List Of The 100 Best Films In The History Of Ukrainian Cinema
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List Of The 100 Best Films In The History Of Ukrainian Cinema
The 100 best films in the history of Ukrainian cinema is a rating given from 1–100 to the best films in Ukrainian cinema. The films were selected in June 2021 by the National Oleksandr Dovzhenko Film Centre in Kyiv, Ukraine Ukraine ( uk, Україна, Ukraïna, ) is a country in Eastern Europe. It is the second-largest European country after Russia, which it borders to the east and northeast. Ukraine covers approximately . Prior to the ongoing Russian inv ... through a poll taken of representatives of the national and international film community. Partial list References Sources TOP 100. Rating of the best films in the history of Ukrainian cinema {{DEFAULTSORT:100 best films in the history of Ukrainian cinema Lists of films Top film lists Lists of Ukrainian films ...
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Cinema Of Ukraine
Ukrainian cinema comprises the art of film and creative movies made within the nation of Ukraine and also by Ukrainian film makers abroad. Despite a history of important and successful productions, the industry has often been characterized by a debate about its identity, the level of Russian and European influence. Ukrainian producers are active in international co-productions, while Ukrainian actors, directors and crew feature regularly in Russian (and formerly Soviet) films. Successful films have been based on Ukrainian people, stories or events, including Battleship Potemkin, Man with a Movie Camera, and Everything Is Illuminated. The Ukrainian State Film Agency owns National Oleksandr Dovzhenko Film Centre, film copying laboratory and archive, and takes part in hosting of the Odesa International Film Festival. Another festival, Molodist in Kyiv, is the only FIAPF accredited International Film Festival held in Ukraine; the competition program has sections for student fi ...
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Leonid Osyka
Leonid Mikhailovich Osyka ( uk, Леонід Михайлович Осика) (March 8, 1940 in Kyiv – September 16, 2001 in Kyiv) was a Ukrainian movie director, producer, and screen writer. Osyka was awarded the Oleksandr Dovzhenko State Prize of Ukraine, which was established to honor outstanding contributions to the development of Ukrainian cinema. Selected films *1965 - The One Who Goes Into the Sea ("Та, що входить у море"), director *1968 - The Stone Cross ("Камінний хрест"), director; late 2009 saw the beginning of the digital restoration of this film. *1968 - Who return, will love to the end ("Хто повернеться — долюбить"), director *1971 - Zakhar Berkut ("Заxap Бepкут"), director *1976 - The Disturbed Month of September ("Тривожний місяць вересень"), director *1978 - Sea ("Море"), director *1985 - Earth-reaching bowing ("Вклонися до землі"), director, writer *1987 - ...
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Lists Of Films
This is a list of "film lists". Index By what: : By title By when: : By year By where: : By country By type: : By source : By genre : By topic Production: : By cost : By length : By location By production: : By production company : By copyright status : By availability By response: : By release style : By response : By revenue See also By title This is an alphabetical list of film articles (or sections within articles about films). It includes made for television films. See the talk page in "A" for the method of indexing used. By year Lists of film related events indexed by year of release. By country • '' African films'' • ' 18-0 North Africa 1-0 • ' 0-2 7-67 9-279 0-5 • ''Egyptian films'' 0-3 7-125 0-4 • '' Moroccan films'' 3-7 8-73 West Africa 0-5 0-5 1-8 5-44 0-9 2-9 0-5 0-1 0-1 8-80 0-2 3-7 0-4 2-18 0-2 0-5 3-23 0-14 0-1 0-3 2-9 2-19 1-11 0-3 14-383 0-18 0-43 • '' Nigerian films'' 7- ...
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Ivan Mykolaichuk
Ivan Vasylyovych Mykolaichuk ( uk, Іван Васильович Миколайчук) (15 June 1941, Chortoryia, Ukrainian SSR – 3 August 1987) was a Ukrainian actor, producer, and screen writer. He is best known for playing the Hutsul Ivan in '' Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors'' (Тіні забутих предків) (1964), based on Mykhailo Kotsyubynsky's book of the same name. He received the Komsomol prize of Ukraine in 1967, and the title of ''Meritorious Artist of the Ukrainian SSR'' in 1968. He posthumously received the Taras Shevchenko prize. Biography Mykolaichuk was born in a village of Chortoryia ( Kitsman Raion) in Western Ukraine during World War II in a family of peasants. Ivan graduated from a high school of the neighboring village of Brusnytsia ( Kitsman Raion). In 1957, he finished the Chernivtsi Music College and in 1961 he graduated from the theater-studio of the Chernivtsi Music-Drama Theater of Kobylyanska. On August 29, 1962 Ivan married an actres ...
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Babylon XX
''Babylon XX'' (russian: Вавилон XX, translit=Vavilon XX; uk, Вавілон XX, translit=Vavilon XX) is a 1979 Ukrainian Soviet film directed by Ivan Mykolaichuk in his directorial debut and starring an ensemble cast including Mykolaichuk, Lyubov Polishchuk, and Les Serdyuk as peasants struggling to adapt to life within a commune led by Soviet sailor Klym Synytsia (played by ). It is a loose film adaptation of the 1971 novel ''A Flock of Swans'' by , and depicts collectivization in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic and the transition from communism to capitalism in Ukraine. ''Babylon XX'' had a troubled production history, with both a part-time film crew and a backdrop of Soviet repressions on Ukrainian freedom of expression; Ukrainian poetic cinema, the movement to which ''Babylon XX'' belonged, was formally banned, and ''A Flock of Swans'' itself had been threatened to be banned. The film's production took two years before premiering at the 1979 Kyiv Internation ...
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The Long Farewell
The Long Farewell (russian: Долгие проводы, Dolgie provody) is a Soviet film drama directed by Kira Muratova. It was filmed in 1971, but it was put on a shelf and was only released on the screens in perestroika in 1987. Plot For a long time, Yevgenia Vasilyevna was busy only with her son Sasha. With the advent of free time, as her son grew older, Nikolai Sergeyevich began to look after her. In the summer, the son went to visit his father. After his return, he began to change. His mother understands that her son wants to leave, but she does not have enough wisdom to behave properly in the current situation. Cast * Zinaida Sharko as Yevgenia Vasilyevna Ustinova * Oleg Vladimirsky as Sasha Ustinov * Yuri Kayurov as Nikolai Sergeyevich * Lidia Dranovskaya as Vykhodtseva * Viktor Ilchenko as Pavel Konstantinovich * Lidiya Brazilskaya as Tonya * Svetlana Kabanova as Tatiana Kartseva Awards and nominations ;1987 * Nika Award — Best Film, Best Director (Kir ...
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Yuri Ilyenko
Yuri Herasymovych Ilyenko ( uk, Юрій Герасимович Іллєнко, 18 July 1936 – 15 June 2010) was a Soviet and Ukrainian film director, screenwriter, cinematographer and politician. He directed twelve films between 1965 and 2002. His 1970 film ''The White Bird Marked with Black'' was entered into the 7th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Golden Prize. Ilyenko was one of Ukraine's most influential filmmakers. His films represented Ukraine and what was happening to it. His films were banned in the Soviet Union, USSR for their suspected anti-Soviet symbolism. Only in the recent years have his films been re-released and open to the public. Biography Ilyenko was born in Cherkasy in 1936 but during Eastern Front (World War II), World War II his family was evacuated to Siberia while his father was in the Red Army.
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The White Bird Marked With Black
''The White Bird Marked with Black'' ( ua, Білий Птах З Чорною Ознакою, Bilyi Ptakh z Chornoyu Oznakoyu', russian: Белая птица с чёрной отметиной, Belaya ptitsa s chornoy otmetinoy) is a 1971 Soviet period drama film directed by Yuri Ilyenko. It was entered into the 7th Moscow International Film Festival and won the Golden Prize. Plot The plot takes place between 1937 and 1947, in a little, traditional Hutsul village in Northern Bukovina. The Zvonars are a poor family of musicians, who eke out a living by performing in the local celebrations. Both older brothers, Petro and Orest, are in love with Dana, the priest's beautiful daughter. Their younger brother, Heorhii, is a dreamlike adolescent who is attracted to the village's witch, Vivdya. In 1940, the Romanian authorities cede the territory to the Soviets. Dana falls for a Red Army officer named Ostap and decides to marry him. On the day of their wedding, the Germans and Romania ...
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Roman Balayan
Roman Gurgenovich Balayan ( hy, Ռոման Գուրգենի Բալայան, russian: Рома́н Гурге́нович Балая́н; born 15 April 1941, Nerkin Horatagh, Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast, Soviet Union) is a Ukrainian-Armenian film director. In 1997 Balayan was awarded the title People’s Artist of Ukraine. Career Balayan worked as an actor in the theater of Stepanakert (located in the Nagorno-Karabakh region) in 1959–1961. He studied directing at the Yerevan State Institute of Theatre and Cinematography and film directing at the Kyiv National I. K. Karpenko-Kary Theatre, Cinema and Television University, graduating in 1969. Since 1970, he has worked at the Dovzhenko Film Studios in Kiev. Balayan calls himself a student of Sergei Parajanov. He was nominated and won several international prizes. He is well-known for his literary adaptations; authors whom Balayan has adapted for the screen are Anton Chekhov (''Kashtanka'', 1975; ''The Kiss'', 1983, TV), ...
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Flights In Dreams And Reality
''Flights in Dreams and Reality'' (russian: Полёты во сне и наяву, Polyoty vo sne i nayavu) is a 1983 Soviet drama film directed by Roman Balayan, written by Viktor Merezhko, dealing with the subject matter of midlife crisis. The film features many highly acclaimed Soviet/Russian actors, with Oleg Yankovsky in the starring role, as well as Lyudmila Gurchenko, Oleg Tabakov, Aleksandr Adabashyan and Oleg Menshikov in supporting roles. Plot On the eve of his fortieth birthday, Sergey Makarov (Oleg Yankovsky) is summing up his life. But nothing brings satisfaction to him, neither wife, mistress, work, or friends. At forty a person achieves many things, but previous ideals often lose their value. Sergey becomes completely confused, he is not bound to his wife with anything other than obligations, and he develops affection for a young girl named Alisa (Elena Kostina). Sergey is loved by a beautiful woman Larisa (Lyudmila Gurchenko), working with him at the drawing bo ...
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Kira Muratova
, honorific_suffix = People's Artist of Ukraine , birth_date = , birth_place = Soroca, Kingdom of Romania(now Moldova) , death_date = , death_place = Odessa, Ukraine , birth_name = Kira Gueórguievna Korotkova , occupation = Film directorScreenwriterActress , yearsactive = 1961–2018 , spouse = Oleksandr Muratov Evgeny Golubenko Kira Georgievna Muratova (russian: Кира Георгиевна Муратова; ro, Kira Gueórguievna Muratova; uk, Кіра Георгіївна Мура́това; née Korotkova, 5 November 1934 – 6 June 2018) was a UkrainianKira Muratova: The Zoological Imperium
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The Asthenic Syndrome
''The Asthenic Syndrome'' (russian: Астенический синдром, Astenicheskiy sindrom) is a 1989 Soviet drama film directed by Kira Muratova. It is the sixth feature film directed by Muratova, and arguably her masterpiece, most important film and best known film. The film was entered into the 40th Berlin International Film Festival where it won the Silver Bear - Special Jury Prize. It also won 1991 Nika Award in Russia. Plot The film consists of two parts: the first part is shot in black-and-white and the second in color. In the first part Natasha, the main character, was in her husband's funeral when she suddenly lost control over her states of extreme rage and despair. She walked away from the funeral and began to treat everybody provocatively and aggressively. After resigning from the hospital where she was a doctor, she seeks sex from two random strangers. The first is met with confusion and anger, but the second results in a fling that she regrets, panicking ...
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