Drifting Clouds

7.6
19961h 37m

The ever-poker-faced Ilona loses her job as a restaurant hostess, as her tram driver husband, Lauri, also finds himself out of work. Together they must hit the streets of Helsinki, facing up to hardship and humiliation in their quest for survival, guided through the gloom by a ray of hope.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Trailer (Remastered)

Trailer (Remastered)

Cast

Photo of Elina Salo

Elina Salo

Mrs. Sjöholm

Photo of Matti Onnismaa

Matti Onnismaa

Forsström

Photo of Pentti Auer

Pentti Auer

Buyer of Dubrovnik

Photo of Outi Mäenpää

Outi Mäenpää

Lauri's Sister

Photo of Esko Nikkari

Esko Nikkari

Restaurant Manager

Photo of Sulevi Peltola

Sulevi Peltola

Man at Nelia

Photo of Vesa Mäkelä

Vesa Mäkelä

Tax Official

Photo of Kaija Pakarinen

Kaija Pakarinen

Woman in Dressing Gown

Photo of Vesa Häkli

Vesa Häkli

Ugly Man

Photo of Antti Reini

Antti Reini

Ugly Man

Photo of Yrjö Järvinen

Yrjö Järvinen

Man at Olympia

Photo of Ona Kamu

Ona Kamu

Cleaning Woman

Photo of Mato Valtonen

Mato Valtonen

Car Dealer

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Reviews

C

CRCulver

6/10

The Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki has made several films about the "little people" in society, hardworking folk who have a spot of bad luck and risk being overlooked by the state bureaucracy and business development schemes that are ostensibly there to help them. KAUAS PILVET KARKAAVAT from 1996 (released as "Drifting Clouds" in English-speaking markets) is one such tale of adversity. Ilona (Kati Outinen) and Lauri (Kari Väänänen) are a happy married couple. One day, Lauri loses his job as a tram driver when the cancellation of some routes makes him redundant. Soon after this Ilona, head water of a fancy restaurant, finds the restaurant bought out by new owners who don't need the old staff. We see Lauri and Ilona turned down from one job after another, facing repo men and shady characters taking advantage of their desperation for work, yet in many respects the film is a comedy. Kaurismäki's humour is extremely deadpan, at some points perhaps too subtle for audiences outside Finland, but it's still generally fun and there are some laugh-out-loud moments.

The film has a strong magical realist feel. Part of this is that the film is ostensibly set during the present day, but the characters and many of the interior sets seem to have stepped out of the 1950s. This is a key feature of Kaurismäki's aesthetic and found throughout his work. But also Ilona and Lauri's insistence on making it on their own, without accepting unemployment money from the state, is plausible but somehow not the expected course of events in 1990s Finland. Kaurismäki was to emphasize distrust of the welfare state in his later film MIES VAILLA MENESYYTTA (Man Without a Past), but there he was too heavy-handed in his criticism, while here there's more a tone of quiet nobility than bitterness.

While the happy ending is too much of a deus ex machina, I greatly enjoyed KAUAS PILVET KARKAAVAT. What really drives the film is the quirky face of Kati Outinen, who in spite of all her defeats rolls with the punches and whose eyes maintain boundless optimism, like an adorable stray puppy. Kaurismäki demands deadpan acting, and Outinen has always acted in his films with a deliberately limited range of expression, but one really appreciates how she discovers subtle degrees of deadpanness: her Ilona is vastly different than, say, her role in Kaurismäki's VARJOJA PARATIIISISSA of a few years before. The performance by Markku Peltola as a drunken cook is also memorable. Finally, the film's colour palette is striking, showing a new maturity in design from the already veteran director.

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