Zoology (2017) Directed by Ivan Tverdovsky 6B
50-ish Natasha (Natalya Pavlenkova) is mired in a life that gives her little satisfaction and even less meaning. She is the Food Procurement Officer for a small zoo in a provincial town way off the beaten path. Her life suddenly becomes more interesting but also far more perplexing when she discovers that she has grown a rather large tail. Director Ivan Tverdovsky drops this premise on us and then just lets it play out. The end result is an oxymoron--serious whimsy. Natasha finds her tail both personally liberating--she begins to look after her appearance more and she starts a relationship with a doctor who knows all about the tail--but also isolating and scary. Her mother as well as the Church provide no comfort only censure and rejection. The townspeople react like 19th century Russian peasants full of dread and superstition. It all borders on being too much for Natasha. There are lots of themes here about body image, being different, self-acceptance, and change. However, what exactly the film is saying, if anything, is hard to determine. Nonetheless, there are some marvelous moments, such as when Natasha finds more comfort among the zoo animals than she does from being around her fellow humans; the sad but respectful disposal of the family's dead cat is also a lovely moment and oddly moving. In the end, Pavlenkova is worth the price of admission alone. She is given a very complex role and she absolutely nails it.
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