German Lavrov
1929 - 1995Позови меня в даль светлую
Stanislav Lyubshin, German Lavrov
Lidiya Fedoseyeva-Shukshina, Stanislav Lyubshin
Grusha's (Lidiya Fedoseyeva-Shukshina) husband has left her and she is now a single parent to her adolescent son Vitya (Vladimir Naumenko). Her brother Nikolay (Mikhail Ulyanov) is determined to hook her up with his friend Vladimir (the film's co-director Stanislav Lyubshin). For Grusha and Vladimir to have privacy to build up their relationship, Nikolay decides his nephew Vitya needs to stay out of the way, so he urges Vitya to come live with his family for a while. However, Grusha's not so sure about the arrangement. Based on a play by Vasiliy Shukshin.
Call Me from Afar
И всё-таки я верю...
German Lavrov, Elem Klimov
Mikhail Romm, Albert Einstein
Originally called World '68, later retitled The World of Today Romm’s film was conceived as an impassioned, large-scale essay on the origins of the 20th century and the subsequent reality the disappointed director felt slipping away from him. The film itself slipped away from him and was left unfinished at the time of his death. His younger colleagues, Marlen Khutsiev, Elem Klimov and German Lavrov, completed the film from the elements he left behind in addition to segments from Ordinary Fascism, closing the film with Romm’s ultimately optimistic outlook: "And still I believe that man is sensible..."
And Still I Believe
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German Lavrov, Georgi Burkov
Nina Usatova, Georgi Burkov
Жора Сорокароссийский — известный на всю округу мастер чучел птиц и зверей — в сущности терпеливый и добрый. Но властный характер жены и ее бесконечные попреки по поводу его странной работы однажды разбудили в нем желание уйти из дома.
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