My Love | |
Director: | Aleksandr Petrov |
Runtime: | 26 minutes |
Country: | Russia |
Language: | Russian |
My Love (ru|Моя любовь, Moya lyubov) is a 2006 paint-on-glass-animated short film directed by Aleksandr Petrov, based on A Love Story (1927) by Ivan Shmelyov. Work on the film took place in Yaroslavl, Russia over a period of three years at the studio DAGO Co. It was funded by Russia's Channel One and Dentsu Tec in Japan.
English | Russian | ||
---|---|---|---|
Director | Aleksandr Petrov | Александр Петров | |
Scenario | Aleksandr Petrov | Александр Петров | |
Animators | Aleksandr Petrov Dmitri Petrov Mikhail Tumelya Isolda Solodova | Александр Петров Дмитрий Петров Михаил Тумеля Изольда Солодова | |
Cameraman | Sergei Reshetnikov | Сергей Решетников | |
Sound operator | Viktor Duritsyn | Виктор Дурицын |
Some time after the completion of the Oscar-winning The Old Man and the Sea (1999), Petrov returned to his hometown of Yaroslavl in Russia to work on his next film. My Love was finished in spring 2006 after three years' work and had its première at the Hiroshima International Animation Festival on August 27, where it won the Audience Prize and the Special International Jury Prize. On March 17, 2007, My Love was theatrically released at the Cinema Angelika in Shibuya (Japan) by Studio Ghibli, as the first release of the Ghibli Museum Library (theatrical and DVD releases of Western animated films in Japan).http://www.fpsmagazine.com/blog/2007/01/ghibli-brings-west-to-japan.php
In January 2007, Petrov announced that the film would eventually be released in theatres in Russia, combined with his other short films.[1]
The film's style is similar to that used in Petrov's other films and can be characterized as a type of Romantic realism. People and landscapes are painted and animated in a very realistic fashion, but there are sections where Petrov attempts to visually show a character's inner thoughts and dreams.
Because of Petrov's insistence on accuracy, especially where human emotions were concerned, about 20% of the film was made with a technique similar to rotoscoping.[2]
My Love has gathered many top awards at film festivals, and was called the "undoubted leader of the festival"[3] at the 12th Open Russian Festival of Animated Film (Russia's most important domestic animation festival). The Japan Media Arts Festival jury called it "indisputably a masterpiece"[4] and at the International Leipzig Festival for Documentary and Animated Film, it was called an "exquisite impressionist vision with a very poetic narrative and profound psychology".[5]
At the same time, it has faced criticism from some of Petrov's colleagues, including Ivan Maximov and Yuri Norstein, who have accused it of putting technical achievement ahead of true artistry. Mikhail Tumelya, who accepted the awards at the 12th ORFAF for Petrov (who was not able to come either on account of illness, or because of worry about the audience reaction to his film[6]), summed up the criticism in the following words, attributed to a Buddhist monk: "there are more interesting things in the world than banal perfection".[7]
My Love was noticeably snubbed at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival, receiving no awards despite being one of the "flagship" films. Some of the heaviest criticism has come from Chris Robinson, artistic director of the Ottawa International Animation Festival, who accused Petrov of wasting his talent on "trite, sentimental stories" and thanked him for not sending the film to Ottawa.[8]
It was also included in the Animation Show of Shows in 2006.