Kontinental ’25 review – incisive, accessible and deeply true to life

Woman in dark jacket crouching by tree trunk with large dinosaur sculpture visible behind her in wooded park setting.

Romanian provocateur Radu Jude takes us on a collective guilt trip in this angry, dialogue-driven satire set in the Transylvanian capital.

Radu Jude’s Hungarian protagonist Orsolya (Eszter Tompa) lives near the historic Transylvanian city of Cluj, which is being overrun by tech-driven gentrification. Orsolya means well, really, but her job as a bailiff requires her to evict a homeless man occupying the boiler room of a building set to be turned into a luxury hotel. In the 20-minute window he’s given to gather his belongings, the man commits suicide; and naturally, Orsolya is plagued with guilt. Struggling to atone and desperate to process a crisis of conscience, she seeks out religion, sex, philanthropy, zen philosophy… But is it her fault if she was just doing her job? Is it possible to be absolved in a world that sustains us by making us complicit, even as we dogpaddle in the wastewaters of so-called progress?

Shot with iPhone cameras (because it’s what we deserve) over 10 days, Kontinental ’25 is more of a side project for the Romanian provocateur, whose other recent work operates on a more epic scale, but that doesn’t minimise any of the film’s impact. It’s a film that is firmly grounded in the geopolitical specificity of Cluj, exploring ethnic tensions, economic inequalities, legacies of totalitarianism, the brutality of capitalism and the destructiveness of real estate – yet it’s through this local context that Jude gets to dig deep into the contradictions of our globalised, neoliberal world as the all-pervasive cultural and moral rot continues to spread.



from Little White Lies - Main https://ift.tt/mkeYV34

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