R.M.N.

6.9
20222h 5m

A few days before Christmas, having quit his job in Germany, Matthias returns to his Transylvanian village. He wishes to involve himself more in the education of his son, Rudi, left for too long in the care of his mother, Ana, and to rid him of the unresolved fears that have gripped him. He’s also eager to see his ex-lover Csilla and preoccupied about his old father, Otto. When a few new workers are hired at the small factory that Csilla manages, the peace of the community is disturbed, underlying fears grip the adults, and frustrations, conflicts and passions erupt through the thin sliver of apparent understanding and calm.

Production

Logo for Mobra Films
Logo for Why Not Productions
Logo for France 3 Cinéma

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Trailer #2 [Subtitled]

Trailer #2 [Subtitled]

Thumbnail for video: Official UK Trailer [Subtitled]

Official UK Trailer [Subtitled]

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer [Subtitled]

Official Trailer [Subtitled]

Thumbnail for video: A Conversation on R.M.N. with Ethan Hawke and Cristian Mungiu

A Conversation on R.M.N. with Ethan Hawke and Cristian Mungiu

Thumbnail for video: Cristian Mungiu on R.M.N.

Cristian Mungiu on R.M.N.

Thumbnail for video: Clip

Clip

Cast

Photo of József Bíró

József Bíró

The Catholic Priest

Photo of Andrei Finti

Andrei Finti

Papa Otto

Photo of Alin Panc

Alin Panc

Traian

Photo of Axel Moustache

Axel Moustache

The Slaughterhouse Foreman

Photo of Gheorghe Ifrim

Gheorghe Ifrim

Vasile Brebu

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

After a bit of an altercation with a co-worker in a meat processing factory in Germany, the slightly thuggish "Matthias" (Marin Grigore) returns to his rural Romanian village where his less than delighted to see him wife "Ana" (Macrina Barladeanu) is trying to bring up their young son "Rudi" (Mark E. Blenyesi). The young lad has clearly suffered from some sort of trauma and so doesn't ever speak. "Matthias" needs to find a job, but the local employer - a bakery run by "Csilla" (Judith Slate) - is fully staffed, though largely by migrant workers including a family from Nepal. What now ensues is quite a telling drama that tries to reconcile the familial differences between the troubled trio whilst also looking at the impact of immigration on small towns where local employment - that pays sufficiently well to maintain adequate standards of living - is particularly sparse. It looks at a xenophobia but with a justifiable, almost sympathetic eye and it also takes a look at the role of the ostensibly tolerant and all-encompassing religious establishment that is perhaps not as Christian as we might expect. This community is not intrinsically racist but perhaps just a little bit nimby-ist - and often with a degree of plausible just cause. I can't say I loved the ending - it was incomplete and rather unsatisfactory for me, but the efforts from the actors and the sometimes quite potent writing offers us an intimate view on just how grand design politics can impact small, traditional, communities.

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