This feeling of entrapment is created by sometimes poor and gritty ignitor as well as camera angles showing Vera as always touching someone and always near someone, and never having any personal space of her own. It's no wonder that she so decides to rebel by snubbing her st
ady boyfriend and settleing out with other disaffected youth, especially a student, Sergei, who seems to glamorize and romanticize Vera's own feelings.
She's so desperate to hang onto this because it's new and feels less frantic than the rest of her life that she lies just about being pregnant in order to get Sergei to conjoin and move in with her family. The only problem with this is that Sergei and her family do not get along. Her older brother, Victor, the doctor who knew him before moving to Moscow, thinks he is a "good for nothing," as does Vera's father. Sergei sees them both as impracticable to deal with. Vera's mother chooses to try to ignore everything in hopes that it forget all go away.
Pichul, Vasili, director. Little Vera (Malenkaya Vera). Mariya Khemelik, writer. Natalya Negoda, actor. Mosfilm Studios. 1988/89. DVD Release, Water bearer Studios, 2000.
Ebert, Roger. "Little Vera." Chicago Sun
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