About Love
About Love
| 10 December 2015 (USA)
About Love Trailers

What is love? The heroes of the film try to answer this question. A series of the most different characters and their stories are woven together. Small stories about various things, all about love: a young pair who prefer to live through images of Japanese anime-heroes; a secretary who receives an obscene offer from her boss; a Japanese woman who arrives in Moscow in search of a Russian man; a graffiti artist in search of beauty; an ex-wife employed by her husband for an unusual task; and many other things...

Reviews
Inclubabu Plot so thin, it passes unnoticed.
Phonearl Good start, but then it gets ruined
Voxitype Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.
Portia Hilton Blistering performances.
jeeap We finally know what love really is. A basic knowledge of chemistry is requred. It's some substance in our brain that makes us inadequate while dealing with a person of opposite sex )) Not for a long time thought. It dissolves in 2-3 years (sometimes much faster) leaving us with bitter aftertaste and questions.This theory belongs to a lector played by Renata Litvinova. You desperately want to beleive that Anna Melikyan, the director, is joking. But you won't be 100% sure she is.
Lee Eisenberg I interpreted Anna Melikyan's "Pro lyubov'" ("About Love" in English) as a look at the question of how we define love in the 21st century. For example, in the first segment, anime fans Lena and Igor are in a relationship but have never seen each other out of costume. When they finally see each other out of costume it's awkward. Meanwhile, other characters spend all day with their gadgets or video games (as if to say that they love artificial things more than they love people). There's even a man whose goal is ridding Moscow of anything that he deems ugly (including a monument to Peter the Great).Like "The Stroll" and "Elena", "About Love" uses its plot to pose the question of where Russia is going in the 21st century. Whether its the office manager who has to satisfy her boss's desires, or the lecturer's discovery about her former lover, something surprising happens with each character. We see the relationships of the people attending the lecture - and how they cross paths with each other - but there remains the issue of how this will get affected by outside events (that's my interpretation anyway). The movie has some impressive camera work and editing to move the story along. I recommend it.
juan_palmero2010 According to a lecture on love and the biology of love in central Moscow, love is just a dopamine-induced temporary suspension of rational thinking that lasts for maximum 30 months if you are lucky. This lecture on love is the hub where 5 rather unusual short love stories crisscross, each suggesting a different answer to the love quest.A very refreshing, light-humoured dynamic film. Formats and ideas keep changing, some kind of filming experiment that, in my view, worked out quite well. Apparent lightness behind which there is clear craft in filming.Modern ideas about love in an upbeat modern Moscow. Love and illusion sometimes clashing with tough reality.Good music throughout the film. Excellent acting by several characters.
Denis Mysenko My expectations were quite high because of director's previous success with 'Rusalka', but unfortunately 'Pro lyubov' didn't deliver.There is no story whatsoever, the movie is just a chaotic sequence of non-related episodes. That works sometimes ('4 rooms', 'Paris, je t'aime') but mini-stories have to be exceptional and have to feel complete. Many of the performances are plastic and fake. It feels that actors are simply reading their scripts rather than submerging into their characters. In one of the stories, patriotic propaganda is a little bit over the roof, which is probably fine for mainstream movies, but not for art-house directors like Melikyan.In sum, it's an okay popcorn movie for one view, but it's definitely not worth the hype.
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