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Russian Film Festival

Festival
Festival presentation: 

Following the success of the 2nd Russian Film Festival, ACADEMIA ROSSICA is proud to present the Russian Film Festival... The program includes features by directors such as Sergei Soloviev, Karen Shakhnazarov and Kira Muratova, a number of documentaries, some contemporary animations and a selection of classic Soviet musicals. 

The 3rd Russian Film Festival will present 10 UK premieres of award-winning Russian feature films produced in 2008-2009.

The festival opens on 30th October with a new adaptation of Anna Karenina by one of Russia's most defiant film directors, Sergei Soloviev. The film took 14 years to make and it is part of Soloviev's trilogy ASSA (1987) - ASSA 2 (2009) - Anna Karenina (2009).

Harking back to a lost Russia, three more adaptations are featured in this year's programme:

Ward No6 by Karen Shakhnazarov, based on Chekhov's story

The Event by Andrei Eshpay, based on Nabokov's play

Pete on the Way to Heaven by Nikolai Dostal, based on Mikhail Kuraev's short story

 

The nostalgia is balanced by work representing Russia's new wave of filmmakers:

Tale about Darkness by Nikolay Khomeriki - everyday life of Russian police

Paper Soldier by Alexei German Jnr. - about Yury Gagarin's flight to space

Russia 88 by Pavel Bardin - examining neo-fascism in today's Russia

First Squad - animation film about pioneers fighting against fascists during WWII.

 

Kira Muratova, the legendary Russian-Ukrainian film director, will present her new award-winning film Melody for a Street Organ on the day of her 75th birthday, 5th November. We are very proud to host and celebrate Muratova on that day in London, at the Russian Film Festival.

 

Documentaries

Award-winning documentary maker Vitaly Mansky will present his film Sunrise/Sunset, a unique and fascinating profile of the Dalai Lama. Alongside this, we present six films capturing the surreal side of the Russian provinces and giving us a window into contemporary life beyond Moscow. In contrast we will also show a portrait of two successful contemporary artists Dubossarky & Vinogradov, revealing the peculiar relationship between the art world and the media.

 

Classic Soviet musicals

Early Soviet musicals are still largely unknown in the West, and yet they are every bit as captivating as their Hollywood counterparts. To mark the 85th anniversary of Mosfilm, Russia's main film studio, we are showing five classics from director Grigory Alexandrov starring Soviet diva Lubov Orlova made in the 1930s. It is said that Stalin's role in their creation was so important that he could almost be considered the co-author of these films.

 

Animation

As part of our main programme we are proud to present the UK premiere of First Squad, a full length animation about World War II made by a Russian writer and Japanese animator. We are also showing a delightful selection of animations for children.

 

Events

  • 31st October, 2pm - a roundtable discussion Russian Cinema: New Reality, New Priority, New Generation, led by Andrei Plakhov;
  • 4th November, 2pm - NFTS/VGIK - two of the best known film schools in the world made documentaries on each others' countries - watch the results.
  • 4th November, 6pm - Which Russia is Real? - a roundtable discussion examining why images of Russia captured by Russian documentary filmmakers are so different from those made by their western counterparts. Why is Russia's image of itself so different from its perception by the West? Which one is the real Russia?

 

Special guests

We are delighted that Russian film directors and actors will be joining us for Q&As and to introduce their films. Among them are Sergei Soloviev, Kira Muratova, Tatyana Drubich, Karen Shakhnazarov, Evgenia Simonova, Andrei Eshpay, Pavel Bardin, Andrei Plakhov, Vitaly Mansky and others.

 

More Information

You will find regular updates and background information for the festival on our website: www.academia-rossica.org. You can also find press accreditation forms there too.

 

Images and video clips

If you would like a CD with low-res images from all the main films, please contact press@academia-rossica.org. High-res images are available to download on our website. We can also supply audio and video clips from many of the films. Please do get in touch for any other information or requests.

 

Venue

Apollo West End Cinema, 19 Regent Street, St James's, London SW1Y 4LR, info and tickets: 0871 220 6000; www.apollocinemas.co.uk

 

Features:

 

Anna Karenina (dir. Sergei Soloviev, Russia, 2009) OPENING NIGHT FILM - Soloviev’s stunningly beautiful adaptation of Tolstoy’s classic tells the tragic and heart-rending story of Anna Karenina, who abandons a loveless marriage in the pursuit of true affection only to lose everything. Fascinatingly, the film is presented as a companion piece to Assa II, Soloviev’s long-awaited follow-up to Assa, the cult perestroika classic, in which a well-known director searches for someone to play the lead role in his adaptation of Anna Karenina.

 

Assa & Assa II (dir. Sergei Soloviev, Russia, 1988 & 2009) – Assa, a groundbreaking feature from the late 1980s, tells the story of a love triangle between a corrupt Soviet official, his mistress Alika and a young punk. The film was the first to represent underground culture, and rock music in particular, as force for change in the stagnant atmosphere of the late Soviet Union and, indeed, the film’s final song ‘I Want Change’ became an anthem for the Gorbachev generation. Assa II tells the story of the main characters 20 years on: Alika is now in prison, but her fortunes may be about to change as a film director visits trying to find the perfect woman to play the lead in his film of Anna Karenina (presented with Soloviev’s Anna Karenina). assa2.ru

 

Ward No. 6 (dir. Karen Shakhnazarov, Russia, 2009) - an adaptation of a short story by Chekhov by one of Russia’s most established film-makers, who is also the General Director of the legendary Russian studio Mosfilm. The action is set in contemporary Russia, and tells the story of Doctor Andrey Ragin who ends up a patient in his own asylum. Initially, Ragin is quick to dismiss the suffering of his patients, however a fascination with the philosophical character of Gromov gradually transforms into obsession, schizophrenia and the ultimate confinement within his own ward. palata6.mosfilm.ru/eng/film/

 

 

 

Pete on the Way to Heaven (dir. Nikolay Dostal, Russia, 2009) - Winner of the Golden George prize for best film at the 31st Moscow International Film Festival, Pete on the Way to Heaven is set in 1953. Pete is the young simpleton of Kandalaksha, a small town on the White Sea, beyond the Arctic Circle. He likes to pretend that he is a real policeman, upholding peace and order. He even has his own gun, albeit made of wood. The town plays along with his harmless law-enforcing conduct and even the local big shots jovially submit to his inspections. Then in March 1953 comes the shattering news of Stalin’s death and the end of an era. A prisoner escapes from the nearby gulag and Pete sets out to chase the fugitive through the snow with the camp guards at his side.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Event (dir. Andrey Eshpay, Russia, 2009) - Based on the play by Vladimir Nabokov, The Event tells the story of a painter named Troscheikin, his wife Lyuba, and her mother and sister who live in a Russian-speaking community in a Western provincial town. The return of a man named Barbashin to the town shatters the monotony of family life. Five years earlier in a bout of jealousy he had shot Troscheikin and his wife and promised to “finish them off” upon his release from jail…

 

 

 

Paper Soldier (dir. Alexander German Jnr, Russia, 2009)
Set in 1961, this is a highly personal and intimate take on an epic moment in 20th century history as we follow Daniel Pokrovsky, an idealistic young medical officer charged with looking after the health of future cosmonauts. When one of the cadets on the programme is killed, Pokrovsky finds that he cannot believe in a programme that sacrifices its young men in the name of their country. Aleksei German’s multi-award winning film tells the story of a man for whom the dream of space travel becomes a nightmare, as he finds himself increasingly at odds with the ambitions of the Sputnik programme.

 

 

Russia 88 (dir. Pavel Bardin, Russia, 2009) - a controversial feature from a young Russian film director, made in a documentary style, examining the rise of xenophobia and nationalism in Russia. The action centres around a Jewish boy who becomes a skinhead and asks how this could happen. When the film opened in Russia it caused a great deal of debate in the press and official circles.
russia88.com
  

 

Melody for a Street Organ (dir. Kira Muratova, Russia, 2009) - Eagerly anticipated, the latest film by award-winning director Kira Muratova does not disappoint. Beautifully shot, Melody for a Hurdy-Gurdy tells the poignant tale of two young children, stepbrother and sister, on the search for their fathers after the death of their mother. Muratova depicts the irony of modern life, where the disadvantaged fight for survival and the affluent allay their ennui by playing with death. Indeed, Melody for a Hurdy-Gurdy is a bleak and heart-rending portrayal of humanity, with no room for those untouched by the pervading egotism and indifference of today’s world.

 

First Squad (dir. Yoshiharu Ashino, Russia/Japan, 2009)
1942: the war along the Eastern front has descended into dreadful and costly stalemate. Desperate to regain momentum, the German army turns to a secret organisation to raise the spirits of their dead ancestors to fight on their behalf. The Red Army’s regular forces prove helpless against these supernatural warriors. Fourteen-year-old Nadya is their only hope. She must use her psychic abilities to travel to the underworld and recruit the souls of her dead friends, the Pioneers of the First Squad, to defend their country. First Squad is a unique, fantastical take on Russian historical events, presented in anime form. It is the product of an intercultural collaboration between Russian creators, Misha Shprits and Aljosha Klimov, and Japanese animators, Studio 4 ºC, known for their ability to bridge the gap between arthouse and mainstream animation.
www.first-squad.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Edition: 
7
Theme: 
International
Category/Format: 
Mixed
Festival Info
Next Festival Dates: 
10/30/2014 - 11/08/2014
Is the Festival open to the public ?: 
Yes
Does the Festival have a market?: 
No
Does the Festival have a competition ?: 
No
Festival Contact
Festival Director Name: 
Svetlana Adjoubei
Festival Director E-mail: 
Festival Press Contact Name: 
Josh Heath
Festival Press Contact Email: 
Festival Organization
Name: 
Academia Rossica
Address: 
76 Brewer Street
City: 
London
Zip code: 
W1F 9TX
Country: 
United Kingdom
Telephone: 
02072872614

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About Academia Rossica

Academia Rossica
ACADEMIA ROSSICA

ACADEMIA ROSSICA is a Russo-British foundation, founded in London in 2000, which supports and promotes cultural links between Russia and the West.

The Russian Film Festival in London is organised by ACADEMIA ROSSICA and was launched in 2007. The festival allows a British audience to see the work of leading Russian filmmakers and presents a variety of styles, genres and themes which reflect the problems and hopes of today’s Russia. The main programme of the festival is made up of the premiere of the ten best critically acclaimed films of the year.

The ROSSICA cinema club is a platform for showing Russian films between the festivals. The screenings of rare archive films, exclusive programmes and discussions between filmmakers and film experts have become important cultural events not only for film buffs but also for cinema specialists.

Russian Literature and Language Week has been promoted in Britain by ACADEMIA ROSSICA since 2008 with the aim of extending Anglo-Russian literary and intellectual ties. As part of this year’s Week, there will be a bookstand representing material from the BOOKS FROM RUSSIA publishing house at the London Book Fair. In addition, there will be numerous discussions between British and Russian intellectuals and publishers, as well as book presentations and talks by leading Russian writers, such as Dmitrii Bykov, Aleksandr Ilichevskii, Lev Rubinshteyn, Olga Slavnikova and Aleksandr Archangelskiy. ACADEMIA ROSSICA’s partners in this project are The Federal Agency of the Press and Mass Communication, The Yeltsin Foundation and The Russkiy Mir Foundation.

The International ROSSICA Prize was founded by ACADEMIA ROSSICA and the Yeltsin Foundation in 2004. The ROSSICA Prize is unique in that it is the only prize in the world for the translation of Russian literature into English. The Council for the prize is made up of many prominent literary figures: the Director of the British Centre for literary translation Amanda Hopkinson, the President of the English Pen-Club («ПЕН-клуб») Alistair Niven, the literature editor for the Independent Boyd Tonkin, publisher Christopher Maclehose and the Director of the literature programme of the British Council Susanna Nicklin. The ROSSICA Prize will be presented in London, on the 24th May, the Day of Cyril and Methodius. The prize amounts to £5,000 and is divided between the publisher and the translator. 

ROSSICA Journal - a journal in English, published by ACADEMIA ROSSICA. The journal deals with a wide range of issues - from Russian history and cultural heritage of the past century to recent news on contemporary art and culture. ACADEMIA ROSSICA aims to develop its projects in collaboration with a large number of Russian and foreign partners, in this way widening the gateway for the efffective integration of Russian art, literature, theatre and cinema in contemporary international culture. More information about the projects of ACADEMIA ROSSICA can be found on the site www.academia-rossica.org 

ACADEMIA ROSSICA is organising its 3rd Russian Film Festival which will be shown at the Apollo West End from 30th October to 8th November 2009. The program includes features by directors such as Sergei Solovyov, Karen Shakhnazarov and Kira Muratova, a number of documentaries, some contemporary animations and a selection of classic Soviet musicals.  


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