The late 1960s was the time of Beatles and Rolling Stones, the time of
sexual revolution. These events have their echo in Bulgarian
English-learning school. The school order provokes a ...
Director: Ivan Andonov
Writer: Vlado Daverov
Stars: Hristo Shopov,
Georgi Staykov,
Sofiya Kuzeva
Storyline
The late 1960s was the time of Beatles and Rolling Stones, the time of
sexual revolution. These events have their echo in Bulgarian
English-learning school. The school order provokes a protest of the
students due to the narrow-minded teachers.
Reviews
The best film of our generation
This
film marks the height of Bulgarian cinema in the XXth century. No other
film shows better the social and cultural framework of Bulgarian
society just before the end of the Cold War than Vchera. The film itself
is about young people coming of age, struggling with the realities and
paradoxes of their future adult life in Bulgarian society. Shown is the
ferocious competition within the top classes in Bulgarian society, which
was otherwise supposed to be class-free. (This competition actually
costs the life of one of the film's characters, Rostislav.) Shown is
also the inequality in a society where everyone was supposed to be
equal. Shown is the impending sexual revolution in a country that was
often hypocritical about sexual issues. The cultural background itself
is the paradoxical contrast of the semi-military discipline in socialist
high schools vs. the libertarian music of the Beatles, the students
clad in drab uniforms vs. the Western ideas that were slowly filtering
to them, the profanity and oafishness of the school officials vs.
Shakespeare's exquisite poetry that was taught in these schools. (The
title Vchera means "yesterday" in Bulgarian, the same "yesterday" from
Shakespeare's verse in Macbeth: "And all our yesterdays have lighted
fools the way to dusty death ..."). For millions of Bulgarians coming to
grips with these contrasts, paradoxes, and realities, the film rings
very true, which has helped propel it to near-cult status. Given the
rapid decline of Bulgarian cinema after the end of the Cold War, it is
likely that Vchera will remain one of its peaks for many more years.
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