Love with Privileges
Love with Privileges | |
---|---|
Directed by | Vladimir Kuchinsky[1] |
Written by | Emil Braginsky Valentin Chernykh |
Produced by | Viktor Glukhov Vladimir Predybaylov |
Starring | Lyubov Polishchuk Vyacheslav Tikhonov Oleg Tabakov |
Cinematography | Felix Kefchiyan |
Music by | Alemdar Karamanov |
Production companies | |
Release date | 1989 |
Running time | 135 min |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
Love with Privileges (Russian: Любовь с привилегиями, romanized: Lyubov s privilegiyami) is a 1989 Soviet film drama directed by Vladimir Kuchinsky.[2]
Plot[]
USSR, the end of the 80s. Former Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers Kozhemyakin comes to rest in Yalta. To meet him at the station is asked Irina, who works as a van driver. An accidental resort acquaintance suddenly turned into something more. Neither the age difference nor the social situation did not become a hindrance. Irina agrees to become Kozhemyakin's wife and moves to Moscow.
In Moscow, taking advantage of her husband's acquaintances, Irina inquires about the circumstances of her father’s arrest, who was repressed after the war and shot in 1952 (the family was sent to Vorkuta, the mother soon died there too). And it turns out that in Stalin's times her new husband was one of those who signed the letter of collective condemnation, after which her father was shot.
Cast[]
- Lyubov Polishchuk as Irina Nikolaeva[2][3]
- Vyacheslav Tikhonov as Konstantin Gavrilovich Kozhemyakin[2][4]
- Oleg Tabakov as Nikolai Petrovich, KGB General[2]
- Lidiya Fedoseyeva-Shukshina as Maria Spiridonovna
- Pyotr Shcherbakov as Mossovet vice-chairman
- Aleksandr Feklistov as Dr. Lev Petrovich
- Yuri Sarantsev as Dr. Kondakov
- Aleksandr Baluev as Kozhemyakin Jr.
- Galina Stakhanova as old-timer[5]
- Alika Smekhova as waitress
- Fyodor Odinokov as General, Kozhemyakin's friend
TV version[]
The duration of the TV version entitled City Details, released in 1990, is 157 minutes.[2]
References[]
External links[]
- Russian-language films
- 1989 films
- Soviet drama films
- Soviet films
- 1989 drama films
- Studio Ekran films
- Mosfilm films
- Films set in Crimea