In a remote village in Azerbaijan the children play war games, "for Stalin and the motherland". The adults see it differently: The Muslim population doesn't regard the Bolsheviks' struggle against fascism as their war. Traditionally nothing good has come from Russia nor the Soviet Union, whilst the Nazi terror is geographically far-removed from their everyday existences. The able-bodied men evade military service and hide in the mountains. Together with his mother and older brother Bakhtijar lives a life of poverty. The political commissar harasses the women and even rapes one of them. Bakhtijar's older brother secretly goes to the mountains. One day a police unit comes to the village looking for the hidden men. Employing poetic black-and-white imagery cameraman Ayhan Salar, also the film's German co-producer, sensitively captures the austere landscapes, whilst artfully making reference to classic war films from the 1960s.
1:2.35 [Cinemascope]
Asif Rustamov, Ilgar Najaf, Roelof Jan Minneboo
Ayhan Salar
5.1 Digital
Rovshan Mehdiyev
Firudin Allahverdi
Gunesh Mehdiyeva
Ilgar Jahangirov
Baku Media Center(Azerbaijan), Salarfilm (Germany), Arizona Prod (France)
Arizona Prod.
Guillaume de Seille
asif_rustamov@yahoo.com
Ilgar Najaf - He was born in in Ararat region of Armenian Republic (USSR). After ethnic conflict in 1988 he and his family was forcibly expelled from Armenia and became refugees. In 1997 he graduated the Azerbaijan State University of Arts, film director’s faculty. 2004 he established the film studio “Buta Film” where produced the number of films as a producer as well as director.
2000 “Shacks without shades”, documentary film / Prize of the Baku Youth Festival
2002 “There exists an old man”, documentary film
2009 “Theatrical Life”, short film (Silver Remi Award at Houston WFF)
2011 “Buta”, Debut feature film
2017 “Pomegranate orchard”, Second feature film