In the gripping Slovene drama The Miner (Rudar), the experienced miner Alija (Leon Lucev) is tasked with checking out an abandoned mine before it is permanently sealed. No one wants anything found in the old shaft, let alone anything controversial. But Alijah is a man burdened by a great sense of duty. As a Bosnian immigrant, he has also been seared by the Bosnian genocide.
The movie starts out as a mystery and urns into a psychological thriller. Indeed, [MINOR SPOILER] the mine that has been closed since 1945 is revealed to contain a mass grave. Embued with the Bosnian resolve to “find them all”, Alijah is not about to cooperate in the coverup that his employer and the Slovenian government desire. Alijah is a man of few words, but he is eloquent when he relates the family story to his adult daughter. The Miner is based on a true story.
The writer-director is Hannah Antonina Wojcik Slak, and The Miner is her third feature.
I saw The Miner at Cinequest. Cinequest’s international film scout Charlie Cockey specializes in Eastern European cinema and brought this gem to the festival. Slak won Best Director and Lucev won Best Actor at the Slovene Film Festival, and The Miner was Slovenia’s submission to the Oscars.