International Releases: Aita (2022) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of  Provzglyad

Young yet prolific Yakut writer-director Stepan Burnashev seems to have shattered the nerves of Russian media regulator Roskomnadzor with his newest film Aita or АЙТА, a police crime drama spoken of the same breath as Straw Dogs or even Bad Day at Black Rock when law and vigilantism find themselves in each other’s crossfire.  Considered to be the most successful Yakutia film yet released theatrically in a burgeoning new wave of distinctly Yakut cinema, the film appeared on streaming services in March 2023 before being pulled from platforms in September with the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation citing instances of “nationalism” with “destructive information” that “contradicts the principles of unity of the peoples of Russia”.  Naturally, the banning of what is shaping up to be an important independent piece of Yakut cinema only furthered interest in finding out what all the fuss was about.  Turns out the actual film is one of the best detective thrillers of recent memory with shades of Zodiac and Memories of Murder sprinkled throughout.

 
In 2019 Yakutia, the village’s police chief Nikolai (Innokenty Lukovtsev) is faced with the difficult task of investigating the death of a young schoolgirl named Aita (Aitalyina Yakovleva) who after a night of partying in an abandoned house winds up committing suicide.  Upon closer inspection, a suicide note turns up in her pocket reading “I hate you, Afonya”, pointing to Russian police officer Afonya (Andrey Fomin) as the prime suspect in what appears to be the rape of an underage girl.  After arrest and incarceration of Afonya, the real battle for Nikolai begins as the girl’s angry parents including but not limited to her father Ayal (Georgiy Bessonov) who objects to the police chief’s fair and due process for his new most targeted inmate and proceeds to take the law into his own hands, resulting in a deadly trading of bullets and explosives.  All the while this chaos is ensuing, Nikolai fights to get closer to the truth and determine whether or not Afonya is guilty of a serious criminal offense.

 
Opening on a grim note in a perpetual nighttime rain taking place over the Yakutia village as cursive credits appear on the screen amid a brooding opening ambient cue by Sergey Govorun and Teo Tao, the world of the film lensed exquisitely by Nasha zima cinematographer Danila Goryunkov feels entrenched in a somber downpour.  Feeling right at home with the aura of David Fincher’s Se7en with its gloomy aesthete and inclement neo-noir stylized weather, Aita from beginning to end is dreary.  The lead actor Innokenty Lukovtsev as village police chief Nikolai who won the Best Actor award at the Winter auteur film festival gives a committed performance as a man caught between a rock and a hard place while Andrey Fomin as the main suspect manages to cast doubt and suspicion on both sides of the story.  Also particularly strong is Georgiy Bessonov as the titular victim’s grieving father with nothing but sweet revenge on his mind.

 
Though a critically acclaimed commercial hit signifying Yakutia cinema as a new wave of filmmaking worldly cinephiles ought to pay close attention to, the chances of seeing this film remain up in the air in spite of the director’s distinguished reputation and the strength of the performances.  Seen outside of the controversy it engendered as an outsider looking in, Aita on its terms proved to be a solid crime drama that presents a kind of Straw Dogs scenario while also being something of a social critique of existing relations between Yakutia villagers and the Russian Federation.  While the film’s future is uncertain, having sought it out myself it is one of the better new crime dramas you’ve never heard of and an important instance of distinctly Yakut filmmaking whose vast scope and unique emerging vision sets it apart from the overall pack of Eastern European cinema. 

--Andrew Kotwicki