Zinoviy Gerdt Movies

Though never considered a star in the handsome-leading-man sense of the word, Zinoviy Gerdt was among Russia's most beloved and respected character actors. Over his nearly five-decade-long career, Gerdt appeared in puppet theater, in dozens of feature films, and on various television shows. The respect accorded him by peers and fans was as much a product of his personal integrity as it was of his talent. He was not an overtly political man, though most of his films spanned the Communist era, but Gerdt refused to buckle under government pressure to appear in propaganda films and productions. Instead, he would only perform in productions that did not offend his personal values.
Gerdt launched his career in Moscow amateur theater during the '30s. His leg was seriously injured during WWII, and this pretty much killed his theatrical career, at least in the normal sense. In 1945, Gerdt found employment working with the Moscow Puppet Theater and worked under Sergei Obraztsov. He was typically cast as the show's colorful, smart-alecky emcee. Though no one saw his face, Gerdt's characterization of the announcer won him considerable acclaim (Gerdt penned most of his own monologues). He made his screen debut in 1958 and specialized in comic roles. The limp from his war wound was only occasionally noticeable. An excellent Gerdt performance can be found in Zolotoy Telyonok (1968), the high-spirited sequel to The Twelve Chairs. On television, Gerdt was a popular host and guest on literary shows. He was especially loved when he read from classic books. He also occasionally narrated films such as Zigzag Udachi (1969) and Devyat Dney Odnogo Goda (1964). In the early '90s, after the fall of the Communist government, Gerdt hosted a Russian chat show in which he informally interviewed celebrities while sipping tea. In 1969, Gerdt received the honorary title of People's Artist of the Russian Federation for his many contributions to Russian film. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
1996  
 
Despite blending familiar elements from both of his cultures, Greek-Russian filmmaker Petros Sevastikoglou creates a totally original fable with this tale of a traveling magic show performing in a small Russian town. Local construction worker Nikita (Taras Koliadov) falls in love with one of the show's stars, the beautiful Alina (Anna Yanoskaya), but when a big storm comes through the town, the troupe pulls up its stakes and moves on. Time passes and Nikita takes a new job at a construction site, while Alina becomes disenchanted with her job and leaves the show. The construction site becomes the stage for Nikita's battle for Alina with the disintegrating troupe's director, the famous Mesmer (Zinoviev Gert). Marina Vlady co-stars with Sergei Desnitsky. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

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1994  
 
1994  
 
A satirical look at Stalinism and Soviet bureaucracy, the movie is based upon a previously banned Russian novel by Vladimir Voinovich. Ivan Chonkin, an uncomplicated man with a taste for sex, is a soldier assigned to guard a broken down airplane in Red, a tiny rural village. Unbeknownst to him, World War II has erupted and his superior officers have forgotten about him. Chonkin enrages the neighbors when he moves into the home of his lover Nyura, the town postal clerk. To get revenge, the neighbors send an anonymous letter to the secret police accusing Ivan of being a spy. The dreaded NKVD immediately go the remote village to arrest Ivan, but he refuses to leave his post without direct orders from his general. In the end, Ivan Chonkin triumphs over both the secret police and the Soviet army. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Gennady NazarovZoya Buryak, (more)
1993  
 
Writer/director Yolande Zauberman's touching tale of the friendship between two boys, one Jewish and the other Catholic, in pre-World War Two Poland. ~ Nicole Gagne, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Roma AlexandrovichSasha Yakovlev, (more)
1991  
 
Geopolitics and big oil play into the capture of a British geologist (Anthony Andrews) by the Russian military in Iran at the end of 1945. As soon as they capture him, they ship him off to a Siberian prison camp. The majority of the rest of the film is about his attempts to survive, and the relationships and adventures he has while imprisoned. Despite the presence of an English star, the rest of the major performers in this film are Russian, and it was one of the first films made on Russian soil to clearly depict life in the infamous gulags (prison labor camps) of Siberia. The geologist has numerous significant relationships, but the most dramatically compelling are with a female camp doctor and a young girl prisoner. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Anthony AndrewsVladimir A. Ilyin, (more)
1989  
 
Tatyana (Yelena Yakovleva) works as a nurse in a hospital in Leningrad. However, she has wants that her salary cannot provide for her, and sometimes she earns some hard currency by sleeping with foreign tourists. One of these is an uninspiring Swedish man, who offers to marry her. She is tempted, because she believes that the material aspect of life in Sweden is infinitely superior to that in Russia. Overcoming the resistence of the bureaucracy to her marriage, she succeeds in moving to Sweden with her new husband. Alas, she is soon bored with her new existence, and returns to her old hooking habits. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Yelena YakovlevaTomas Laustiola, (more)
1989  
 
Isaac Babel was a popular writer in the 1920s and 1930s who fell victim to Stalin's "purges". His exact date of death was never established. It's assumed that he died in 1940. Understandably, his works were not published again until the '60s. Another reason why his works were not adapted to the screen earlier was the pervasive anti-Semitic attitude among the state and communist bureaucracy during the Soviet times. Bindyuzhnik i Korol is a musical based on Isaac Babel's works. It was much hyped but it wasn't a huge success. Maxim Leonidov, who played Benya Krik (the "king") in the movie, was a handsome-looking leading singer from the popular Leningrad beat quartet "Sekret". "Sekret" was a Russian hommage to The Beatles. Shortly after starring in the movie, Leonidov immigrated to Israel, where he organized another band. In the story, set in the Jewish quarter of a Russian city, Mendel Krik (Armen Dzhigarkhanyan) is the wealthy owner of a large livery stable (the "drayman") who lords it over everyone who comes in his path, especially his two grown sons, whom he plans to disinherit. One of his sons, Benya, is far cleverer than his critical wrath of a father thinks, and manages to take his father's business away from him. This musical generally has a somber tone, and resembles the dark, serious works of Bertold Brecht rather than the much lighter tone of Fiddler on the Roof, with which it has sometimes been compared. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Armen DzhigarkhanyanZinoviy Gerdt, (more)
1987  
 
Originally Vory v Zakone, this uncompromising Russian drama takes place during the Brezhnev years, when corruption reigned unchecked. Anna Samokhina plays a mob moll caught in the middle of a blood feud between gangsters Boris Scherbakov and Arnis Licitis. Bartender Vladimir Steklov, who loves Samokhina, tries to help her out, to no avail. The on-the-take cops aren't much use either; they're more preoccupied with framing one of their own to keep him from informing on his colleagues. Kings of Crime was adapted from two short stories by Fazil Iskander. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Anna SamokhinaValentin Gaft, (more)
1983  
 
In this standard, serious film about why teenagers or pre-teens go wrong and what can be done to help them, immoral or corrupt parents are as much at fault as the teens themselves. An idealistic camp counselor takes on several of the kids who want to be helped and installs them at his sports camp in the wilderness, generally bending to the teens' wishes whenever possible. At first his liberal-minded attitude backfires because the kids continue their antisocial behavior either out of habit, or just to spite him. Eventually, when the counselor is about to call it quits, the teens rally around him because whether he was aware of it or not, his own decent behavior was having an effect right along. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Valeriy PriemykhovAndrei Zykov, (more)

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