The Tango of Our Childhood
The Tango of Our Childhood | |
---|---|
Մեր մանկության տանգոն | |
Directed by | Albert Mkrtchyan |
Written by | Albert Mkrtchyan |
Starring | Frunzik Mkrtchyan Galya Novents |
Cinematography | Rudolf Vatinyan |
Music by | Tigran Mansuryan |
Distributed by | Armenfilm |
Release date |
|
Running time | 89 min |
Country | Soviet Union |
Languages | Armenian Russian |
The Tango of Our Childhood (Armenian: Մեր մանկության տանգոն, Russian: Танго нашего детства) is a 1984 Soviet-Armenian tragicomedy film written and directed by Albert Mkrtchyan and starring Frunzik Mkrtchyan (his brother) and Galya Novents. Novents' performance as a mother who struggles to raise her children during post-World War II Armenia was awarded Special Mention at the Venice Film Festival. Mkrtchyan dedicated the autobiographical story to his hometown of Gyumri.[1][2] The filming locations highlighted the historic buildings of Gyumri which were marked for preservation as the Kumayri Reserve in 1980.[3] The New York Times described Novents' performance as that of "a kind of Anna Magnani earth mother who acts at the top of her lungs."[4]
Plot
[edit]The film is set in Leninakan (now Gyumri) in the aftermath of World War II.[5] Novents portrays a wife whose husband has left her and their three children for his wife's best friend.
Cast
[edit]- Galya Novents as Siranush
- Frunzik Mkrtchyan as Ruben
- Elina Agamyan as Vardush
- Azat Gasparyan as Mesrop
- Narine Bagdasaryan as Ruzan
- Samvel Sarkisyan as Armen
- Ashot Gevorkyan as Gagik
- Artashes Nalbandyan as Ashot
- Artashes Gedikyan as Serob
- Margarita Karapetyan as Arpenik
- Nona Petrosyan as Knar
- Ruben Mkrtchyan as Yeghish
- V. Movsisyan as Svasyan
- Aleksandr Oganesyan as Zarzand
- Vrezh Hakobyan as Melkonyan
- Kadzhik Barsegyan as investigator
References
[edit]- ^ Galstyan, Siranush (August 2016). "Armenian Cinema in the Post-Soviet Era". KinoKultura: New Russian Cinema (Special Issue 17).
- ^ Mirzoyan, Gayane. "Albert Mkrtchyan". Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity. auroraprize.com. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
- ^ Melik-Avakian G. Applause after Silence (The Tango of Our Childhood) // Communist Magazine, May 30, 1985
- ^ Nan Robertson, "Film Series Salutes the Soviet Republics", The New York Times, October 10, 1986.
- ^ "Giumri 21"[usurped], Armenian Heritage, accessed 6 September 2017.
External links
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