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Revolutions in Romanian Cinema

Sunday, November 25, 2007
3:00 p.m. The Great Communist Bank Robbery
Alexandru Solomon (Romania/France, 2004)

Described by director Alexandru Solomon as a “political detective story,” this sardonic and elegantly constructed documentary investigates both a historical mystery—the theft of 1.6 million lei from the Romanian national bank in 1959—and the transformation of history into film. The unprecedented robbery led to a far-reaching and brutal inquiry; six people were arrested for the crime, all Communist Party members and all Jewish. Hoping for clemency, they agreed to reenact the robbery for a widely screened film called Reconstruction, a gangster movie for a Stalinist state where gangster movies were banned. After a show trial, also performed for the cameras, all but one of the robbers were shot. Delving into the archives, interviewing those who remember the events, and considering the motives behind both the crime and its reenactment, Solomon deconstructs the reconstruction in a revealing meta-movie.

—Juliet Clark

• Written by Solomon. Photographed by Constantin Chelba. (70 mins, In English and Romanian with English subtitles, Color, 35mm, From CNC)

Preceded by short:
Tertium non datur (Lucian Pintilie, Romania/France, 2006). Romanian recruits await their orders in this political parable set during the last days of World War II. (39 mins, In Romanian with English subtitles, Color, 35mm, From CNC)

• (Total running time: 109 mins)