6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The neo realism italian resurrected in this little gem!, December 12, 2004
This review is from: The Match Factory Girl [VHS] (VHS Tape)
The essential clues will be found through a meticulous analysis of the viewer all along the story .
The serious breakdown of the girl can not be seen as an isolated fact . Kaurismaki through his merciless eye-camera will lead to a dead city where the relationships are not cold . Simply they are absent . The emotive liasons are not present in her vocabulary and her loneliness , despair and hopeless will make of her a little monster closed behind a shell created to prevent of any human being .
Her unhappy affair with that nasty boyfriend is the last drop that will surpass the glass before she decides to cross the forbidden line between sanity and insanity .
It is not a simple revenge . It a statement against a not human world deaf , mude and blind .
A must see this minimalist and clever film of Finland .
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3.0 out of 5 stars
Kaurismäki's sparsest and most overtly political film, January 22, 2012
Aki Kaurismaki's 1990 film TULITIKKUTEHTAAN TYTTÖ (The Match Factory Girl) caps a loose trilogy where the Finnish auteur explored the tribulations of lower-class lonely hearts. This Amazon listing describes a standalone DVD, but you can now get this film along with the other instalments of the "Proletariat Trilogy" in a Criterion Collection
box set.
The protagonist of TULITIKKUTEHTAAN TYTTÖ is Iris (Kati Outinen), a taciturn 20-something who still lives with, and financially supports, her layabout parents (Elina Salo, Esko Nikkari). Iris has no real social life to speak of, being ignored by co-workers and, at her nightly excursions to dance halls, by men. After meeting wealthy businessman Aarne (Vesa Vierikko), she thinks she has found happiness, but is cruelly abandoned by him and then her parents. Though she doesn't visibly snap, the pressures take their toll, and she gets her revenge on those who have done her wrong...
As the film progresses, radio and television in the background report the news of Chinese government forces suppressing the protest in Tiananmen Square. That overt political focus is something rather unusual for Kaurismäki. He has usually included some criticism of state bureaucracy in his films, but here the film is entirely a metaphor for what might happen if the people are held down too hard and too long. Kati Outinen has one of the quirkiest faces in cinema, but here makeup and lighting accentuate those looks and she becomes the very image of misery.
TULITIKKUTEHTAAN TYTTÖ fits with Kaurismäki's general aesthetic in that the film features décor and music from the 1950s, although it is ostensibly set in the present day. His penchant for minimal dialogue here is taken even further than usual. What sets this film apart from the rest of his output, however, is that it lacks his characteristic deadpan humour. Even when he focuses on the underdogs staying under, there's usually some chuckles in his work. Consequently, I found TULITIKKUTEHTAAN TYTTÖ often unpleasantly bleak, less enjoyable than his other films. Nonetheless, the streamlined script and careful cinematography make this a film worth seeing at least once.
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