Los Angeles Times

Deft mix of sport, Soviet politics

- — Gary Goldstein

“The Fencer,” Finland’s official Academy Award entry for 2016, is an effective mix of underdog sports drama and political thriller, inspired by the true-life story of celebrated fencing champ Endel Nelis.

The 1953-set film finds Estonian resister Endel (a finely understate­d Mart Avandi) forced to flee Leningrad — and Stalin’s secret police — and return to his Soviet-occupied homeland to hide away in the tiny town of Haapsalu.

There, he’s hired as an athletic instructor at the local secondary school, whose dour, provincial principal (Hendrik Toompere) mistrusts Endel’s big-city past.

But when Endel cobbles together a fencing club, he finds enough enthusiasm from the students — including soulful Jaan (Joonas Koff) and puckish Marta (Liisa Koppel) — and their downtrodde­n parents and guardians to defeat the principal’s disdain for a sport he deems a “relic of feudal times.”

Later, despite his initial reluctance, Endel enters his eager young trainees in a national fencing tournament in Leningrad, which results in its share of inspiratio­nal moments as well as suspense as Endel risks capture by Soviet authoritie­s.

Director Klaus Haro, working from a script by Anna Heinamaa, deftly captures the grayish gloom and day-to-day paranoia of postwar Soviet life, while infusing this absorbing tale with affecting emotion.

“The Fencer.” In Estonian and Russian with English subtitles. Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 39 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Royal, West L.A.; Laemmle Playhouse 7, Pasadena.

 ?? CFI Releasing ?? ESTONIAN RESISTER Endel (Mart Avandi) teaches a student (Liisa Koppel) a few moves.
CFI Releasing ESTONIAN RESISTER Endel (Mart Avandi) teaches a student (Liisa Koppel) a few moves.

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