| California Dreamin' (endless) | |
|---|---|
| Romanian | California Dreamin' (nesfârșit) |
| Directed by | Cristian Nemescu |
| Written by | Tudor Voican Cristian Nemescu Catherine Linstrum |
| Produced by | Cristian Nemescu |
| Starring | Armand Assante Jamie Elman Răzvan Vasilescu Maria Dinulescu |
| Edited by | Liviu Marghidan[1] |
| Distributed by | Media PRO Studios |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 155 minutes |
| Country | Romania |
| Languages | Romanian English |
California Dreamin' (endless)[2] (Romanian:California Dreamin' (nesfârșit)) is a 2007 Romanian film byCristian Nemescu. It won thePrix un certain regard at the2007 Cannes Film Festival. It also picked up the Iris Award for Best Film, the Audience Award and the Canvas Award at theBrussels European Film Festival 2007. The film is also sometimes calledEndless inEnglish,[3]nesfârșit being Romanian for "endless, unfinished".
The director died before editing was completed. MediaPro Studios decided to edit the film with the entirety of the material left by Nemescu, a decision which led to the considerable runtime of 155 minutes.[4]
I'm in Romania, I guess
— Captain Jones
The plot is based on a true story:[5] in 1999, during theNATO bombing of Yugoslavia, a train containingAmerican radar equipment required inKosovo, guarded by a small troop of American andRomanian soldiers, went through Romania and was stopped for four days in a small village inOltenia because some customs papers were missing, even though the train had been authorised to pass through Romania by its Prime Minister.
In the movie, the train is stopped several days in the village of Căpâlnița by the chief of the train station, Doiaru, who is corrupt and routinely steals goods from the trains which go through his station. He forces the train to move onto a siding until the paperwork is produced. The Americans try in vain to get the Romanian government to sort out the paperwork, but the responsibility is passed from one ministry to the other and as a result, their departure is delayed.
Periodic flashbacks take the audience back to Doiaru's childhood, when his parents, who were factory owners,awaited the coming of the Americansat the end of World War II. As his father was considered a German supporter, Doiaru's family dreaded the arrival of the Russians. However, the Russians arrived first and they took away Doiaru's parents and he never saw them again. The first Americans to arrive in the village after the war are the very soldiers on the train in 1999.
The mayor of the village tries to make the Americans' stay enjoyable and invites them to the 100th anniversary of the founding of the village, even though such a feast was celebrated only a few months before. Doiaru's daughter, Monica, develops a crush on an American soldier, but as she knows no English, she uses the help of a local geek, Andrei, who is in love with her.
The mayor and the rest of the villagers are incited into revolting against Doiaru and start a riot, during the course of which the train leaves and Doiaru dies.
An ending note says that the radar was installed two hours after the ceasefire with Yugoslavia was signed, and the final scene shows Monica and Andrei meeting in Bucharest in 2004.
Onreview aggregator websiteRotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 89% based on 18 reviews, with an average rating of 6.90/10.[6]
Keith Uhlich ofTime Out New York namedCalifornia Dreamin' the third-best film of 2009.[7]
The film also got a 3 out of 4 from Andrew Schenker ofSlant Magazine.[8]
Chivoiu, Oana (2011) “Cristian Nemescu's California Dreamin' (Endless): A Cinematic Radiography of a National Dream”, in: manycinemas 1, 54-65OnlineArchived 2012-03-27 at theWayback Machinepdf