Aki Kaurismaki Collection Vol.2 details

Format: 15 DVD
Starring: Andre Wilms, Kati Outinen, Matti Pellonpaa, Kari Vaananen, Elina Salo, Sakari Kuosmanen, Kirsi Tykkylainen
Director: Aki Kaurismaki
Genres: Comedy - General, Drama - General, Romantic, Romance
Studio: FUSION MEDIA
Name Discs
Aki Kaurismaki Collection Vol.2 - Take Care Of Your Scarf, Tatjana
PG Disc 1
Aki Kaurismaki Collection Vol.2 - Drifting Clouds
PG Disc 2
Aki Kaurismaki Collection Vol.2 - Juha
12 Disc 3

DVD Information

Run time: 3 hours 49 minutes
Rental release: 08 Oct 2007
Main languages: Finnish
Subtitles: English
Write your own review

Most helpful review Aki Kaurismaki Collection Vol.2

  • A film for ironic introverts

    Rated - 5.0 stars  
    By a customer from Buckfastleigh , 30 Oct 2008

    [Highly rated reviewer]

    This is a review of Take Care of Your Scarf...

    I have to like Kaurismaki films.

    Even tho i don't like to like them.

    Don't like retro rockabilly chic at all.

    I can imagine Kaurismaki sitting around drinking pots and bottles of coffee and vodka, listening to 1950's rockers and Finnish tango, with a fag on, picking at chips and burgers, getting slowly sozzled.

    And then quietly belching and burping. Or letting out a gentle quiet f--t.

    And you have to smile. Cus he's naff. And doing it on purpose. Without meaning to (cause offence that is)

    If there were a Deadpan Olympics, Kaurismaki and Jarmusch would be favourites to lose at everything. Deliberately come last in the Low Jump. Get disqualified doing the 6 Foot Slouch (on the sofa)

    Like 'Man without a Past' this film seems to be moulded out of the same melancholy. Nobody is getting anywhere much. Nobody is doing anything much. It's all about putting up with being a Nobody. You can't help but be the Nobody you are, and were always meant to be. You squeeze out dry farts of droll humour like you were passing wind. Has to be done. But hopefully nobody is noticing.

    You're an Underdog. Nobody is bothering about you. So don't bother them. Or be bothered by them. Or be bothering.

    The Art of Lugubriousness. You either have to like it, or you have to switch off.

    I didn't switch off.

    So I'm watching Valto guzzling down potfuls of coffee and Reino cracking open (with his elbow) and quickly emptying yet another bottle of vodka. They're a couple of boy-men who don't know how to talk to girls. Or maybe they don't want to talk to girls. Even tho they've got 2 of them in tow, as traveling companions.

    Valto takes the creases out of his jacket with a blowtorch. He's got his car coffee maker bubbling. He's a big blokey seamstress with a rocker quiff. He locks his cigar smoking, face-slapping mother in the cupboard so he can go get more coffee. Reino is a dodgy mechanic who brylcreems his mustache and looks a bit diddy alongside his lumbering lump of a mate Valto.

    You get how absurd this is right?! Affable absurdism. Like watching a gentle black and white silent movie. Only the characters keep forgetting to be silent. Or rather they keep remembering they can speak. So they say something. Occasionally. For old times sake.

    It's only about an hour long - which is long enough. I don't understand why films have to be an hour and a half long. Let's have more films that find their natural length rather than go on for longer than they should.

    Kaurismaki's films are for ironic introverts

    with lugubrious faces.

    And I'm one of them.
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(4)
  • Finns for the memory

    Rated - 4.5 stars  
    By CapnPookie (97 reviews) from Upminster , 01 Sep 2010
    Grimly funny, starkly shot in black/white and using minimalist dialogue.

    2 pretty unprepossessing guys set off to test drive a new car engine. Many hours, coffees and vodkas later, they pick up - or, more accurately, are picked up by - 2 women trying to get to the ferry port. Unperturbed by this additional lengthy detour, off they all set on a bizarre road trip. And mother's still locked in the cupboard...

    Only about an hour long, but every minute is packed with careful detail, loaded with atmosphere and very, very funny. Watch this!
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  • Good

    Rated - 4.0 stars  
    By Charlie2000 (67 reviews) from Northampton , 21 Jun 2009
    I really enjoyed this, featuring as it does two of the most boring characters ( but stil linteresting) characters ever! One of them played the manager in Leningrad Cowboys Go America.
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  • A film for ironic introverts

    Rated - 5.0 stars  
    By a customer from Buckfastleigh , 30 Oct 2008
    This is a review of Take Care of Your Scarf...

    I have to like Kaurismaki films.

    Even tho i don't like to like them.

    Don't like retro rockabilly chic at all.

    I can imagine Kaurismaki sitting around drinking pots and bottles of coffee and vodka, listening to 1950's rockers and Finnish tango, with a fag on, picking at chips and burgers, getting slowly sozzled.

    And then quietly belching and burping. Or letting out a gentle quiet f--t.

    And you have to smile. Cus he's naff. And doing it on purpose. Without meaning to (cause offence that is)

    If there were a Deadpan Olympics, Kaurismaki and Jarmusch would be favourites to lose at everything. Deliberately come last in the Low Jump. Get disqualified doing the 6 Foot Slouch (on the sofa)

    Like 'Man without a Past' this film seems to be moulded out of the same melancholy. Nobody is getting anywhere much. Nobody is doing anything much. It's all about putting up with being a Nobody. You can't help but be the Nobody you are, and were always meant to be. You squeeze out dry farts of droll humour like you were passing wind. Has to be done. But hopefully nobody is noticing.

    You're an Underdog. Nobody is bothering about you. So don't bother them. Or be bothered by them. Or be bothering.

    The Art of Lugubriousness. You either have to like it, or you have to switch off.

    I didn't switch off.

    So I'm watching Valto guzzling down potfuls of coffee and Reino cracking open (with his elbow) and quickly emptying yet another bottle of vodka. They're a couple of boy-men who don't know how to talk to girls. Or maybe they don't want to talk to girls. Even tho they've got 2 of them in tow, as traveling companions.

    Valto takes the creases out of his jacket with a blowtorch. He's got his car coffee maker bubbling. He's a big blokey seamstress with a rocker quiff. He locks his cigar smoking, face-slapping mother in the cupboard so he can go get more coffee. Reino is a dodgy mechanic who brylcreems his mustache and looks a bit diddy alongside his lumbering lump of a mate Valto.

    You get how absurd this is right?! Affable absurdism. Like watching a gentle black and white silent movie. Only the characters keep forgetting to be silent. Or rather they keep remembering they can speak. So they say something. Occasionally. For old times sake.

    It's only about an hour long - which is long enough. I don't understand why films have to be an hour and a half long. Let's have more films that find their natural length rather than go on for longer than they should.

    Kaurismaki's films are for ironic introverts

    with lugubrious faces.

    And I'm one of them.
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    • (10) Yes |
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  • Take care of your scarf, Tatyana

    Rated - 5.0 stars  
    By a customer from High Wycombe , 26 Jun 2008
    Excellent! and funny
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