Love and Pigeons (Russian: Любовь и голуби, romanized: Lyubov i golubi) is a Soviet romantic comedy, filmed in 1984 at the Mosfilm film studio by director Vladimir Menshov whose previous film Moscow Does Not Believe In Tears won an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It is based on a script written by theater actor Vladimir Gurkin. The script is based on his play of the same name, written in 1981.[1]
Love and Pigeons | |
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Directed by | Vladimir Menshov |
Written by | Vladimir Gurkin |
Starring | Aleksandr Mikhailov Nina Doroshina Lyudmila Gurchenko |
Cinematography | Yuriy Nevskiy |
Edited by | R. Pesetskaya |
Music by | Valentin Levashov |
Production company | Mosfilm |
Release date |
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Running time | 107 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
The film was the leader of Soviet distribution in 1984 and sold some 44.5 million tickets.[2]
Vasily Kuzyakin (Alexander Mikhailov), a forestry worker who is fond of pigeon breeding, lives in the countryside with his wife Nadezhda (Nina Doroshina) and three children: the eldest daughter Lyudka (Yanina Lisovskaya), who left for the city, but returned to the village after an unsuccessful marriage; son Lyonka (Igor Lyakh), a cheerful guy and a technology lover; the youngest daughter Olya (Lada Sizonenko), the favorite of her father.
Nadezhda, a woman with a rather grumpy character, considers her husband frivolous because he spends family money to buy expensive pigeons, and constantly reproaches him with this. An elderly couple lives next door to the Kuzyakins — baba Shura (Natalya Tenyakova) and uncle Mitya (Sergey Yursky), in whose family there are also constant conflicts. Uncle Mitya is a bit of an alcoholic, but his wife tries to keep him in a tight grip. Therefore, he uses every opportunity to drink secretly from his strict wife (for example, he arranges an impromptu funeral feast for her, although she did not die).
One day Vasily gets an industrial injury and leaves on a trip to the seaside for treatment. At the resort, he meets Raisa Zakharovna (Lyudmila Gurchenko), an employee of the personnel department of the forestry enterprise in which Vasily works. This city dweller, a flighty and exalted lady, fascinates Vasily with her amazing stories about psychics, telekinesis, astral bodies and humanoids. They have a holiday romance going on.
As a result, Vasily leaves the family for his new lover, which they tell his wife and children about together in a letter. After reading the letter, Nadezhda has a tantrum. On the same stormy evening, Raisa Zakharovna herself pays a visit to the Kuzyakins, thinking to find a common language and settle everything in peace. Raisa tells Nadezhda that she is an employee of the personnel department, and at first does not give details. The overwrought Nadezhda talks to her about her errant husband, but after finding out who she is, causes a scandal and rushes at her with his fists. The battered Raisa leaves with nothing.
After that, Nadezhda sinks into depression and is about to die. The children are also offended by their father, especially Lyonka, who threatens to kill him as soon as he sees him. At the same time, the life together of Raisa and Vasily does not work out, because they are people of "different social strata", in addition, Vasily misses his family. As a result, he leaves Raisa. His family does not accept him, so the main character is forced to live in a hut on the riverbank.
After a while, Nadezhda, realizing that Vasily cheated on her largely because she got a nasty temper, forgives him. She also stops reproaching her husband for his hobby — pigeons. Fearing a negative reaction from Lyonka and the villagers, they meet secretly, but two months later, after learning that Nadezhda is pregnant, Vasily returns home. The return takes place against the background of the upcoming departure of his son to the army.
The Golden Rook Award at the Torremolinos International Comedy Film Festival in 1985.
MTV Russia Movie Awards in 2009, nomination "Best Soviet Film".
VHS — publisher "Close—up" (1997), VCD on two discs — publisher "Lizard Digital Video" (1997), DVD5 (without restoration, mono) - publisher "Close-up" (2003), DVD9 — publisher "Close-up" (restoration of sound and pictures) (2007), Blu-ray — publisher "Close-up" (restoration of sound and pictures) (2010).
Year of the first theatrical production — 1982, radio — 1986.
Author: Vladimir Gurkin
Performer: Artists of the Sovremennik Theater
Radio performance of the Sovremennik Theater based on the play by Vladimir Gurkin.
Directed by Valery Fokin
Films by Vladimir Menshov | |
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