Kontroll
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article is about the 2003 Hungarian film entitled Kontroll. For the upcoming film about Ian Curtis and Joy Division, see Control: The Ian Curtis Film. For other meanings of the word - see Control (disambiguation).
Kontroll | |
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Kontroll film poster |
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Directed by | Nimród Antal |
Produced by | Tamás Hutlassa |
Written by | Jim Adler Nimród Antal |
Starring | Sándor Csányi Zoltán Mucsi |
Distributed by | ThinkFilm |
Release date(s) | 20 November 2003 (Hungary) |
Running time | 105 min. |
Language | Hungarian |
Budget | US$500,000 |
IMDb profile |
Kontroll is a Hungarian film released to theatres in 2003. Shown internationally, mainly in art house theatres, the film is a darkly comic thriller set on the Budapest Metro.
"Kontroll" in Hungarian refers to the act of ticket inspectors checking to ensure a rider has paid their fare. The story revolves around the ticket inspectors, riders, and a possible killer.
The film was written and directed by Nimród Antal and starred Sándor Csányi, Zoltán Mucsi, and Csaba Pindroch. The film was entered in a number of film festivals in Europe and North America. It won the Gold Hugo Award at the Chicago International Film Festival.
Antal used the same idea in his music video Szandál for the rock band Warpigs.
[edit] Plot
The main character of the story is Bulcsú (Sándor Csányi), who spends his life in the Metro of Budapest, checking tickets. He eats and sleeps under the ground, and never sees the sunlight. He is a member of a ticket inspector team (the others are played by Zoltán Mucsi, Csaba Pindroch and Sándor Badár). His team struggles with checking riders' tickets because few people do not hate them. Within teams, there is a conflict between Bulcsú's team and another team. Bulcsú is challeneged to a "rail running" by this other team's leader. "Rail running" is an event, similar to the running of the bulls. Once the last passenger train leaves the station, the contenders must run through the tunnels and exit before the last train, which does not stop at any station. Bulcsú exits the tunnel first and with his opponent close behind, Bulcsú pulls him off the track before the train runs him over. While Bulcsú is on a ticket inspection, he meets a woman, Sofie(Eszter Balla), who is wearing a "bear suit" and never buys a ticket for the metro. Bulcsú falls in love with Sofie, and later discovers that she is the daughter of his good friend Béla, a metro driver. Béla drinks and used to drive trains on the surface until he crashed a train due to lack of braking distance. As the events occur, several deaths occur. At first they are thought, by the characters, to be suicidal jumpers. However, to the audiance, and later Bulcsú, the deaths are seen to be caused by a person pushing each victim onto the tracks, right before a train comes. The identity of the murderer is never known.
When Bulcsú is chasing a troublesome passenger, nicknamed "Bootsie", the murderer pushes Bootsie in front of a train. Bulcsú is suspected of the crime which leads to him quitting his job. While brooding and in despair he is attacked by the murderer. He has to run for his life on the rails. In the end, the train apparently hits the murderer and Bulcsú leaves the underground hand in hand with Sofie.
One interpretation of the final death race between Bulcsú and the murderer is that the murderer is in fact Bulcsú himself, and that the last "rail run" is a symbolic race where the evil Bulcsú perishes while the good Bulcsú survives. Other interpretations suggest the killer is actually one of the other metro workers, or merely the creation of Bulcsú's imagination. The final scene, in which Bulcsú and Sofie ride the escalator up to the outside world, can be interpreted literally, or as a metaphorical ascension, as he is guided up a stairway suffused by a light from above by an angelic-looking character with wings. The director has stated Andrei Tarkovsky's Solaris to have been an inspiration for the film.
- Tagline: There's no such thing as a free ride.
[edit] External links
- Official site
- Kontroll at the Internet Movie Database
- Roger Ebert - Review of Kontroll.
- Kontroll at the Cannes Film Festival
- Kontroll at the Boston Film Festival
- Kontroll at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Film Festival
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