Dau. Katya Tanya ((better)) | LEGIT ✭ |
DAU is a remarkable project that has been pushing the boundaries of art and cinema for over a decade. At its heart are Katya and Tanya, two talented women who have become the faces of this innovative project. Through their performances, Katya and Tanya have brought DAU to life, offering a glimpse into a world that is both familiar and strange.
The story follows (Ekaterina Yuspina), a young librarian at the Institute whose idealistic views on love are repeatedly crushed by cynical reality and failed affairs with men. She eventually finds genuine tenderness and connection with Tanya (Tatyana Polozhiy), a journalist colleague. Their fragile happiness is ultimately dismantled by the State Security department, which deems their relationship "inappropriate" for a Soviet woman. Critical Perspectives DAU. Katya Tanya
DAU. Katya Tanya (2020) is a divisive, 103-minute entry in Ilya Khrzhanovskiy's massive and controversial DAU project . Unlike the more brutal and visceral installments like Natasha , this film leans toward a melancholic, psychological melodrama focused on lesbian romance and female subjectivity under Soviet totalitarianism. DAU is a remarkable project that has been
What makes Katya Tanya so unsettling is not the explicit content—we have seen power games before in cinema (from Last Tango in Paris to The Piano Teacher ). It is the absence of a moral anchor. There is no cut to a horrified observer. There is no soundtrack to tell you how to feel. There is only the relentless, static gaze of the camera. The story follows (Ekaterina Yuspina), a young librarian