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  • gbijumohan18 January 2017
    The plot of the film is very interesting. A student under communist regime wants to escape from Romania...same time he meet an exiled poet Ovid from Roman empire who wants to return to Rome (during the dictatorship of Augustus . They comes to an agreement to help each other....This satire has multiple dimensions to explore. Socially, politically, historically the film is multi-layered and intriguing. It presents the repeating forms of dictatorships in different ages of history. It is about power, domination, social engineering and individual's struggle against totalitarianism of the state.

    The film maker has done a good job. The historical reality is interwoven with fictional fantasy. The humor rules the all....
  • As a kid I from India, I remember reading newspaper reports about Ceausescu. Romania seemed like a distant country, I wanted to know more but about thirty years ago there was not much I could read. Thanks to Robert Eugen Popa's film Veni, Vedi, Fugi. I know more about what was happening in Romania in the eighties. The first shot of the film shows a Roman historical character, which I later discover is Ovid. Film draws parallel between two characters a poet and a young boy who are separated by two thousand years. The young boy wants to leave his country while, Ovid is already out of his country, in exile. The film is about the challenges faced by young boy in a communist regime, from his school principal to loan sharks, everyone lays obstacles in his path.

    The film has a complex structure, an implacable irony that dominated the Golden eras (Ceausescu's in the 1980's and Emperor Augustus's 2000 years ago) .This film is a reflection of Romanian society in the days of communist dictatorship. The name of Ceausescu comes couple of times in the film. I would recommend this film to anyone who wants to know more about Romania
  • The seventh art or muse Clio herself came closer to the viewer to untangle both the strings of some elusive ancient stories that have still kept away the reasons why Ovid was forced to leave Rome for some cold and remote place on The Black Sea Coast and also a young romance sprung mostly from our 'K' – a high school teenager who seems to dance on the rhymes of Ars Amandi. Two separate realities emerge and are very similar for us though initially felt different for 'K' – Rome in Augustus' time could not resemble Romania in the late Communism era yet both were engaged in oppressive actions for controlling their people. Thus, beautifully combined, history and art portray a short span in the life of an adolescent who albeit poor at Latin finds help from an imaginary Ovid who tutors him to unravel the mystery of why the poet had been removed from Rome and succeeds in doing the homework being later unexpectedly commended by the teacher. This short film is humorously speckled with a three-bloke gang, an allusion to a famous concubine in the city of Constanta from the 80's and the petty slang of those days and all these are not far etching from what we remember. Again, the poet akin to the Roman gentry finds the society in this contemporary city of Tomis a clear match for the ruthlessness of the Ancient Empire. Ovid must have desperately needed a way back to Rome but found none while 'K' managed to flee away from communism and won his freedom.
  • jesusgalleres8 February 2017
    There is more than a touch of magical realism in the connection of K, the 12 grade protagonist of the film, trapped in the last years of Ceausescu's "golden era" and iconic Roman poet Ovid, (the protagonist's larger than life alter ego in the film, perhaps ) exiled in the year 8AD, from Rome to the the ancient city of Tomis, on the Black sea. (current day Romania).

    Despite the relentless propaganda of Caesar Octavian Augustus, that tried "to sell" to the Roman people, his 41 years reign as the "golden era" of the "Republic", Caesar era was one of brutal repression, political assassinations and intimidation.

    A well thought scene that caught my attention shows one suggestive gesture of the Latin teacher that suddenly seem to be descending into an inner looking mode as she observes as bird -that we as audience, hear somewhere off camera - as she discusses about freedom (or lack off during Augustus's reign 2000 years ago and indirectly commenting on the oppression on Romania at the time of the story,in the 80's ) during the Latin class.

    Ovid's is haunted by the obsession to return in secret to his beloved Rome and enlists the local support of K, charismatic and capable of improvisation, but who will have to overcame both, the fear of such a radical action and the fact he's broke, in order to outwit the Romanian Establishment.

    Witty satire of the 80's Socialist regime in Romania as the film has abundant mordant irony ? Hypnotic fable? An ingenious and lyrical fantasy comedy? Probably somewhere at the intersection of these 3 genres.

    "I came, I saw, I fled" is a well crafted film which I highly recommend!
  • The seventh art or muse Clio herself came closer to the viewer to untangle both the strings of some elusive ancient stories that have still kept away the reasons why Ovid was forced to leave Rome for some cold and remote place on The Black Sea Coast and also a young romance sprung mostly from our 'K' – a high school teenager who seems to dance on the rhymes of Ars Amandi. Two separate realities emerge and are very similar for us though initially felt different for 'K' – Rome in Augustus' time could not resemble Romania in the late Communism era yet both were engaged in oppressive actions for controlling their people. Thus, beautifully combined, history and art portray a short span in the life of an adolescent who albeit poor at Latin finds help from an imaginary Ovid who tutors him to unravel the mystery of why the poet had been removed from Rome and succeeds in doing the homework being later unexpectedly commended by the teacher. This short film is humorously speckled with a three- bloke gang, an allusion to a famous concubine in the city of Constanta from the 80's and the petty slang of those days and all these are not far etching from what we remember. Again, the poet akin to the Roman gentry finds the society in this contemporary city of Tomis a clear match for the ruthlessness of the Ancient Empire. Ovid must have desperately needed a way back to Rome but found none while 'K' managed to flee away from communism and won his freedom.
  • I saw the film 10 times. It was like a time machine for me. Every time getting me back in time. Making me to remember school years with similar problems as K's, living in that communist hard period with no real aspirations and without any real future. Very vivid sensation of been there lived that. Characters are very well defined, and the melange of fantasy and history that inserts into the present action is very catchy an tastefully. Even the film is not a comedy, humor is the word. You can find the satiric mood of the film maker on every step. Bottom line I liked the film, it made me meditate over some things. Worth to see.
  • ionutzer-6442214 February 2017
    I believe Veni, Vidi, Fugi it's really a very refreshing, new type of comedy (or comedic film as it might not be exactly a classic type of comedy)

    There is a realistic treatment of the situations and the Roman poet Publius Ovidio Naso "appears" only as the protagonist who is pushing the always bickering couple credibly into a hilarious "fantasy comedy" zone.

    The chromatic is very vivid and intense - especially during the discotheque scenes - thus leading to a sharp contrast with the way in which the Communist dictatorship is usually represented and an intensification of the already hilarious situations.

    I was really fascinated with the subject matter and the script's structure and I hope to watch soon other films by the same authors.
  • I agree strongly with the above reviews. This is a phenomenal film touching on the echoes of history, art vs. state, imagination vs. dictatorship; all within 29 minutes.

    The story opens with Ovid exiled under what is now called Constanta, Romania; no longer an oppressive Roman state, but operating under the communist regime of Ceausescu in the 1980s. We learn Ovid was exiled by the Augustus Caesar and lived here, wretched and unknown, pining, until his death, to return to Rome, where he had once been its most famous poet. His mentoring of the young student has all the sweet irony of the iconic historical figure meeting the dismayed protagonist, all with a nostalgic view of what must have been a very difficult period to live through. One is reminded of Midnight in Paris, Amacord and Mean Streets all rolled up into a Balkan surprise.

    We are immersed in the character's dilemma: history echoing, exile, entrapment in a Byzantine system ruled by Ceausescu's dreaded secret police, while there is the incredibly obsessive mirage of the West and the need for ingenuity in order to succeed in outwitting the brutal Romanian Government.

    I would like to point out the wonderful characters that are generated and acted by first-class portrayals. The young protagonist K is played superbly displaying all the angst and drama of a young man trying to negotiate his way to manhood. Ovid, is utterly believable - played straight with no irony. One feels that the classic poet has indeed been conjured out of the past. I would love to hang with the Pig Brothers just for enough time to gain a lifetime of hilarious anecdotes. Lastly, the young women are played with true coquettish and dramatic intentions by wonderful actresses.

    My only complaint is I wish it was longer. There is so much potential here. There is a subtle use of camera framing and movement that fulfills all the dramatic goals while never seeming contrived or superficial.

    Bravo, Well done!!!
  • Amazing story, very smart and politically incorrect. A quirky combination of two characters walking 1989's Romania. Ovid desires to return to Rome and K is just an unruly teenager in a communist era, together they will discover how similar their times are. I recommend this film as it challenges your conception of comedy and buddy films. Great storytelling and intelligent dialogues make this film a must watch. I watched this film in Mexico City via private link but I can't wait to see it in the big screen and let Mexican audience make reviews. Congratulations to the team, can't wait to see your next project.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I was a little skeptical about the possibility of pulling off this type of fantasy comedy (especially in a short film, with limited resources). Once i started to watch the film itself, I was scooped in right away. I was thrilled with the way in which the story unfolds story as well as by the effervescence of the script and the excellent performances of the actors.

    Maia Morgenstern's performance as the Latin teacher is nuanced and subtle.

    To summarize it: as opposed to a lot of films which plot is desperately predictable, the viewer's anticipations while watching Veni,Vidi,Fugi are always contradicted and invalidated by a very original and complex script.
  • You want to watch it and then watch it again. This is the feeling that one is left with, upon watching "Veni,Vidi,Fugi".

    This short film written by Timothy M. Brice and Robert Eugen Popa (as well as directed by Robert), succeeds in keeping the audience enticed from beginning to end. Mixing several layers of the story with different characters popping in and out within the parameters of a very catchy aesthetic coupled with a very elaborated narrative.

    The film is infused with some sort of idiosyncratic mix of rich story, humor, mordant sarcasm and social criticism.

    The elaborated mise-en-scene combined with a suggestive cinematography consistently support the plot, mood and ultimately the climax.

    The script makes you really want to spend more time with the characters. A special word should be added for the nuanced role of the disenchanted Latin teacher during the dictatorship years, played by Maia Morgenstern. The spectator is equally immersed in different plot layers, parallel actions, contemporary reality and a similar story from a different historical era, which are all skillfully connected to the main plot.

    This short film from Romania leaves you desiring more and one could very easily see its story becoming a feature film in the future.
  • nicudin10 March 2017
    From its Incipit, which brings the audience to Constanta, on Romania's Black Sea Coast in the year 1989, the medium-length film "Veni, Vidi, Fugi" seems to announce some sort of revisiting to director's native lands, possibly converted into an evocative "Axis Mundi". The unusual note hits us right away though, when we catch sight of the Roman Poet Ovid, exiled to Tomis 2000 years ago in 8 AD, immersed in reading a letter, while the protagonist's voice - a Constanta 12th grade student who is in huge trouble in his Latin class, ''flows" over the fluid travelling shot capturing Ovid's desolation (cultural touch which has brought to the film a special award in Montecatini Festival). As two millenia are compressed instantly through this juxtaposition, we are then thrown through Viorel Sergovici Jr's dynamic camera style into the midst of a romantic innuendo initiated by the protagonist trying to win the heart of a classmate via nonchalant maneuvers, verging on an almost bully-like seducing style. We discover the protagonist is played by "perpetual teenager" of Romanian Cinema, Paul Diaconescu, now almost 30 and yet almost never used at the level of high potentiality demonstrated in the Acting University shows and even coming under a negative spotlight in a production such as "Mamaia" (2013, Jesus del Cerro). In "Veni, Vidi, Fugi" (2016) the young actor though forges a convincing partnership with Constantin Florescu, maybe also because the former outwits the long pattern of supporting roles in which he ''got trapped", ''becoming" an icon - Publius Ovidius Naso, "captured" during the exile and decay stage and yet vital enough to remain a Cicerone and mentor to the young protagonist from a remote province of Rome (Tomis, on the Black Sea Coast). The partnership between protagonist and Ovid is a construct based on a parallelism which could appear somewhat artificial in the absence of any background of "bitter comedy" and also if missing one crucial plot element - both characters - Ovid and the protagonist - tie their destiny to the nieces of the major authority figures in their worlds - both brutal dictatorships - (Ovid, to Iulia, the niece of Emperor Octavian Augustus; while the protagonist is involved in an intense courtship of Iulia, his attractive classmate, who is also the niece of his morose and ominous high school's Principal.) By extracting supremely privileged "insider information" on Ovid's tribulations - from Ovid himself, the protagonist succeeds in winning over the Latin teacher, a sexy and sarcastic Maia Morgenstern (winner of two film festival awards for "Best Supporting Role" for" Veni, Vidi, Fugi" in Buenos Aires, Argentina and Sydney, Australia ). Escaping from the Latin class ordeal, the protagonist's romantic interest shifts - and this is a good plot point of the script that won already this year's "Best Script in International Category" at the Film Festival in Jaipur, India, from classmate Iulia, played with aplomb by less known Malina Tomoiaga, to the "Femme Fatale" played by Raluca Aprodu (mistress of a local Party big shoot and informer for the Securitate - Ceausescu's secret services), who seems to be under a favorable star in last years, as she has achieved definitive recognition in Bogdan Mirica's 2016 "Dogs". The individual's clash with the Establishment seemed to be also at the very center of an older short film by Robert Eugen Popa,( "Regression" - 2011 - winner of "Best Director in Short Film" Award at Corinth International Film Festival 2012 ), built as "Veni, Vidi, Fugi" on a script written together with former UCLA peer and buddy, Timothy M. Brice. From that older film - actors Dorian Boguta (plausible and versatile in the lead role, with the exception of the final scene where there is a credibility slip from his otherwise "chameleonic" range ) Geo Dobre and Claudiu Trandafir are brought back, last two as a pair of secret agents to enhance the directorial comic vision, that is also well supported by Ovidiu Vacaru's fast pace editing. Intense "chromatics" is the portrayal of the nefariously funny criminal trio of the Pig Bros, out of which the Geavit character offers to Elias Ferkin a very earthy role to think his teeth into, at least after the preponderantly mystical characters played in "Kasimir" ( 2013, Directed by Dorian Boguta) and "4.15 The End of the World" (2016 Directed by Catalin Rotaru & Gabi Virginia Sarga). There is no doubt that the complex target of an elaborate historical recreation of the two eras represented in the film would scream for very different financial resources than the ones available to this production. That being the case, the authorial voice falls on the paraphrase (starting with Caesar's title twist, which rather reminds us of Napoleon's witticism "La seule victoire en amour c'est la fuite") coupled with a obvious eloquence of some characters and a certain intertextuality, meant probably to soften the tragedy of the exile theme: the 12th grade student seems to be opting for radical escape, while Ovid seems to be "going native", in the most accentuated Balkan way, on this remote outpost of the Black Sea Coast. Intellectually skeptical, but pragmatic and very ambitious, the Screenwriter-Director Robert Eugen Popa has ample material and a feature breath for "Veni, Vidi, Fugi" - and other features to come, whether in Romania, the United States or wherever abroad, because, as Ovid's life taught us, the artist doesn't meet always with his homeland imperatives.
  • chel-147-83019123 January 2019
    Rich and catchy plot. The characters interactions and dialogues are absolutely witty and charming. Photography is gorgeous and the satire like none other. Everything about "Veni, Vidi, Fugi" is sharp and relatable just enough for one to get entranced and feel like its 30 minutes went by like magic.
  • onicom17 February 2017
    On January of this year, I was in Jaipur, India, and I participated on the Jaipur International Film Festival.I watched a bunch of short films, but the one that caught my eyes was this one in particular. First of all, the acting was very good,the characters are well done by the actors. On Second place, I can say that I really liked the script, the dialogues are very funny, full of references (in particular I enjoy the reference that are related to latinamerica) and cleaver. On third place, I could say that the plot was very interesting because It manage to explain 2 dark historical moments of Romania from a funny and intelligent point of view. When I left Jaipur the awards weren't given, so checked a few days later if this film was given any and it was no surprise that it won the award for best script. I thought that also deserved the best short film award, but perhaps politics were in the middle of this decision. I recommend this short film, and also any work of this director.
  • rasvan-dima23 April 2021
    9/10
    Chaaa
    Far from the movies that highlight the drama from Ceausescu era, "Veni, Vidi , Fugi" comes with an unexpected perspective about Communism. Full of irony the move is well related to the exil of latin poet Publis Ovidius Naso and his wish to leave Tomis and a teenager who have the same burning desire to run away from the sistem, a thought that most youngsters of the communist regime aspired to.

    The cinematography is good, also the sound, but the edit it doesn't suit my taste.
  • pablovandernayar18 January 2019
    The story but also how it is filmed, impeccable production, editing, light, photography. More than a short film looks like a film. Congratulations !!!!
  • Let me start by saying that i am an avid movie consumer. Romanian movies do not particularly interest me, since i saw plenty, and some of them do not carry the vibe that i look for. So i didn't bring along too many expectations or a good mood when i came across this movie. I was glad to be wrong.

    Without giving away the plot, i can say the movie was very well crafted, making the best use of the set, since it was a low budget. It never dragged out , on the contrary, i found myself wanting more by the time the end credits started rolling.

    The actors, although little known, with the exception of Maia Morgenstern, who is an icon of romanian theatre and cinematography, were spot on and did a very good job.

    It is however the script and direction that deserve the praise and encouragement for future developments.

    If you're a fan of good movies, that have a story to tell, you should see this little hidden gem.
  • I came, I saw, I fled the Communist regime. I found reason, art, history, freedom, love, Latin, poetry across the realms of Ancient Rome and Communist Romania. Winner of several 'best film' awards, this acclaimed, intelligent short film reaches deep into your soul with the level of artistry, insight and imagination that unlocks the human potential in all of us. Magical realism, amusing satire and teachings abound. Highly recommended.