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Samizdat Eastern European Film Festival

The Touch/Прикосновение (Amanzhol Aituarov, 1989, Kazakhstan/USSR)

Thu 3 October 2024

Tickets no longer available
SDH captioning

SDH captioning

English subtitling

Wheelchair accessible

Wheelchair accessible

A mournful looking woman wearing braids and standing in a dusty rural landscape.

The Touch/Прикосновение (Amanzhol Aituarov, 1989, Kazakhstan/USSR)

UK premiere; with a recorded introduction by director Amanzhol Aituarov

The Kazakh New Wave is known for its grim, ascetic, and darkly humorous portrayals of the late Soviet Kazakhstan. One such film that stands out however is writer/director Amanzhol Aituarov’s The Touch (1989) – a ‘minor work’ of the Kazakh New Wave, whose earnest portrayal of tragic love between two outcast nomads has a spiritual, mythic, and almost esoteric sensibility but formally borrows from the subdued cinematography of Uzbek auteur Ali Khamrayev (a close friend and stylistic ally of Andrey Tarkovskiy).

The framing device of the film is that of an intimate conversation, held in hushed tones between two separating lovers in the early morning in 1980s’ Kazakhstan. A woman is coming to terms with her partner’s betrayal – reimagining it as a stranded blind girl’s quest for survival in the Kazakh steppe of a long-gone past. On her way to the Promised Land, the girl encounters a runaway slave, and the two continue their journey together, until they are informed of a tragic prophecy predicting their end…

Making an unconventional shift from a depiction of political or national disenchantment towards a sensuous portrayal of companionship, love and grief, The Touch is a small masterpiece of Central Asian cinema – shown in the UK for the very first time, with original English subtitles created by Samizdat Festival.

The 2024 edition of Samizdat is supported by Screen Scotland’s National Lottery Film Festival and Screening Fund and Film Hub Scotland, part of the BFI’s Film Audience Network, awarding funds from Screen Scotland and National Lottery funding from the BFI.

Accessibility

Wheelchair accessible, English subtitles, SDH subtitles (Closed Captions), Pay-what-you-can tickets (£0-£8)

If you want to attend this screening but find it unaffordable, you may be able to have the cost of your ticket, commute, and/or childcare covered by the Audience Access Fund — see here for further details.

Content notes:
Sexual threat, attempted sexual assault, murder, violence, suicide, grief

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Details

Event Type

Film

Festival

Location

Theatre

Time

9:10pm — 10:40pm

Ages

15

Ticketing

Tickets: £0/£2/£4/£6/£8

Booking fee: 10%

Accessibility

SDH captioning

English subtitling

Wheelchair accessible

Tickets no longer available