Daughter-In-Law Explained

Nevestka
Director:Khodzha Kuli Narliyev
Cinematography:Anatoliy Ivanov
Runtime:81 minutes
Country:Turkmen SSR

Nevestka (English: Daughter-In-Law, Turkmen:Gelin) is a 1972 Turkmenistani film directed by Khodzha Kuli Narliyev, starring Maya-Gozel Aimedova, Aynabat Amanliyeva, and Baba Annanov. The film is about a woman who loses her husband during World War II and is forced to take care of her father-in-law in the desert.

Cast

Reception

Nevestka has been called "the film that put Turkmen film on the map".[1] Mira Liehm and Antonín J. Liehm note its "strong cinematic feeling for local settings".[2] Michael Rouland calls it a "representation of Turkmen life at the edge of the desert during World War Two", writing that it "engages a rich genre in Soviet film: the tragedy of lives left on the home front while loved ones sacrificed their lives on the battlefront. Bridging the vast territorial and cultural spaces of the Soviet Union, the sacrifice of war and its suffering was a common theme of Soviet film".[3]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Beumers, Birgit. A History of Russian Cinema. 2009. Bloomsbury Academic. 978-1-84520-215-6. 157.
  2. Book: Liehm. Mira. Liehm. Antonín J.. The Most Important Art: Eastern European Film After 1945. 1977. University of California Press. 978-0-520-03157-9. 335.
  3. Web site: Hodzhakuli Narliev – Nevestka AKA Daughter in Law (1972). Worldscinema.org. 3 February 2012. 10 March 2014. 11 March 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140311025618/http://worldscinema.org/2012/02/hodzhakuli-narliev-nevestka-aka-daughter-in-law-1972/. dead.