Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn aquatic nymph falls obsessively in love with a man and wants to have him with her forever in her underwater kingdom, where she is doomed to spend eternity.An aquatic nymph falls obsessively in love with a man and wants to have him with her forever in her underwater kingdom, where she is doomed to spend eternity.An aquatic nymph falls obsessively in love with a man and wants to have him with her forever in her underwater kingdom, where she is doomed to spend eternity.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
Cecile Plage
- Olga
- (as Sesil Plezhe)
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Im rating this movie 8/10 coz it is really underrated for all the effort and great visual effects the creators have put in it. 4 out if ten?! Unfair and unappreciated !
So we in the western world see mermaids as beautiful sea women who have the tail of a fish. Keep in mind that this is a foreign film, and the mermaids of Russian and Ukrainian lore are not the same as what we know. The film has a decent plot but there isn't exactly a lot of logic behind it. The "mermaid" is more like a ghost, because the woman died centuries ago (so now it's a spirit I guess?). Being a Russian film, the dubbing is pretty atrocious. It's almost laughable that they don't even attempt to try and match the mouths with the words. In all its a decent late night flick, but not one you wanna watch more than once.
Let's start with the badly translated title. Where's the mermaid? There isn't one. The title character is a rusalka, not a mermaid in any western understanding of the word. Rusalki are the damned souls of girls who commited suicide by drowning, typically because they were pregnant out of wedlock and abandoned or rejected by the father. Such a girl becomes a rotting half-fish, half-woman, hideous in appearance, inhabiting ponds and rivers (not the ocean), who tries to lure young men to their death. They can shape-shift to appear beautiful or take the form of a living person. They are vengeful, evil, capable of sorcery, and dangerous. Don't think Ariel in a clamshell bra. Think carp zombies.
There. Does that help?
Marina is engaged to Roma, a competitive swimmer. Roma and his sister Olga lost their mother at an early age, supposedly to drowning. But as you see in the opening scene, she was actually killed by a rusalka at their lakeside dacha (summer house). The widowed father, who has had at best a distant relationship with his children ever since, unexpectedly gifts the dacha to Roma and Marina as a wedding gift, telling them to sell it and take the money. Instead, Marina wants to fix it up and keep it. But the rusalka has not gone away, and now casts her eye on Roma...
Visually, "The Rusalka: Lake of the Dead" (to give it its proper translation) excels. It is rich in old-fashioned atmosphere: mist on the lake, moon through clouds, candlelight in the old banya (wooden sauna), a lush Russian forest.
Contrary to what some reviewers found, the storyline is perfectly coherent. There are a handful of cultural references that Russians will understand but are not explained for the benefit of westerners (such as a shout-out to Karamzin's "Poor Liza").
But these do not pose a problem as long as you understand that a rusalka is not a mermaid.
There. Does that help?
Marina is engaged to Roma, a competitive swimmer. Roma and his sister Olga lost their mother at an early age, supposedly to drowning. But as you see in the opening scene, she was actually killed by a rusalka at their lakeside dacha (summer house). The widowed father, who has had at best a distant relationship with his children ever since, unexpectedly gifts the dacha to Roma and Marina as a wedding gift, telling them to sell it and take the money. Instead, Marina wants to fix it up and keep it. But the rusalka has not gone away, and now casts her eye on Roma...
Visually, "The Rusalka: Lake of the Dead" (to give it its proper translation) excels. It is rich in old-fashioned atmosphere: mist on the lake, moon through clouds, candlelight in the old banya (wooden sauna), a lush Russian forest.
Contrary to what some reviewers found, the storyline is perfectly coherent. There are a handful of cultural references that Russians will understand but are not explained for the benefit of westerners (such as a shout-out to Karamzin's "Poor Liza").
But these do not pose a problem as long as you understand that a rusalka is not a mermaid.
There is not an awful lot to add to what has already been said very well. Really loved the concept to 'The Mermaid: Lake of the Dead' and that it was loosely based on 'Rusalka'. Absolutely love Russian film, both live action and animation of which there are classics in both of all decades and genres/styles. Likewise with Russian folk tales, and there are many timeless ones out there. It also looked and sounded good.
Part of me was a little disappointed watching 'The Mermaid: Lake of the Dead'. Not because of it being awful, actually don't it is that at all, but because there was room for it to be so much more than it turned out to be. It is nowhere near close to being a waste of time but it had potential to be great and it just wasn't. Instead of falling into either extreme of loving or hating 'The Mermaid: Lake of the Dead', for me it was one of those films that left me mixed and where there was a lot of pondering needed to sum up my thoughts on it.
Will start with the good with 'The Mermaid: Lake of the Dead'. Much of the film looks quite good, with locations being a mix of beautifully dark and charming and the photography has a good deal of atmosphere. As does the audio which unsettled without being obvious and fitted tonally and in placement. There is an eerie tension and the mermaid is both ethereal and creepy.
Viktoriya Agalakova is a heartfelt Marina and Sofia Shidlovskaya enchants and chills. The visual acting is better than average.
It is such a shame however 'The Mermaid: Lake of the Dead' has too many short-comings too on top of those major strengths. While the visual acting was not an issue, the same cannot be said for the dubbing which had nowhere near the same amount of emotion seen on screen, didn't fit (Ilya came over as an irritating character as a result) and it sounds awkward. It actually would have been better just having it said entirely in Russian and having subtitles. There was an eerie, dark eerie tension and heart in much of the film but towards the end the logic becomes sloppy to the point of ridiculousness and the finale was impossible to take seriously, pure nonsense. Parts are repetitive too and in a predictable way too.
Do agree too about the jump scares. Excessive in number and use, added absolutely nothing, none of them were surprising, none of them were scary, they were just cheap and predictable and just cheapened an atmosphere that was already quite effective without them. The special effects looked as though they were made in a rush and as an afterthought, didn't see the need for them here (am seeing a pattern here, one of pointlessness regarding a few components).
A mixed bag overall. A fair bit impressed but there were frustrations too that could easily have been avoided. 5/10
Part of me was a little disappointed watching 'The Mermaid: Lake of the Dead'. Not because of it being awful, actually don't it is that at all, but because there was room for it to be so much more than it turned out to be. It is nowhere near close to being a waste of time but it had potential to be great and it just wasn't. Instead of falling into either extreme of loving or hating 'The Mermaid: Lake of the Dead', for me it was one of those films that left me mixed and where there was a lot of pondering needed to sum up my thoughts on it.
Will start with the good with 'The Mermaid: Lake of the Dead'. Much of the film looks quite good, with locations being a mix of beautifully dark and charming and the photography has a good deal of atmosphere. As does the audio which unsettled without being obvious and fitted tonally and in placement. There is an eerie tension and the mermaid is both ethereal and creepy.
Viktoriya Agalakova is a heartfelt Marina and Sofia Shidlovskaya enchants and chills. The visual acting is better than average.
It is such a shame however 'The Mermaid: Lake of the Dead' has too many short-comings too on top of those major strengths. While the visual acting was not an issue, the same cannot be said for the dubbing which had nowhere near the same amount of emotion seen on screen, didn't fit (Ilya came over as an irritating character as a result) and it sounds awkward. It actually would have been better just having it said entirely in Russian and having subtitles. There was an eerie, dark eerie tension and heart in much of the film but towards the end the logic becomes sloppy to the point of ridiculousness and the finale was impossible to take seriously, pure nonsense. Parts are repetitive too and in a predictable way too.
Do agree too about the jump scares. Excessive in number and use, added absolutely nothing, none of them were surprising, none of them were scary, they were just cheap and predictable and just cheapened an atmosphere that was already quite effective without them. The special effects looked as though they were made in a rush and as an afterthought, didn't see the need for them here (am seeing a pattern here, one of pointlessness regarding a few components).
A mixed bag overall. A fair bit impressed but there were frustrations too that could easily have been avoided. 5/10
Poor script, poor acting, poor end. No logic in the story. Story doesn't fit reality in a logical way. Too many predictable scare jumps, many if them too obvious.
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- AnecdotesBoth main protagonists' names are water-related. Roma Kitaev is nicknamed by his friends as "Kit", which means "whale" in Russian; His bride's name is Marina, from the Latin word "Marinus", which translates as "of the sea".
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Mermaid: The Lake of the Dead
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 3 741 098 $ US
- Durée1 heure 27 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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