My Best Friend, General Vasili, Son of Joseph Stalin
My Best Friend, General Vasili, the Son of Joseph Stalin | |
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Russian | Moy luchshiy drug, general Vasiliy, syn Iosifa |
Directed by | Viktor Sadovsky |
Written by | Valentin Yezhov |
Starring | Boris Shcherbakov Vladimir Steklov Andrei Boltnev Irina Malysheva Andrei Tolubeyev Petr Shelokhonov Igor Gorbachyov Georgi Shtil |
Cinematography | Vadim Grammatikov |
Edited by | G. Baranova |
Music by | Vladlen Chistyakov |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Lenfilm (Soviet Union) Leninterfilm Kraun |
Release date |
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Running time | 102 minutes |
Countries | Soviet Union Belgium |
Languages | English Russian |
Budget | $15 000 000[1] |
My Best Friend, General Vasili, the Son of Joseph Stalin (Russian: Мой лучший друг генерал Василий, сын Иосифа, romanized: Moy luchshiy drug, general Vasiliy, syn Iosifa) is a 1991 sports comedy-drama film, directed by Viktor Sadovsky and starring Boris Shcherbakov and Vladimir Steklov.[1]
Plot
[edit]Biopic film set in the 1950s Soviet Union, based on a true story of friendship between Vasili Stalin, the son of the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, and the famous Soviet sports star Vsevolod Bobrov.
Vasili Stalin was Lieut. General of the Red Army in charge of the Army and Airforce sports teams. He befriended the talented athlete Bagrov (Bobrov) and made him a sports star in the Soviet Union. After each game played by his "toy-star" Bobrov, General Vasili Stalin would throw massive and wild drinking parties, with women dancing on their dining table among bottles of vodka. But after the death of his father, general Vasili Stalin was arrested by the new Soviet leadership, and was charged with "anti-Soviet" conspiracy, because of his opinions expressed in conversations with foreign diplomats.
Cast
[edit]Main characters
[edit]- Boris Shcherbakov as Vsevolod Bagrov (Vsevolod Bobrov)
- Vladimir Steklov as Vasili Josifovich Stalin
- Andrei Boltnev as Astafiev
- Irina Malysheva as Ninel
- Andrei Tolubeyev as Tolik (Vladimir Dyomin)
- Petr Shelokhonov as Colonel Savinykh
- Igor Gorbachyov as doctor
- Yan Yanakiev as Lavrentiy Beria
- Valentina Kovel as neighbour
- Igor Yefimov as General
- Georgi Shtil as Colonel
Production
[edit]- Production companies: Lenfilm, Leninterfilm, Kraun (Belgium)
- Production dates: 1990 - 1991
- Filming locations: St. Petersburg, Russia, Moscow, Russia.
- Additional production assistance was received from the Red Army and the Central Archives of the USSR.
- Original period military uniforms of the Red Army were used in the film production.
- Vintage Soviet cars of the 1940s and 1950s period were used in the film production.
Release
[edit]- Theatrical release in Russia was in 1991
- Theatrical release outside of Russia was in 1992
- Video release was in 1993
Reception
[edit]- Estimated theatrical viewership in the former Soviet Union was about 10 million.[1]
Facts of film production
[edit]- The treatment for the film script was initially written by Valentin Ezhov in the 1980s, but he was waiting for the right time and circumstances together with director Viktor Sadovsky. The final script was written by the group of four authors.
- Filmmakers changed the name of the main character to Bagrov, in order to avoid direct mentioning of the reputable Russian star Vsevolod Bobrov, whose popularity was high among sport fans in Russia, as well as internationally.
- At the time of filming the former Soviet censorship was practically obsolete because of "perestroyka" and "glasnost" under Mikhail Gorbachev.
- Absence of the Soviet censorship allowed to portray Stalin's son, Vasili Stalin, giving some artistic freedom to filmmakers, and also allowing Russian actresses to be involved in nudity and sex scenes, which were less than usual in the Soviet cinema before 1991.
Facts of history
[edit]- Vasili Stalin was the second and youngest son of Joseph Stalin.
- In real life Vasili Iosifovich Stalin was imprisoned under a fictitious name "Vasili Vasilyev" in the Vladimir central prison. He was temporarily released under Nikita Khrushchev and returned to Moscow, but then was arrested again and exiled to the city of Kazan, where he died aged 42, in 1962.[2]
- Vsevolod Bobrov excelled in both football (soccer) and ice hockey, and led the Soviet ice hockey team to victory in the 1956 Winter Olympic Games in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, earning himself an Olympic Gold Medal.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Мой лучший друг, генерал Василий, сын Иосифа (1991)". КиноПоиск (in Russian).
- ^ "95-летний охранник Василия Сталина раскрыл тюремные тайны сына вождя". Московский комсомолец (in Russian). July 6, 2017.
External links
[edit]- Мой лучший друг генерал Василий, сын Иосифа на Kinoexpert.ru: [1] (Russian)
- Мой лучший друг генерал Василий, сын Иосифа на Kinopoisk.ru: [2] (Russian)
- My Best Friend, General Vasili, the Son of Joseph Stalin at IMDb
- 1991 films
- 1990s biographical drama films
- Soviet biographical drama films
- 1990s sports comedy-drama films
- Soviet sports comedy films
- Soviet sports drama films
- 1990s Russian films
- 1990s Russian-language films
- Films set in the 1940s
- Films set in the 1950s
- 1991 comedy-drama films
- 1991 direct-to-video films
- Films about the Soviet Union in the Stalin era
- Soviet film stubs
- 1990s film stubs