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Recommended Mongol

aka Mongol - The Rise to Power, Sergei Bodrov, 2007

Star Review

Bodrov’s epic, Oscar-nominated historical drama was one of the few foreign-language movies to find large audiences this summer. Mongol introduces us to the young Genghis, aka Temudjin, who as a child saw his father poisoned by a rival tribe, and was thereafter pursued by those who sought to assume power.

If you’re wondering how anyone might make Genghis heroic, it’s partly by making his enemies even more brutal, and partly by characterising the adult Temudjin (Japanese megastar Tadanobu Asano) in much the same way as Mel Gibson’s Braveheart did William Wallace: as a lover, not a fighter, only driven to bloodshed when his girl is threatened.

Like Gibson, Bodrov relishes battlefield carnage, but there’s also genuine poetry here, with the screen frequently given over to the incredible Mongolian landscape that lends itself well to spectacular cinematography. Further instalments are promised: get in early on what may become the arthouse superhero/villain franchise of the decade!

Anne Biggs on 10th September 2008

View all 7 of Anne Biggs’s reviews

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Star Review

The first revelation of Sergei Bodrov's Oscar-nominated historical drama – one of the few foreign-language movies to find large audiences this summer – is that Genghis Khan was a stage name. Mongol introduces us to the young Genghis, aka Temudjin, who as a child saw his father poisoned by a rival tribe, and was thereafter pursued by those who sought to assume power.

If you’re wondering how anyone might make Genghis heroic, it’s partly by making his enemies even more brutal, and partly by characterising the adult Temudjin (Japanese megastar Tadanobu Asano) in much the same way as Mel Gibson’s Braveheart did William Wallace: as a lover, not a fighter, only driven to bloodshed when his girl is threatened.

Like Gibson, Bodrov relishes battlefield carnage, but there’s genuine poetry here, too: so frequently is the screen given over to the Mongolian landscape the film might legitimately trade under the alternative title The Thirty-Nine Steppes. Further instalments are promised: get in early on what may just become the arthouse superhero (or super-villain) franchise of the decade.

Jamie Smith on 29th August 2008

View all 10 of Jamie Smith’s reviews

[ Show Film Description ]

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Film Details

Director

Sergei Bodrov

Year

2007

Country

Asia, Europe, Germany, USSR

Cast

Tadanobu Asano

Technical Details

Certificate

15

Length

126 mins

Label

UPV

Format

DVD Colour

Region

2

Aspect

1:1.33 (4:3) Standard

Cat No

8256833

Main Language

Mongolian

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