Melodies of a White Night
Melodies of a White Night | |
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Directed by | Sergei Solovyov Kiyosi Nisimura |
Written by | Sergei Solovyov Tasiyuki Tasikura |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Georgy Rerberg |
Music by | Isaac Schwartz |
Production companies | |
Release date |
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Running time | 97 minutes |
Countries | Soviet Union Japan |
Languages | Russian, Japanese |
Melodies of a White Night (Russian: Мелодии белой ночи, romanized: Melodii beloy nochi; Japanese: 白夜の調べ) is a 1976 romantic drama directed by Sergei Solovyov.[1][2]
Plot[]
A Japanese pianist (Komaki Kurihara) travels to the Soviet Union to better understand the country's composers' production. She falls in love with Soviet composer Ilya (Yury Solomin), who has lost his parents in the Siege of Leningrad and also his wife during childbirth. The lovers enjoy Leningrad's white summer nights, and Ilya starts composing a piano concert inspired by Yuko. A couple of years later, they meet again in Japan in Kyoto, where Ilya is conducting his piano concert, and Yuko is the soloist. Ilya finds out that Yuko is a widow and starts to experience feelings of guilt.
Cast[]
- Komaki Kurihara - Yuko, Japanese pianist
- Yury Solomin - Ilya, composer-conductor
- Aleksandr Zbruyev - Fedor, Ilya's brother, painter
- Sergey Polezhaev - musician, teacher
- Yelizaveta Solodova - foster mother of Ilya and Fedor, music teacher
- Andrey Leontovich - Alyosha, son of Ilya
- Seiji Miyaguchi
References[]
- ^ "Энциклопедия кино — МЕЛОДИИ БЕЛОЙ НОЧИ". dic.academic.ru.
- ^ "Мелодии белой ночи". VokrugTV.
External links[]
- 1976 films
- Soviet films
- Soviet romantic drama films
- Japanese films
- Japanese romantic drama films
- 1976 romantic drama films
- Mosfilm films
- 1970s multilingual films
- Toho films
- Japan–Soviet Union relations
- Japanese multilingual films
- Soviet multilingual films
- 1970s Japanese film stubs
- Romantic drama film stubs