2000 Songs of Farida (Uzbek: Faridaning ikki ming qoʻshigʻi), also translated as Farida's 2000 Songs, is a 2020 Uzbekistani drama film directed by Yalkin Tuychiev. It is set in Central Asia in 1920.
The story centres on a landowner in a rural location, who already has three wives, and has his life disrupted when a fourth wife arrives at his home.[3] He has married the new, younger wife because his other wives had not produced an heir for him,[2] but he treats his wives poorly, and the women forge close relationships among themselves. The coming of the Bolsheviks means that women's roles in society will change.[4]
Cast
Sanobar Haqnazarova as Kamil's wife
Bahrom Matchanov as Kamil
Ilmira Rahimjanova as Kamil's wife
Yulduz Rajabova as Kamil's wife
Marjona Uljayeva as Kamil's wife
Themes
One reviewer described the film as "a story about the changes in local women’s lives under patriarchy and the war going on around them. Using the example of one local family, the film analyzes how the historical events of the beginning of the last century in Turkestan, affected the life of the population of this region".[2]
The director said "This film is neither a historical decoration nor a museum exhibition,... but the exploration of a real-life, real people, their reality, dignity and truth... that gets over the borders of history, mentality, nationality and race in order to reach a real sense of humaneness".[2]
World Film Reviews called it a "deceptively clever film", with the final 20 minutes particularly exciting.[1]
Called Faridaning ikki ming qoʻshigʻi in the Uzbek language, the film title has also been translated as Farida's 2000 Songs.[6] The film makes use of long takes, showing the dry and rural landscape around the house where all of the action takes place.[2]
Its German premiere was at the GoEast festival, based in Wiesbaden but much of it online, in April 2021,[7][4] and it was shown at the 6th Ulju Mountain Film Festival, a film festival held in the Yeongnam Alps in South Korea[8] dedicated to films about mountains and mountaineering. It was listed as the first of twelve films not to be missed at the festival.[9]
Reception
The film was submitted for the Golden Globes in 2020, but was not nominated. The website reviewer called it a rare film:[2]
It was selected as the Uzbekistani entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 93rd Academy Awards.[10][11] However, the film was disqualified,[12] because the Uzbek Film Commission did not submit the required format of the film to the Academy in time.[1][13] It was resubmitted for the following year.[14]