Perestroika was in its early days when Yuri Mamin, the “boy wonder” of new Soviet film comedy, made his film about a decrepit house and its occupants, a disaster-comedy that escalates with the force of an avalanche. A small businessman is growing two thousand tulips in his apartment and hopes to sell them. Disciples of the “Pamyat” society watch over the wallpaper with graffito written by a “genius of the people”, and while they’re busy nailing a commemorative plaque to the wall, the building is threatening to collapse. The roof is held up – literally – by slogans. The lift in the building may – or may not – be a stairway to heaven, but the film cunningly leaves open the answer to the pressing question: Does this grotesque parable refer to the (Communist) system, or to the attempted restructuring (Perestroika)?
Perestroika was in its early days when Yuri Mamin, the “boy wonder” of new Soviet film comedy, made his film about a decrepit house and its occupants, a disaster-comedy that escalates with the force of an avalanche. A small businessman is growing two thousand tulips in his apartment and hopes to sell them. Disciples of the “Pamyat” society watch over the wallpaper with graffito written by a “genius of the people”, and while they’re busy nailing a commemorative plaque to the wall, the building is threatening to collapse. The roof is held up – literally – by slogans. The lift in the building may – or may not – be a stairway to heaven, but the film cunningly leaves open the answer to the pressing question: Does this grotesque parable refer to the (Communist) system, or to the attempted restructuring (Perestroika)?