“CURIOUSLY ENTERTAINING!” –eye Weekly
Though not strictly a silent movie, Veit Helmer's latest is a delightful fable sans dialogue, like his debut Tuvalu. While the market for this kind of parabolic former-Eastern-bloc whimsy isn't what it used to be, Absurdistan is too enjoyable to go unappreciated.
The titular mountain village is so isolated that it's been virtually forgotten, claimed by no country since perestroika. An underground water delivery system constructed generations ago now provides barely a trickle, and local men are too lazy to fix it. Fed up, their industrious wives strike at the one thing these virility-proud husbands can't do without: Not only do they withhold sex, they create an "iron curtain'" separating the genders, and perform armed guerrilla maneuvers. Meanwhile, young Temelko (Maximilian Mauff) frantically tries to repair the pipe by himself, having been told his long-awaited deflowering of Aya (Kristyna Malerova) must take place during a current, short-term celestial alignment. Physical comedy, charmingly primitive f/x, robust performances and imaginative design contributions make Absurdistan a treat for the eyes and funny bone.
--Variety
“A comedy with plenty of hilarious visual gags…refreshingly offbeat, delightfully funny and irresistibly entertaining without a dull moment.” NYC Movie Guru
Cast Kristyna Malerova, Maximilian Mauff, Nino Chkheidze