BootDigest
Such a frustrating disappointment
Peereddi
I was totally surprised at how great this film.You could feel your paranoia rise as the film went on and as you gradually learned the details of the real situation.
Dynamixor
The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.
Neive Bellamy
Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
bigbundy69
If you want to see this movie to learn the history of the Russian mafia you'll be disappointed (most probably you'll have to do the hard work of reading a book on that subject).This movie is mostly talks with 3 mobsters, where they tell you about their personal history (as you might expect they mostly talk about their good deeds), their aspirations (always good in nature by the way) and their views on themselves (surprisingly good) & their role in Russia (as you might expect Russia is benefiting from their deeds). In a bit more serious tone this movie let you as a viewer have a short window into the head of a mobster that will not hesitate to kill you if you'll call him some bad name in front of his friends and still consider himself as a good person. These people have a very different state of mind then most people in the western society.So this is more of a sociology movie rather then history & I think that as a great experience to learn how different people look at things differently
dbborroughs
This is a look "inside" the Russian mafia at the men who call themselves "thieves by law". In theory those that call themselves "thieves by law" are to have no home, no property of their own, no wife, no family. They are to have nothing that will tie them down and divert their attention from the brotherhood or give them pause. The film focuses on three men who have survived the prisons, the wars and the other nastiness to become "respected" men of means, with money and families.I saw the film as part of the world première presentations at the Tribeca Film Festival and I was very disappointed. Yes, the film tells the story of the mobs raise to power in the former Soviet Union and much of Europe, but at the same time the film is very cursory. If you are at all interested in organized crime the odds are strong that you will know more about the history of what happened then what is shown. The film is only allowed to briefly deal with the history of the mob and what it really means because the film spends a great deal of time with its subjects in their lives now.Ultimately the problem with the film is in how the three men paint themselves. Sure they are are very candid and forth right in letting you know that they are bad guys, but they bend over backwards to make sure that you know that they are not that bad. They are trying to paint themselves as later day Robin Hoods giving to the church and helping various charities, as they say out right they are trying to buy respect with their good deeds. The result of this nice talk is the film becomes a project to make them look like slightly tarnished saints rather than nasty guys who would (still) kill you for the wrong remark. And since they are selling themselves they down play the details of their deeds since it works against their goals. The down playing makes the film less of the expose promised.Sure they are compelling characters, but my expectation for the film was that of hard hitting documentary about organized crime, not a piece on the current life of three of the mob survivors.I suppose if you know what you're getting you'll like it more than me. See it expecting a brief introduction to the subject and you'll be fine. If you want blood and guts and details you'll be sorely disappointed.Personally I would love to see a film where the three guys sat down and really told us what happened and what it was like in detail, then they can show us how they rose above it. If that was this film I wouldn't have felt like I was cheated by a film that promises one thing and delivered another. I think the filmmakers did the men and history a disservice.