‘The Southern Chronicles’ Review: Winning Coming-of-Age Tale Unfolds Amid Lithuania’s Post-Soviet Growing Pains

11/07/2025

In an endearing period piece, a hustling high schooler from the wrong side of town falls for a middle-class, bookish brunette who inspires him in purpose and poetry.

It’s easy to see why director Ignas Miškinis’ earnest coming-of-age dramedy “The Southern Chronicles” hit it big with Lithuanian audiences, becoming the country’s highest-grossing film of all time and racking up a slew of Silver Crane awards. Both the leading man’s charisma and the setting’s local color shine through immediately, gifting us with a winning hero and an upbeat, lively journey. The hilarious hijinks that ensue are centered on a rugby-playing rascal whose initial interests in pulling chicks and working get-rich-quick schemes give way to a lifelong love of writing poetry in the post-Soviet-occupation era of the 1990s. Picked as the country’s official submission for the Academy Awards’ international feature category, it’s a rollicking crowd-pleaser realized by a fresh, assured voice in filmmaking.

Smart aleck 17-year-old Rimantas (Džiugas Grinys) is a lovable lughead whose main goal in life is to not be viewed as a loser, as he says in his insightful narration. Needless to say, he’s got a ways to go. He’s a typical high schooler in the economically depressed south end of Šiauliai, ribbing his teacher (Rasa Samuolyte) during class, cooking up unwieldy business plans with dweeby best friend Minde (Robertas Petraitis) and playing rugby with the best team in the league. His youthful acerbic hubris frequently gets him into trouble with the authorities as he mouths off and sells off-brand goods on the black market, much to the chagrin of his put-upon parents (Algirdas Dainavicius and Dovile Silkaityte). He’s caught in a rinse-repeat cycle of these destructive patterns, but doesn’t seem to mind it much.

Things begin to gel for Rimantas once he prioritizes getting a girlfriend. After a disastrous attempt at bedding Minde’s ex-girlfriend Edita (Vaidilė Juozaitytė), our flat-top sporting hero with a crooked smile meets Monika (Digna Kulionytė), an ambitious, studious beauty from the middle-class area of town. She’s well-versed in the arts, voraciously reading acclaimed novels and playing various musical instruments. Rimantas’ interest in her opens up his insular world, as she spurs him to expand his education by regularly checking out books from the library and, later, taking his writing studies seriously. He even nabs a respectable gig, earning extra cash as a nightclub bouncer and janitor. But as the pair’s romance blossoms, class disparities threaten to tear them apart, from her classmate Mantas’ (Matas Dirginciu) jealousy to her disciplinarian dad’s (Dainius Gavenonis) disapproval.

Miškinis and writer Eglė Vertelytė (who adapts Rimantas Kmita’s semi-autobiographical novel) masterfully dodge genre tropes, avoiding confining their characters to simplistic labels and keeping the focus of their arcs self-motivated. There’s more than meets the eye with this couple. Their introductions have us believe that Rimantas is an airhead jock who is only swayed by Monika’s Manic Pixie Dream Girl-esque, universe-disrupting ways. Though Monika fits the aforementioned archetype, crashing into Rimantas’ world in a meet-cute involving goofy party games, she eventually defies that mold as every transformation her presence inspires also leads him to experience a setback. To see him rise above those challenges is where the heartening drama transpires, especially when he starts dating leggy blonde artist Jurga (Irena Sikorskytė), who encourages him to better himself through his poetic pursuits.

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