Beresina, or the Last Days of Switzerland

Beresina, or the Last Days of Switzerland

Promotional poster
Directed by Daniel Schmid
Produced by Marcel Hoehn
Written by Martin Suter
Starring Yelena Panova
Geraldine Chaplin
Martin Benrath
Ulrich Noethen
Ivan Desny
Release date(s) 1999
Running time 108 minutes
Country Switzerland
Germany
Austria
Language German
(Swiss German)

Beresina, or the Last Days of Switzerland (German: Beresina oder Die letzten Tage der Schweiz) is a 1999 satiric comedy film by Swiss director Daniel Schmid. It chronicles the story of Irina, a Russian call girl arriving in Switzerland, whose innocent attempt to live the high life there triggers unintended coup d'etat in the country. The title Beresina refers to the Beresinalied, a patriotic song used as the code for initiating the Putsch.

The film is a black comedy where all aspects of Swiss life are satirized in anecdotes. The heroine deals with a retired P-26 officer who appears as her false "sponsor" and various sexual perverts at the top of Swiss social hierarchy. Their attitudes to immigrants are also depicted ironically. Even the national identity and modern history of Switzerland are caricaturized in the country's first ever coup d'état sequences. The film culminates with Irina's coronation as Queen of Switzerland.

Beresina was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1999 Cannes Film Festival.[1]

Contents

Cast

Reception

The film was praised by Variety, where Shmid "applies his wicked sense of humour", to create a "rollicking socio-political farce that roasts just about everyone in power." The review also explained how Smid uses "black humour to expose Swiss high society as a hypocritical facade hiding secrets from money-laundering to pimping, with the banks involved in absolutely everything."[2]

References

  1. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Beresina, or the Last Days of Switzerland". festival-cannes.com. http://www.festival-cannes.com/en/archives/ficheFilm/id/5390/year/1999.html. Retrieved 2009-10-09. 
  2. ^ Young, Deborah. Beresina, or the Last Days of Switzerland. Variety. 7 June 1999. p. 29

External links