

Juhan Liiv, a struggling poet and an unlikely detective, solves gruesome murder cases in Estonia, the Wild West of the crumbling Russian Empire in the 1890s. Investigations take him to miserable dwellings of the local Estonian peasants, luxurious castles of German nobility that have sworn allegiance to the Czar, and to the depths of ancient forests where witchcraft is still practiced. Juhan is fighting crime and his own inner demons. He is considered mad and pronounced crazy. But by standing for justice and truth, at the end of the day, he is the sanest of them all.
Cinematography
Estonian forests look genuinely cursed. Gorgeous misery.
Acting
Pääru Oja's unhinged gentleness is magnetic.
Production
Period detail captures empire's rot without prestige gloss.

Director
Jaak Kilmi
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Juhan Liiv was a real Estonian poet who died in poverty in 1913; the film reimagines his actual struggles with mental illness as noir detective fiction.
Director Jaak Kilmi previously made documentaries about Estonian history, explaining the obsessive period detail in peasant dwellings.