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The Factory opens like a classic post-Soviet maelstrom. A dilapidated industrial building stands in some godforsaken Russian town whose people it had employed before the winds changed its ownership from state regulation to capitalist privatization. When Konstantine Kalugine (Andrey Smolyakov), a local oligarch with links to the KGB and the political powers that be, announces the factory’s bankruptcy, a group of blue-collar workers who haven’t been paid for months conspire to kidnap him for ransom. Though inexperienced and disorganized, each of them is between a rock and a hard place, and they all have their own reasons for taking this fateful plunge. Under the tutelage of mysterious Alexei (Denis Shvedov), the heist quickly goes awry. Soon, Kalugine’s private security team, led by Fog (Vladislav Abashine), and SWAT police have them surrounded. The radicals are trapped inside, the ticking of the clock is palpable, and allegiances are murky. One thing is clear: everyone is disenchanted and knows deep down that in this world there is no justice. And is this a robbery or a revolution? As single threads are slowly pulled, the entire plot unravels into chaos and violence. (Toronto International Film Festival)

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POMO 

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Deutsch Bykov macht wieder auf die Korruption in Russland aufmerksam, aber gleichzeitig auf die Notwendigkeit der Existenz von Sozialschichten (weil sonst eine Gesellschaft einfach nicht funktionieren kann). Er will mehreren Seiten Recht geben. Er möchte, dass die Konstellation der Figuren geistreich wirkt, aber andererseits will er es direkt und klar haben (der Film ist purer Mainstream). Am Ende stockt die Verteilung der Sympathien gegenüber den einzelnen Teilnehmern des Spiels, die Gefühle sind verwirrter. Dank einer unvorhersehbaren Entwicklung und einer hochwertigen Form ist sein Knaller aber immer noch sehr "enjoyable“. [Helsinki IFF] ()

angel74 

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Englisch I guess I didn't quite get the ending, but I wasn't bored for a minute and I could take some life truths away with me. For example, I found the polemic that justice does not exist to be apt and more than appropriate in the social context of the movie. As a whole, it was really depressing and yet sufficiently suspenseful, musically sophisticated and quite unpredictable in terms of plot. Which are certainly compelling reasons for my great satisfaction with this movie. (80%) ()

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Necrotongue 

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Englisch Yuri Bykov's film put me in a much better mood after Andrei Tarkovsky had done a number on me. It certainly didn’t get so philosophical (just a little), and what I got instead was an interesting and decently filmed story. I didn't get bored even for a second, and the film made me feel good despite its gloomy atmosphere. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

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Englisch Yuri Bykov serves up a decent dramatic thriller and the Russians score plus points. The story is about factory workers who have not been paid for three months and decide to kidnap and rob their boss, but the boss of the factory is an influential man who has dangerous people working for him and this complicates the whole situation. The film more or less takes place in one factory with several characters whose relationships will constantly change, secrets will float to the surface and there will be one perfectly realistic shootout. Apart from the acting performances, I also praise the smart dialogue. 75%. ()

Othello 

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Englisch Criticism of the system, non-criticism of the system, as soon as I see people in balaclavas with AKs in their hands standing around in dank factories and devastated plains, I get a terrible S.T.A.L.K.E.R. video game vibe. Otherwise, actually, like Bykov's previous The Fool, this feels like a perfect debut in the many ways it wants to scream about some injustice in the world without forgiving itself for various genre shortcuts, artifacts, or even action scenes. The Factory feels less mature than The Fool, in some ways written by an enthusiastic child's hand, but it's also clear that its owner is someone who watches contemporary films and can thus spin some of the clichés on offer. From that perspective, it's such a synergistic joy to watch. However much the film tries to be bleak and oppressive. ()

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