Search results
Sep 29, 2011 · My Joy. NYT Critic’s Pick. Directed by Sergey Loznitsa. Adventure, Drama. Not Rated. 2h 7m. By Manohla Dargis. Sept. 29, 2011. “My Joy,” a stark, moody, often beautiful-looking dark fable ...
- Sergey Loznitsa
My Joy. My Joy ( Russian: Счастье моё) is a 2010 internationally co-produced Russian-language road film directed by Sergei Loznitsa. It is set in the western regions of Russia, somewhere near Smolensk. My Joy was the first Ukrainian film ever to compete for the Palme d'Or .
- Oleh Kokhan
- Sergei Loznitsa
- Viktor Nemets
- Sergei Loznitsa
Sep 30, 2011 · My Joy: Directed by Sergey Loznitsa. With Viktor Nemets, Vladimir Golovin, Aleksey Vertkov, Dmitriy Gotsdiner. A few days in the life of truck driver Georgi, which seems to be a never-ending nightmare, a spiral of violence and abuses of power.
- (2.6K)
- Drama
- Sergey Loznitsa
- 2011-09-30
Nov 16, 2017. Rated: A- • Oct 5, 2011. A truck driver (Viktor Nemets) embarks on a dark odyssey through Russia.
- (20)
- Vlad Ivanov
- Sergei Loznitsa
- Sota Cinema Group
Review: Sergei Loznitsaʼs "My Joy" on Notebook MUBI, 2011-09-30, www.mubi.com Starting with the one man, his truck, and the road, Loznitsaʼs film finds good reason to branch off from that singular movement in newly opened directions of story, as the region the man travels through seems a repository for Russian history, miscreant deeds and shackled existences.
Apr 10, 2024 · Show all movies in the JustWatch Streaming Charts. Streaming charts last updated: 1:19:18 AM, 04/10/2024. My Joy is 17168 on the JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts today. The movie has moved up the charts by 14108 places since yesterday. In the United States, it is currently more popular than Cabin Fever: Patient Zero but less popular than Love ...
Sep 30, 2011 · The New York Times. Sep 29, 2011. The world of My Joy is grim, though the experience of watching it and piecing together its fragmented story strands is anything but. It's suspenseful, mysterious, at times bitterly funny, consistently moving and filled with images of a Russia haunted both by ghosts and the living dead. Read More.