4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days

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4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days
4 luni, 3 săptămâni şi 2 zile
Directed by Cristian Mungiu
Produced by Cristian Mungiu
Oleg Mutu
Written by Cristian Mungiu
Starring Adi Carauleanu
Luminiţa Gheorghiu
Mădălina Ghiţescu
Vlad Ivanov
Anamaria Marinca
Alexandru Potocean
Laura Vasiliu
Cinematography Oleg Mutu
Editing by Dana Bunescu
Distributed by BAC Films
Release date(s) Flag of France 17 May 2007 (Cannes)
Flag of Romania 1 June 2007 (TIFF)
Flag of Poland 12 October 2007
Flag of Australia 18 October 2007[1]
Flag of the United Kingdom 4 January 2008
Flag of Hungary 10 January 2008
Flag of the United States 25 January 2008
Running time 113 min.
Country Romania
Language Romanian
Budget €600,000
Official website
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days (Romanian: 4 luni, 3 săptămâni şi 2 zile) is a 2007 Romanian film, written and directed by Cristian Mungiu. It won the Palme d'Or and the FIPRESCI Award at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival.[2]

The film is set in Communist Romania in the final years of the Nicolae Ceauşescu era. It tells the story of two students, roommates in the university dormitory, who try to arrange an illegal abortion.

After making its worldwide debut at Cannes, the film made its Romanian debut on June 1, 2007, at the Transilvania International Film Festival.

Contents

[edit] Plot

The film follows the story of Otilia Mihartescu (Anamaria Marinca) and Gabriela 'Găbiţa' Dragut (Laura Vasiliu), two university friends in Bucharest, Romania. The film is set in 1987,[3] one of the last years of the Ceauşescu regime. When Găbiţa falls pregnant, the two girls arrange a meeting with Mr. Bebe (Vlad Ivanov) in a hotel, where he is to perform an illegal abortion (Communist Romania had a natalist policy against abortion).

At a college dorm Gabriela and Otilia go over the items they need for the following day, and as Gabriela nervously sits and waits in the room, Otilia barters and buys soap, cigarettes, etc. from school friends. Afterwards, Otilia takes a bus to visit her boyfriend Adi, from whom she borrows money. Adi asks Otilia to visit his family that night, as it is his mother's birthday, and to buy flowers on the way, to which Otilia initially declines, but she relents after Adi becomes visibly upset.

Otilia heads to a hotel where Gabriela has booked a room, only to be informed by an unfriendly receptionist that there is no reservation under Gabriela's last name. Otilia goes to another hotel, and after much begging and haggling is able to book a room at an expensive rate. Afterwards Otilia goes to a rendezvous point to meet with Mr. Bebe, although he had been told by Gabriela that Otilia was her sister, and Mr. Bebe grows angry upon hearing that Gabriela is not at the planned hotel, and that he has to leave his ID at the front desk, fearing that the arrangement might be a police trap.

Mr. Bebe discovers that Gabriela's claim that her pregnancy was in its third month is a lie; in fact, it has been four months, three weeks, and two days. After threatening to leave when he makes it clear that he wanted sexual favors, and not just money, in exchange for the abortion, Mr. Bebe blackmails both Otilia and Gabriela into having sex with him in exchange for the abortion.

Mr. Bebe then performs the abortion by injecting a probe and some fluids into Gabriela, and leaves Otilia instructions on how to dispose of the fetus when it comes out. Otilia is visibly exasperated by Gabriela's lies, yet continues to help her and care for her.

Otilia leaves Gabriela at the hotel to go to Adi's mother's birthday, she's still visibly disturbed but stays and has dinner with Adi's mother's friends, which are mostly doctors. They all talk about trivial things while Otilia and Adi remain silent, one of the guests then starts talking about lost values and respect to elders when Otilia starts smoking in front of Adi's parents, which prompts Adi to bring the champagne in order to get the party over with. Adi and Otilia then go to his room where Otilia tells him about Gabriela's abortion, they then start talking about what would happen if it was Otilia that was pregnant since Adi seems to be against abortions. After fighting with Adi, Otilia calls Gabriela from Adi's house. She is unable to talk to her, so she decides to go back to the hotel.

When Otilia enters the room Gabriela is lying on the bed, she tells Otilia that the fetus has come out and is on the bathroom. Otilia then wraps the fetus with some towels and puts everything on a bag, while Gabriela asks her to bury the fetus. Otilia then goes outside and walks around for a while, finally climbing to the top of a random building, like Mr. Bebe had suggested, dropping the bag on the trash cube.

Otilia then goes back to the hotel and finds Gabriela eating at the restaurant. She sits and tells Gabriela that they are never going to talk about the whole thing ever again.

[edit] Production

The initial idea[4] was inspired by Mungiu's project to do a film, Memories from the Golden Age, which would collect several stories taking place during the Communist times in Romania. Mungiu felt the need for a serious movie, focusing on a tragic story of life under that regime, to balance the intended comedic tone of the planned Memories from the Golden Age. He based the plot of 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days on a real story he had heard and, according to him, "still affected me after more than 15 years".[4]

After thinking about the story for a month, Mungiu put down the synopsis in 10 minutes then wrote the screenplay in another month. He revised the screenplay numerous times during productions, rewriting and taking out parts that didn't seem necessary (some changes were also suggested by discussions with Răzvan Rădulescu, who co-wrote Cristi Puiu's previous two features).

Most of the filming was done in Bucharest, with some scenes filmed in a hotel in Ploieşti.[4] The film was produced on budget of less than 600,000.[5]

[edit] Reviews

The movie received an enthusiastic response from critics, earning a 96% rating on Rotten Tomatoes (based on 108 reviews), a website that aggregates professional critiques,[6] while also earning a 97% rating on Metacritic (based on 37 reviews). Time magazine's Richard and Mary Corliss described it as a "gripping, satisfying film" and particularly noted the use of minimalism and "formal rigor" as defining aesthetic characteristics.[3] Jay Weissberg from Variety magazine opined that the film was "pitch perfect and brilliantly acted... a stunning achievement". He remarked that the film shares a number of characteristics with other productions of the New Romanian Cinema, namely: "long takes, controlled camera and an astonishing ear for natural dialogue."[7]

Several sources view the film as indicative of a broader renaissance in Romanian cinema in the 2000s, particularly as another Romanian film, Cristian Nemescu's California Dreamin', won the Prix un certain regard at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival[8][9] and the The Death of Mr. Lazarescu, one of the best reviewed films of 2005, won the same award two years prior.

[edit] Top ten lists

The film appeared on many critics' top ten lists of the best films of 2007.[10]

[edit] Awards, nominations and accolades

Wins

  • Hollywood Film Festival
    • Hollywood World Award (Best Film)

Nominations

[edit] Notes

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Awards
Preceded by
The Wind That Shakes the Barley
Palme d'Or
2007
Succeeded by
Entre les murs