Psy (1989) Poster

(1989)

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10/10
It hits the golden niche of Russian cinema
AndreiPavlov20 May 2015
Let's be realistic, Russian cinema cannot create something like the original "RoboCop" or "Alien". And it always hurts to see something like "Okhota na Piranyu" – an example of Russian cinema trying to pull off something like "Die Hard" with a-la "matrix" stunts plus the happy nicey-nicey ending. But the Russians can easily carry out something that the others cannot. Every nation has its own traditions, and in cinema it really pays off well when a talented director follows them. "Psy" follows the traditions step by step and goes further. Beware… A minimalistic approach. An oppressive atmosphere of doom without hope in almost every single shot. Weird characters that play very weird tricks, spitting out most weird phrases and uttering apocalyptic speeches.

It delivers a strange adult spooky story in the way only Russian cinema can do. Can a reliable horror be done with minimum funds, unknown actors, bad equipment, etc.? This is the answer. The talent can deliver and it does here. Where the others would fail, the Russian film spreads its wings, pecks your eyes out, and crawls under your skin. Too bad such examples are rare ("Gongofer" comes to my mind as another weird story, though much inferior in depth, but also impressively told on the screen).

Will try to dish a few lines out, without actually revealing the plot.

The topics touched upon in this movie are quite interesting. 1) Frustration of human science (the wretched scientist in the film tells something like "The science is great, we'll get the water back!" but you see quite well that science lost its battle. 2) The revolt of nature vs. man (cities turn to deserts, water leaves man, the domestic animals attack people in most ferocious ways). 3) Man on the verge of breakdown (everything loses its worth in the midst of catastrophe). 4) Insanity and poetry as a couple of weird ways to escape the "dead end" of human existence (one character shoots his fellow man and then himself, another is talking in poems and drinks hard, still another tries to get all the valuable items with him before certain death). 5) The place is "no-name", the characters are "no-name", and the mission is a total wacko right from the start, but you can clearly see that mankind has returned to something like stone age, living in filthy conditions, and having no hope at all. The "wild dogs" can be just a metaphor for something that man has triggered and cannot operate any more. Like a nuclear world war.

The following episodes stand out in this feature, both technically and emotionally. 1) A dancing man who gets drunk and tries to get all the precious things onto him, as if it could save him (my favourite scene in this film, brilliantly executed, and the soundtrack fits the scene like nothing else). 2) A man in a gas mask with a torch in one hand and an AK in another, howling and stalking about like madman (just a perfect bit in this picture of a total disaster). 3) A man with his hands up, coming up to the insane shooter whispering "Don't shoot. It's me. It's me. Don't." (being minimalistic to the core, the scene is very intense and lets you experience the whole psychotic action as if in slow-mo, though it's in actual speed). 4) Two strong men wailing like stray dogs near the fire. 5) Every time the leader is about to give orders, the atmosphere of incompetence captures all people present, though he tries really hard to act like the commander. The acting of this almost unknown person is unique.

And most importantly, the director does not disappoint during the whole production, sticking to the fine line of a weird and tough thriller, never stepping aside to brighter genres (even the jokes are VERY dark).

This comment will be changing. Not because the movie is of doubtful quality, but because it's so multi-layered and unique, that it deserves a much more detailed analysis.

A 10 out of 10, quite an achievement. Thank you for attention.
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9/10
Seriously creepy soviet apocalypse
cousinoleg19 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Псы - Hounds, Dogs (russian). This is the first soviet movie with horror elements that i've seen in my childhood. It could be somewhat traumatizing, depressing and scary like many other perestroika period movies, so don't show it to little children, since it instilled in me a deep fear of dogs, only thanks to God it has decreased now.

The intro shows a verse from the Bible, alluding that the events of the movie and USSR fall are the result of God's punishment. A group of various soviet people - an alcoholic teacher, an immoral sports shooter, a hunter, a criminal, guided by a party representative and a driver take an old bus towards a lost village in the desert near a large dried lake (a nod to the catastrophe of Aral sea).

They were instructed to clean up the spread of wolves attacking people. Once there they encounter only two people, a hydrologist and his wife, surviving on a tank of rain water. Later some marauders, attempting to steal the abandoned village property are being attacked by the real cause of deaths - dogs that turned feral and cannibalistic.

The hunters barely fight off the massive assault of the feral dogs, and then clean up a stranded ship with a cargo of ice, now melted to water, which was the dogs' lair. At the same time the surviving marauder steals their bus, but ends up swallowed by quicksand, leaving the hunters stranded in the desert. This causes a mental breakdown in the hunters, so they resort to conflict, murder and suicide. The two remaining hunters wail in anguish like dogs, feeling helpless.

NOTE: It may seem like a horror movie about an isolated village, but it's subtext was about the real collapse and decay which has taken over the whole Soviet Union. The communism and humanism was failing, so the people turned to western ideas and methods, out of desperate attempts to imitate the seemingly peaceful and prosperous West, often resorting to wild capitalism through crimes, so the dogs may actually symbolize a part of soviet people who turned on their own, like cannibals. For instance the marauder wears a t-shirt with an English text, which was a popular fad in the late 80s-early 90s, until people realized that capitalism and democracy will not grant you an instant material heaven.

It is also a critique of the politics of the corrupt soviet state to boost statistics for bonuses and praises for party members and production directors, which promoted blind service, demagogue-propagandist talk, leading to common mistrust and treachery, which often lead to catastrophes and disasters. There is a common saying, about the causes of soviet problems and deficiency, "People forgot of God", by creating some sort of a false religion of faith in "communism", heavily borrowing from Christianity and humanism, with the ultimate goal being a sort of material heaven on earth, but this faith could only exist as long as the people needed to rebuild the states from the ashes of war, both after the fall of the Russian empire and civil war, and then after WWII, after which it slowly returned to capitalism, with Nomenklatura, party members and their associates becoming the new financial elite and future "democratic" rulers.

Also it has a creepy atmosphere and an electronic soundtrack, somehow similar to the one in the American movie Cyborg (1989). For another movie with similar feel, made by the same director and composer, with much of the same cast, see Proryv (1986) - Inrush.

CONCLUSION: Don't depend on various human inventions and politics, they sooner or later fail. It is true faith in God and our Lord Jesus Christ, that leads people away from their sinful nature towards holiness by God's grace. Depend on God and He will deliver you, for instance the remaining hunters could escape the desert by walk, since they could get food and water from the hydrologist or the ship, which could have been boiled to be cleaned.
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I didn't finish this one
jrd_7322 June 2022
I am not giving a star rating to this film since I turned it off halfway through for reasons that I will explain later on.

Psy is a post-apocalyptic film made in Russia. The plot had a lowly bureaucrat tasked with assembling a crew to eliminate wolves that have been attacking (and eating) people in a not quite deserted village some kilometers away. The village was once set on an ocean, but only sand remained, leading to the interesting image of a lighthouse in the middle of a desert. After the protagonists arrived, they found that the attacks were not being carried out by wolves but by a pack of wild, hungry dogs. Since they were contracted only for wolf hides, some of the men wanted to return to, well, not exactly civilization, but the bleak existence they were used to. However, the men became stranded after their bus is stolen and would have to fight their way out. That was basically the plot of Psy, a sort-of futuristic version of that American 80's horror film The Pack, which starred Joe Don Baker.

I gave up on Psy after the first big action scene. The dogs were attacking the crew at their camp, a couple of stories up this abandoned building. The men had to shoot the dogs. It became clear to me that the dogs were being really gunned down, not by the actors (since they do not appear in the same frames), but in insert shots. I realize that special effects can be convincing, but the way these dogs sounded and moved when they were shot (some not dying instantly) strongly suggested a canine snuff film. I hope I am wrong, but I doubt it.

I am a westerner who grew up in the countryside of the Midwest. I have seen animals killed for food or to be put out of their misery. However, I also had, growing up, dogs as pets. I just could not stomach scenes of dogs being shot, regardless of whether they were pets or animals that were unwanted and homeless.

True, I did not flinch over the scenes of the buffalo shootings in Richard Brooks' The Last Hunt (a film I liked). I sat through the samurai film Shogun's Shadow where a horse was lit on fire, even though I did not care for that scene. Nonetheless, I could not go anymore of Psy. I am not giving it a star rating, nor am I going to finish the disk, but I do think potential viewers should be warned, so I am writing this review.
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