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In Motion (film)

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In Motion
В движении
Directed byFilipp Yankovsky
Written byGennadiy Ostrovskiy
Produced byFyodor Bondarchuk
Stepan Mikhalkov
Viktor Glukhov
Sergei Melkumov
Yelena Yatsura
StarringKonstantin Khabensky
Elena Perova
Oksana Fandera
CinematographySergei Machilskiy
Music byDanila Kalashnik
Production
companies
Production Company "Slovo"
Art Pictures Studio
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
  • 2002 (2002)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian

In Motion (Russian: В движении, romanizedV dvizhenii) is a 2002 Russian drama film, directorial debut of Filipp Yankovsky.[1][2] Its plot shares some similarities to La Dolce Vita by Federico Fellini.[3][4][5]

Plot

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Alexander Guryev is a successful independent journalist whose life has been full of many adventures. Now Sasha is looking for interesting stories and sensations which will earn good money. But Sasha is haunted by failures after such searches and more often than not he runs into big trouble, but still he continues to search for the next bombshell.

Sasha's personal life is different: he is married, but he is no longer attracted to his wife Vera. The passion is gone and only memories remain. Every day Sasha meets various women, with some he has short-term romantic relationships. And his wife Vera continues to hope that one day her and Sasha's life will change for the better.

And then one day Sasha meets an old friend who returned from abroad in order to occupy a major political post. Guryev suddenly realizes that he himself has dug up compromising evidence on his own friend. He begins to understand that his friend is in danger. Now there is only one way out – to run for as long as it is possible, so that at least he can save himself.

Cast

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Release and reception

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The film premiered at the Moscow International Film Festival in the program "Great Expectations". Izvestia wrote: "Almost the entire cinema audience laughed - from the content of dialogues, from the joy of familiarity and in order not to cry. All too recognizable was all that was happening on screen and too accurate".[6]

Awards

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[7]

  • 2003 Film festival "Vivat Cinema of Russia!" in St. Petersburg
    • Prize for Best Actor (Konstantin Khabensky)
  • 2003 Kinotavr
    • Audience Award (Filipp Yankovsky)
  • 2002 The New Russia Cinema Foundation
    • Diploma "For the highest spectator rating", Prize of the company "YUKOS" (Filipp Yankovsky)
  • 2002 Film festival "Window to Europe" in Vyborg
    • Special jury prize for directorial debut (Filipp Yankovsky)
  • 2002 International film festival "Listapad" in Minsk
    • Prize and Diploma of the jury of cinematographers "For the best direction" (Filipp Yankovsky)
  • 2002 Golden Aries Award
    • For best film editing (Alexander Chupakov))
  • 2002 Nika Award
    • For the best camerawork (Sergey Machilsky)
  • 2002 Nika Award
    • In the nomination "Discovery of the Year" (Filipp Yankovsky)
  • 2002 Prize of the Guild of Cinematographers of Russia "White Square"
    • (Sergey Machilsky)

References

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  1. ^ "Янковский-младший весь "в движении"". Moskovskij Komsomolets.
  2. ^ "Хабенский играет у Янковского-младшего". Delfi.
  3. ^ Natalia Sirivlya. "Новая сладкая жизнь. "В движении", режиссер Филипп Янковский". Iskusstvo Kino.
  4. ^ "В движении". Time Out.
  5. ^ Leslie Felperin. "More of a ripoff than a remake of Fellini's "La Dolce Vita," thriller-cum-redemption story "Moving," about a jaded journo caught up in a whirl of mobsters and starlets, will more than likely stay put in its home territory". Variety.
  6. ^ Maria Kuvshinova. "Ну, кролик, погоди..." Izvestia.
  7. ^ "В движении". Encyclopedia of Russian Cinema. Archived from the original on 2018-03-26. Retrieved 2018-03-26.
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In Motion at IMDb