Naerata ometi
Games for Schoolchildren | |
---|---|
Naerata ometi | |
Directed by | Arvo Iho Leida Laius |
Written by | |
Starring | Hendrik Toompere Jr. |
Cinematography | Arvo Iho |
Music by | Lepo Sumera |
Production company | |
Release date | 1985 |
Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Estonian |
Games for Schoolchildren[1] or Well, Come On, Smile;[2] (Estonian: Naerata ometi) is a 1985 Soviet Estonian drama film directed by Arvo Iho and Leida Laius.
Plot[]
After the death of her mother, high school student Mari ends up in an orphanage. Three days later, the girl returns home, but her drunken father makes it clear almost from the door that she doesn't belong here.
The night spent at the train station ends for Mari with an acquaintance with an aggressive group of teenagers, led by Robi, and being driven to the police. In the morning, the fugitive leaves the cell: the orphanage teacher came for her.
The orphanage has its own internal hierarchy. The dashing guy Robi is considered the informal leader. The guys obey him and readily obey. The polite, intelligent Tauri, who, unlike the other pupils, has a respectable and very busy father, takes custody of the newcomer. Among the girls, the harsh, nervous Katrin, who ended up in an orphanage after her mother was imprisoned, dominates.
Cast[]
- as Mari Lehiste
- Hendrik Toompere Jr. as Robi
- as Tauri
- as Katrin
- as Kerttu
- as Melita
- Siiri Sisask as Siiri
- as Anne
- Helle Kuningas as Nursery teacher
- Mari Lill as Robi's mother
- Evald Hermaküla as Ülo, Mari's father
- Eduard Tinn as Tauri's father
- Rudolf Allabert as Director of the orphanage
- as Rein
- Maria Klenskaja as Ülo's lover
- Evald Aavik as teacher
Awards and nominations[]
- All-Union Film Festival (1986)
- Grand Prize
- Best Screenplay (Marina Sheptunova)[3]
- International Film Festival of Young Filmmakers of Socialist Countries in Koszalin (1986) — Polish Film Critics Prize named after Wisniewski (Arvo Iho)
- USSR State Prize for 1987 (director and cameraman Arvo Iho, screenwriter Marina Sheptunova)[4][5]
- Berlin International Film Festival (1987) — participation in the "Kinderfilmfest" program, prize of the United Nations Children's Fund
References[]
- ^ Horton, Andrew & Brashinsky, Michael (1992) The Zero Hour: Glasnost and Soviet Cinema in Transition, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0691019208, p. 237
- ^ "Naerata ometi (1985)".
- ^ Лауреаты Всесоюзного кинофестиваля // Энциклопедия отечественного кино
- ^ Лауреаты Государственной премии СССР Archived 3 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine // Энциклопедия отечественного кино
- ^ Paavle, Silja (2012) Arvo Iho: "Filmi "Naerata ometi!" jõhkrus oli päriselt olemas."", Õhtuleht, 10 September 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2018
External links[]
- Estonian-language films
- Estonian films
- 1985 films
- Estonian drama films
- Soviet-era Estonian films
- 1985 drama films
- Soviet teen films