The Pokrovsky Gate
The Pokrovsky Gate | |
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Directed by | Mikhail Kozakov |
Written by | Leonid Zorin |
Starring | Oleg Menshikov Inna Ulyanova Anatoly Ravikovich Leonid Bronevoy Viktor Bortsov |
Cinematography | |
Edited by | |
Music by | Georgy Garanian Bulat Okudzhava |
Distributed by | Mosfilm |
Release date |
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Running time | 140 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
The Pokrovsky Gate (Russian: Покровские ворота, romanized: Pokrovskiye Vorota) is a 1982 Soviet comedy film produced for television by Mosfilm. It was directed by Mikhail Kozakov and stars Oleg Menshikov, Leonid Bronevoy, and Inna Ulyanova. The screenplay is based on a 1974 stage play by Leonid Zorin.
Featured in the film are three songs written and performed by renowned "bard" Bulat Okudzhava: "Chasovye Lyubvi" ("Sentries of Love"), "Zhivopistsy" ("Painters"), and "Pesenka ob Arbate" ("Ditty about Arbat").[1]
The title refers to a square on Moscow's Boulevard Ring near which the film's main characters reside.[2]
Plot[]
The story takes place in the 1950s. Konstantin “Kostik” Romin (Oleg Menshikov) has come to Moscow to study history and is staying with kindly aunt Alisa ( ), who lives in a "communal apartment" building there. His life soon becomes intertwined with those of the other residents. Among them are Margarita Pavlovna (Inna Ulyanova) and both her former husband Lev Khobotov (Anatoly Ravikovich), a publisher of foreign poetry, and her new beau, World War II veteran and engraver-turned-teacher Savva Ignatevich (Viktor Bortsov).
The main plot revolves around the congenial Khobotov’s attempts to find happiness with newfound love Lyudochka (Yelena Koreneva), while constantly being thwarted by the controlling Margarita. Another tenant is musical comedian Arkady Velyurov (Leonid Bronevoy), who is trying to revive his faltering career and escape from his own loneliness. He has become enamored of a young competitive swimmer, Svetlana (Tatyana Dogileva), who rebuffs his advances but takes a fancy to the opportunistic Kostik.
Kostik finds his own love interest, Rita[3] ( ), for whom he decides to forsake his playboy lifestyle. In the end he becomes the catalyst for both Khobotov and Velyurov to find some measure of happiness: the former elopes with Lyudochka with the help of Kostik's pal Savransky, and the latter is elated that Svetlana attends one of his concerts in response to a telegram Kostik had urged him to send.
Main idea of the film[]
(3) Moscow 1957.
Gorky Street towards Kremlin II.
The main action of the picture takes place in 1956-1957.
The main action of the picture takes place in Moscow, period 1956-1957, shown in the photo above (3).
Quotation about the movie:
Скрылись за поворотом пятидесятые, отшумели шестидесятые, уже восьмидесятые проросли. Мы смотрим на развалины скворечника на с не меньшей грустью, чем режиссёр Михаил Козаков. С улыбкой, но не без горечи, он спрашивает больше себя, чем нас: «Молодость, ты была или не была? Кто ответит, куда ты делась?» (Костик)
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The fifties disappeared around the corner, the sixties were noisy, the eighties were already sprouting. We look at the ruins of the birdhouse on with no less sadness than the director Mikhail Kozakov. With a smile, but not without bitterness, he asks himself more than us: “Youth, have you been or not? Who will answer, where have you gone? "(Kostik)— Гербер, Алла Ефремовна (Gerber, Alla Efremovna), Скворечник на Покровке
Cast[]
Actor | Role |
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1 Yelena Koreneva | Lyudochka |
2 Oleg Menshikov | Konstantin “Kostik” Romin |
3 Inna Ulyanova | Margarita Pavlovna |
4 Viktor Bortsov | Savva Ignatevich |
5 Yevgeny Morgunov | Soyev (Velyurov's friend and collaborator) |
6 Leonid Bronevoy | Arkadi Velyurov |
7 Tatyana Dogileva | Svetlana Popova |
8 | Rita |
9 Anatoly Ravikovich | Lev Yevgenevich Khobotov |
Other parts[]
- Rimma Markova as doctor
- Igor Dmitriev as Gleb Nikolaevich Orlovich
- Natalia Krachkovskaya as Olga Yanovna Soyeva
- Mikhail Kazakov as Konstantin Romin, after 25 years
- as Savelich (voiced by Georgy Vitsin)
- as aunt Alisa
References[]
- ^ http://www.ozon.ru/context/detail/id/1670793/ (in Russian)
- ^ See Moscow Boulevard Ring: the Prechistensky Gate for a historical perspective. An illustration of the historical Pokrovsky Gates in old Moscow can be seen here: [1]
- ^ A diminutive form of "Margarita", a source of some irony; when she introduces herself to a bewildered Khobotov as "Margarita", Kostik interjects "Rita! RI-TA!"
- ^ Гербер А. (17 Feb 1983). "Скворечник на Покровке" [Birdhouse on Pokrovka] (in Russian). 21 (5653). Moscow: Soviet culture: 4. Cite journal requires
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External links[]
- The Pokrovsky Gate at IMDb
- The Pokrovsky Gate at AllMovie
- Detailed synopsis and discussion with many screen shots (in Russian)
- Complete text of Zorin play (in Russian)
- Пьесу легендарного драматурга покажут в московском театре (in Russian)
- 1982 films
- Russian-language films
- Soviet films
- Films set in the 1960s
- Mosfilm films
- 1982 comedy films
- Russian comedy films
- Russian films
- Soviet comedy films
- Films set in 1956
- Films set in 1957
- Films set in Moscow
- Films set in the Soviet Union
- Films shot in Moscow
- Films set in hospitals