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In late nineteenth-century Yakutia, Habji and his wife Keremes have just buried their second child, and are preparing for a harsh winter of famine. Instead of giving them the help he promised, the local prince foists a Russian convict, Kostya, on the family, who the law decrees must live in the same house as them. They initially struggle to find a common language, and the convict soon decides that he will be the master of the house from now on.
Acting
Pavel Kolesov's silent suffering could freeze vodka.
Cinematography
Snow so white it hurts—visual metaphor for colonial blindness.
Production
Authentic Yakut language and customs, rarely seen on screen.

Director
Vladimir Munkuev
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes