The Morning Call (Sunday)

Slow, quiet Finnish romance blooms in miserable world

- By Jake Coyle

In a movie year rife with grand three-hour opuses from auteur filmmakers comes a slender 81-minute gem that outclasses them all. Aki Kaurismäki’s “Fallen Leaves” is the kind of movie that’s so charming, you want to run it back the moment it’s over.

Kaurismäki, the writerdire­ctor Finnish master of the deadpan, has for nearly four decades been making fables about mostly working-class characters in harsh economic realities. Bleak as his films are, they’re also funny, compassion­ate and profound. They put up a tough, droll front that never quite hides the heart underneath.

The same could be said for one of the main characters in this plaintive film. When Holappa (Jussi Vatanen), a constructi­on worker, is invited by his friend Houtari (Kaurismäki veteran Janne Hyytiäinen) to karaoke, he replies: “Tough guys don’t sing.”

“You’re not a tough guy,” Houtari responds.

“Fallen Leaves,” Kaurismäki’s first since 2017’s “The Other Side of Hope,” is about Holappa and a woman, Ansa

(Alma Pöysti), both solitary people scraping by in Helsinki. They first encounter each other at that karaoke bar where Houtari sings, but Ansa and Holappa watch apart.

Kaurismäki draws them together, slowly. This is the best big-screen romance of the year, even though its prospectiv­e lovers exchange only a handful of words.

It’s more about their circumstan­ces. In the beginning of the film, Ansa is working at a supermarke­t while a security guard

glares at her. She’s fired for keeping an expired item instead of throwing it away. At home, she looks at her bills and then shuts the power off. Her next job, at a restaurant, fizzles on payday when the owner is arrested for selling drugs.

Holappa loses his job, too. After an accident at a constructi­on site due to shoddy equipment, he’s fired for having alcohol in his blood. He’s a scapegoat, but the drinking problem is real. He keeps vodka in his locker and hidden on the job site.

“I’m depressed because I drink, and I drink because I’m depressed,” he tells Houtari.

The cinematogr­aphy of longtime Kaurismäki collaborat­or Timo Salminen is so spare, with occasional pops of color and irony, that “Fallen Leaves” feels timeless. It casts the cruelty of the world as an eternal state, a sense only expanded upon in the most precise contempora­ry reference of the film. Whenever Ansa turns the radio on, news from the war in Ukraine is being broadcast.

In Kaurismäki’s film, the world is full of bullying authoritie­s. His 2011 film “Le Havre,” about an old French shoe shiner helping a migrant boy, hinged on a police officer who in the climactic moment

choses to look the other way. In “Fallen Leaves,” the only thing to do is curse the jerks who make life miserable, have a drink and head to the movies.

That’s where Ansa and Holappa go, once they finally meet for a date. They see Jim Jarmusch’s “The Dead Don’t

Die,” a funny choice not just because it’s a zombie comedy, but because Jarmusch, a friend of Kaurismäki’s, is so similar in deadpan style. Outside, the couple stands in front of telling posters: “Le Cercle Rouge,” “Fat City,” “Pierrot le Fou” — each a touchstone to the director.

It’s little odes to cinema like these that make

“Fallen Leaves” — winner of the jury prize at the Cannes Film Festival and Finland’s Oscar submission — one of the most self-reflective films for the director. As Ansa and Holappa come together without a word of flowery romance, they carve out a small, private refuge from the world — just like the movies do. There isn’t a bit of fat on “Fallen Leaves” — just some lean truths about life.

In Finnish with English subtitles

Not rated

Running time: 1:21

How to watch: In select theaters

 ?? MUBI ?? Alma Pöysti and Jussi Vatanen star in “Fallen Leaves.”
MUBI Alma Pöysti and Jussi Vatanen star in “Fallen Leaves.”

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