Wedding in Malinovka
Wedding in Malinovka | |
---|---|
Directed by | Andrei Tutyshkin |
Written by | Leonid Yukhvid |
Produced by | Semyon Malkin |
Cinematography | Vyacheslav Fastovich |
Edited by | Mariya Pen |
Music by | Boris Aleksandrov |
Production company | |
Release date |
|
Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
Box office | 74.6 million tickets[1] |
Wedding in Malinovka (Russian: Свадьба в Малиновке, Svadba v Malinovke) is a 1967 Soviet musical comedy film directed by Andrei Tutyshkin based on an operetta by Boris Aleksandrov adapted by Leonid Yukhvid.[2][3]
The film is about a Ukrainian village during the time of the Russian Civil War. With power alternating almost daily between Soviet and Ukrainian nationalist forces, the villagers of Malinovka are never sure who is in charge, so they modify their behaviour and dress accordingly.
Cast
[edit]- Vladimir Samoilov as Nazar Duma, Red squadron commander
- Liudmyla Alfimova as Sofya (vocal by Valentina Levko)
- Valentina Lysenko as Yarinka
- Yevgeni Lebedev as Nechipor
- Zoya Fyodorova as Gorpina Dormidontovna
- Heliy Sysoyev as Andreyka (vocal by Mikhail Egorov)
- Mikhail Pugovkin as Yashka the Gunner
- Nikolai Slichenko as Petrya
- Grigori Abrikosov as Grytsko Balyasny, or Pan-Ataman Gritsian Tavrichesky.
- Andrei Abrikosov as Balyasny Senior
- Mikhail Vodyanoy as Popandopulo[4]
- Tamara Nosova as Komarikha
- Emma Treyvas as Tryndychikha
- Aleksei Smirnov as Smetana
- Margarita Krinitsyna as Redhead
- Aleksandr Orlov as priest
- Lyubov Tishchenko as peasant woman
- Boris Leskin as bandit
- Vyacheslav Voronin as Chechil
Dance scenes were cast with the participation of the Moldovan dance troupe Joc.
Cultural influence
[edit]One of the film's main characters, Nazar Duma, has a completely unrelated namesake in a different famous Soviet film, Tractor Drivers (1939). This coincidence was used in a crossover parody film, Tractor Drivers 2.
References
[edit]- ^ Sergey Kudryavtsev (4 July 2006). "Отечественные фильмы в советском кинопрокате". LiveJournal. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
- ^ Derek Elley, World Filmography: 1967 Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1977, ISBN 9780498015656, 639 pp.
- ^ Tatiana Smorodinskaya, Encyclopaedia of Contemporary Russian Routledge, 2013, ISBN 9781136787867, 440 p.
- ^ В поселке Малиновка был установлен памятник герою одноименного фильма Попандопуло
External links
[edit]
- 1967 films
- 1967 in the Soviet Union
- Lenfilm films
- 1967 musical comedy films
- 1960s war comedy films
- Films set in the Soviet Union
- Soviet musical comedy films
- Soviet war comedy films
- Films based on operettas
- Russian Civil War films
- 1960s Soviet films
- 1960s Russian-language films
- Russian-language musical comedy films
- Russian-language war comedy films
- 1960s Soviet film stubs
- Musical comedy film stubs