Fall Focus

October 20, 2023 - 6:30 pm At The Brattle

$15 General Admission
$13 IFFBoston & Brattle members, students, and seniors*

*Limited to one ticket per screening per membership card or Student ID. Student and senior prices are only available at the box office with valid ID. Member discount cannot be combined with other offers.

IFFBoston members get priority seating for all Fall Focus screenings.

Showtimes

    Finland’s entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 96th Academy Awards

    In Finnish w/English subtitles

    Aki Kaurismäki’s 20th feature in 40 years, FALLEN LEAVES takes place in a very personalized version of Helsinki, one intimately familiar to longtime admirers of the Finnish director’s hilariously deadpan, fervently humanist tragicomedies. Ansa (Alma Pöysti) and Holappa (Jussi Vatanen), spend their waking hours in drab workplaces, bars full of stone-faced patrons, and sparsely decorated homes in which a radio is the height of modern technology. Despite the decades that have passed between Kaurismäki’s latest and his Proletariat Trilogy (1986–90)—of which the director considers FALLEN LEAVES a belated extension—they all seem to take place in the same sad, strange world.

    Yet within this space, viewers will find the richness of feeling that’s a hallmark of the director’s recent work. FALLEN LEAVES is also among his funniest movies, with Kaurismäki taking full advantage of all the sight gags and recurring jokes at his disposal. The material just gets richer as the bond between Ansa and Holappa deepens, their first encounter at a karaoke bar followed by an outing to a screening of Jim Jarmusch’s THE DEAD DON’T DIE (one of many nods to Kaurismäki’s friends and inspirations).

    The couple’s chance for happiness feels all the more precious due to the film’s only significant acknowledgement of our present moment: news reports on the war in Ukraine, a source of anxiety in a country that shares a 1,340-kilometre border with Russia. This intrusion of the real adds another layer of poignancy to Kaurismäki’s celebration of the solace we may find in each other, if we’re brave enough to try.

    —Jason Anderson, Toronto International Film Festival guide