this film. One of the drawbacks of international trains is the company in the compartment to which you have been assigned. Finnish student Laura has bad luck, having to share hers with a drunken Russian miner who asks without much ado if she is a prostitute.
During the long ride from Moscow to the northern city of Murmansk the two travel companions get to know each other better, and even learn to appreciate each other. This sounds a bit cheesy, but it isn't. Laura is dissapointed and lonely: her lover couldn't accompany her on the trip and reacts coolly to her phone calls. When, during a long stopover, she has to choose between the company of her rude but adventurous travel companion or no company at all, the choice is a no-brainer.
An extra attraction is that the movie takes place in the not-so distant past. It is the pre-internet era of pay phones and Walkmans. This is no major issue in the film, but it explains why Laura takes the train instead of flying.
There's a bit of 'Lost in Translation' in this film, a bit of 'Before Sunrise' and a bit of 'Ma nuit chez Maude'. Plus: it's Russia, so everything is nicely rough-edged and vodka-soaked. Na zdorovie!
Everybody who once took a long distance sleeper knows the reality is different. Those people will enjoy this film. One of the drawbacks of international trains is the company in the compartment to which you have been assigned. Finnish student Laura has bad luck, having to share hers with a drunken Russian miner who asks without much ado if she is a prostitute.
During the long ride from Moscow to the northern city of Murmansk the two travel companions get to know each other better, and even learn to appreciate each other. This sounds a bit cheesy, but it isn't. Laura is dissapointed and lonely: her lover couldn't accompany her on the trip and reacts coolly to her phone calls. When, during a long stopover, she has to choose between the company of her rude but adventurous travel companion or no company at all, the choice is a no-brainer.
An extra attraction is that the movie takes place in the not-so distant past. It is the pre-internet era of pay phones and Walkmans. This is no major issue in the film, but it explains why Laura takes the train instead of flying.
There's a bit of 'Lost in Translation' in this film, a bit of 'Before Sunrise' and a bit of 'Ma nuit chez Maude'. Plus: it's Russia, so everything is nicely rough-edged and vodka-soaked. Na zdorovie!
What would you do, in a carriage made for four, there's just you and a drunk guy, and he thinks that you're a whore, there's nowhere to run or hide, this will not be a great ride, but you're stoic and heroic, you will take it in your stride.
A wonderful story, as Laura and Ljoha, two strangers on a train, gradually allow the ice that encapsulates us all to thaw, defrost, puddle and merge, creating a bond that was as distant as the poles when they first encountered each other at the beginning of their journey from Moscow to Murmansk. A story that proves what a catalyst we can be to each other when the barriers are removed to reveal the compassionate and emotional beings we are deep inside.
A wonderful story, as Laura and Ljoha, two strangers on a train, gradually allow the ice that encapsulates us all to thaw, defrost, puddle and merge, creating a bond that was as distant as the poles when they first encountered each other at the beginning of their journey from Moscow to Murmansk. A story that proves what a catalyst we can be to each other when the barriers are removed to reveal the compassionate and emotional beings we are deep inside.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe film crew had to smuggle some of the negatives out of Russia to have them developed, as they were shot in the dark and required a special process. Originally set to be sent to Budapest, the negatives could not be delivered due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As development was not possible in Russia and the law doesn't allow for transporting film negatives out of the country, the crew had to resort to smuggling at the border of Finland and Russia.
- ErroresThe train with the main characters arrives in St. Petesburg Vitebsky railway station and then keeps going. In real life, this station is terminal and none of the trains can continue to move in the same direction.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Compartment Number 6
- Locaciones de filmación
- St Petersburg-Vitebsky, San Petersburgo, Rusia(railway station)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- EUR 2,230,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 205,843
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 9,514
- 30 ene 2022
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 2,669,654
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 47 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1
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