Time Out

1985
6.8| 0h9m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 20 May 1985 Released
Producted By: Tallinnfilm
Country: Soviet Union
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

An anxious cat, immediately engaged in a flurry of stressful morning activities, works himself into a nervous breakdown.

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Cast

Director

Priit Pärn

Production Companies

Tallinnfilm

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Time Out Audience Reviews

Spoonatects Am i the only one who thinks........Average?
TrueHello Fun premise, good actors, bad writing. This film seemed to have potential at the beginning but it quickly devolves into a trite action film. Ultimately it's very boring.
Nayan Gough A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.
Jakoba True to its essence, the characters remain on the same line and manage to entertain the viewer, each highlighting their own distinctive qualities or touches.
MartinHafer AEG MAHA ("Time Out") is a short animated film that is not for everyone! It is almost like taking drugs--weird, colorful and brain-numbing. As for me, I really didn't enjoy it but can respect the work and time that went into making this thing.I'll try to describe the film, but frankly it defies description--especially after the main character apparently goes crazy. This character looks like a cat or raccoon painted by someone using LSD. The colors are very funky and the animal runs about the apartment trying to fix everything. When it all goes kablooey, it seems to lose its mind and enters a bizarro world at the beach that...well...is odd. Boobies, people whizzing in the ocean and a lot of other stuff follows.As the film was meant as an art film, I guess it's pretty good but not exactly something I would like to see again.
ackstasis Priit Pärn's 'Time Out (1984)' is as nonsensical as a Terry Gilliam cartoon, but with even more randomness to spare. The story, such as it is, concerns an overworked cat who wakes up and is immediately engaged in a flurry of stressful morning activities, eventually working himself into a nervous breakdown. At this point, the cat enters an imaginary inner world that temporarily removes him from the chaos of his daily routine, similar to the reveries of Jonathan Pryce's character in Gilliam's 'Brazil (1985).' At this point, any semblance of narrative is thrown out the window. What I found most interesting amid all this craziness was how Pärn accentuated the surrealism of the cat's fantasies by toying with visual perception, a bit like M.C. Escher's tessellations – an apparent river is revealed to be a dwarf's blue hat; a bird rotates its beak to become a wizard's hat; a crow tries to take off, only to find that its tail is a turn-off in the road.Eventually, the cat reawakens from his daydream and falls back into the chaotic routine to which he's become accustomed. His "escape" into fantasy, oddly enough, was no less hectic than his usual schedule, though he does admittedly have a greater control over the elements of his environment. Priit Pärn's visual style is a departure from the traditional Soviet animation of earlier decades, decidedly less graceful and with a slap-dash quality that suggests the animator was basically making it up as he went {visually, one might venture that the film is closest to the "Nu, pogodi!" series (1969-1993)}. There's even an appearance from a giant stamping foot, probably indicating that Pärn was, indeed, influenced by Gilliam's work on "Monty Python's Flying Circus." I usually enjoy Soviet animation for its gorgeous visuals, so I'm not sure that 'Time Out' was necessarily my sort of film – but, even so, that was a wild ten minutes. I'm sure I'll be revisiting Pärn's other work at some later date.