In Krishtofovich's A Friend of the Deceased, the fall of the Soviet Union and its
Communist infrastructure brings with it not freedom, but instead a kind of cold isolation,
spurred on by a sudden upsurge in capitalist methodology that renders old friendships
null and void and stifles almost every other aspect of life. A bleak, bitter satire
from the Ukrainian director of Adam's Rib, Krishtofovish sets his film in Kiev, where
the intellectual professor Anatoli (Lazarev) is trapped performing menial jobs to
make ends meet. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, he's discovered that his worldly
views and mental prowess suddenly mean nothing to his employers or even his friends.
His wife Katia (Nevolina) is blatantly cheating on him in the night and making money
hand over fist as an ad exec during the day, and even his old buddy Dima (Pachin)
seems to be racing down the capitalist highway to hell, selling vodka and trinkets
out of his tiny corner store. When Anatoli bemoans his fate in the new world order,
Dima helpfully suggests that he take out a contract on his straying wife. Heartened,
Anatoli strikes upon the seemingly brilliant idea of taking out a hit on himself
instead, which he does. Not long after (though after his wife finally moves out of
their tiny flat), he meets up with the diminutive, sexy prostitute Vika (Krivitska)
who, predictably, teaches him that not everything in his new life has to be awful.
Second thoughts about the self-imposed death sentence bubble to the surface, and
suddenly Anatoli finds himself taking out a second contract, via a second hit man,
on the first. From here on out it's a game of cat and mouse as Anatoli must avoid
killer A and hope that killer B gets the job done before Anatoli ends up in the pine
box he was so looking forward to. Shades of Bulworth, I know, but Krishtofovich and
his spirited players are after far larger fish. As a metaphor for the spiritual malaise
following the collapse of communism in the Ukraine, it's a grim, dark spectacle of
mistaken identity and covert emotions. No matter what course of action Anatoli decides
on, he is still no more than leftover brain cells, a smart guy trapped in a dumb
world. Working for pennies as a translator for a corrupt businessman, he shivers
the night away while sleeping on the couch (his wife won't let him touch her). Lazarev
has a magically expressive face. His lines are few and far between sometimes, but
when he finally meets up with the elfin Vika, they're not necessary; his weary visage
says it all. A grim, Eastern comedy of (t)errors, A Friend of the Deceased poses
the question: "What price happiness?" and then answers via Lennon: "Happiness is
a warm gun."
3.5 stars
--Marc Savlov
Capsule Reviews
A Friend of the Deceased 
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