San Francisco International Film Festival 20 April - 04 May 2006

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FILMS/

FRESH AIR

Friss levegö

New Directors

Hungary, 2006, 109 minutes

SHOWTIMES

Thu, May 3 / 09:30 / Kabuki / FRES03K
Sat, May 5 / 06:00 / Kabuki / FRES05K
Tue, May 8 / 09:05 / PFA / FRES08P

CREDITS

dir
Ágnes Kocsis
prod
Ferenc Pusztai
scr
Ágnes Kocsis, Andrea Roberti
cam
Ádám Fillenz
editor
Tamás Kollányi
mus
Bálint Kovács
cast
Izabella Hegyi, Júlia Nyakó, Anita Turóczi, Zoltán Kiss, Henriette Ámon, Péter Bereczky, Gaetano Busico
source
Magyar Filmunió, Városligeti fasor 38, H-1068 Budapest, Hungary FAX: +36-1-352-6734 EMAIL: kati.vajda@filmunio.hu
Fresh Air

Watch

For Viola and her teenage daughter Angela, "family time" means silently watching a favorite weekly television show. Away from the comfort of their Budapest apartment couch, these women take dramatically divergent paths in Ágnes Kocsis’s beautiful and hypnotic tale of love and longing. As a subway bathroom attendant, Viola spends her days collecting coins and scrubbing toilets. At night she attends singles events where she comes face-to-face with sad, aging bachelors who don’t interest her. Meanwhile, 17-year-old Angela dreams of a life as a famous fashion designer. Creative, cool and focused on finding a new life, she and her best friend Martina wander the streets searching for excitement amid the ordinary. After Angela’s adventurous hitchhiking trip and Viola’s unfortunate encounter at work, the alienated mother and daughter are brought together in unexpected ways. As the film quietly details the daily rituals of this tiny family unit, Kocsis consistently focuses on the most intriguing, humorous and profound moments of each scene. From the fabulously colored air fresheners that Viola has meticulously arranged in her miniscule bathroom office to Angela’s obsessive window-opening ritual, Fresh Air plays like a silent film, using stunning imagery and a still camera to uncover character motivation and depth without unnecessary action, dialogue or exposition. With the eye of a painter and the heart of a poet, Kocsis crafts a wonderfully poignant story about the surprising connections between a mother and daughter.

—Brendan Peterson

Presented in association with Mad Cat Women’s International Film Festival.

 

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