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Natalya Gundareva Movies

Russian actress Natalya Gundareva, known for her roles of caring but often unhappy middle-aged women, was born and raised in Moscow. Initially she did not plan to become an actress and spent a few years working as an engineer in one of the capital's construction bureaus. In 1967 Gundareva enrolled in the Shchukin Acting School and graduated in 1971. Since then she committed herself to Moscow's Mayakovsky Theater where she worked throughout her acting career. Though Gundareva first appeared in the movies in 1966, her big-screen breakthrough did not come until the leading role in Zdravstvuy I Proshchay(Hello and Goodbye) in 1972. Then came her most celebrated film performances in Osen (Autumn) (1975), Sladkaya Zhenshchina (The Sweet Woman), Podranki (Orphans) (1977), Vas Ozhidaet Grazhdanka Nikanorova (Miss Nikanorova Is Waiting for You) (1978), and Osenny Marafon(Autumn Marathon) (1979). In 1979 she also reached the pinnacle of her stage career playing Katerina Izmailova in Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk District. In 1981 the actress was lauded for the warm and affectionate screen performance as a mother of 10 children in Odnazhdy 20 Let Spustya (Once Upon a Time, 20 Years Later). Three times -- in 1977, 1981, and 1984 -- Gundareva was voted Best Actress of the Year by the readers of the popular film magazine Sovetsky Ekran. In 1990 she received an award at the Montreal World Film Festival and a Nika (the Russian Oscar) for her role in Sobachy Pir (Dog's Feast). In 2001 the actress suffered a stroke from which she was not able to fully recover. ~ Yuri German, Rovi
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, Rovi

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Starring:
Anthony AndrewsVladimir A. Ilyin, (more)
 
1991  
 
In 1987, director Alla Surikova scored enormous success in her home country with Chelovek S Bulvara Kaputsinov, an engaging slapstick comedy about an idealistic film projectionist trying to introduce the Old West to the nascent art of motion pictures. This film, aptly named Choknutye / Crazy People, features another idealist, an Austrian engineer (Ulrich Pleitgen) who comes to 19th century Russia to build the first railroad. A group of aristocrats sees him as a direct threat to their thriving stagecoach business and they employ elaborate schemes to thwart his project. However, with the help of a dashing lieutenant (Nikolai Karachentsov), a double-dealing agent of the secret police (Leonid Yarmolnik), and a mysterious young woman named Maria (Olga Kabo), he manages to get the czar's approval. ~ Yuri German, Rovi

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Starring:
Ulrich PleitgenNikolai Karachentsov, (more)
 
1990  
 
In this picaresque comedy, a Georgian boy with a Jewish stepbrother gets involved in an emigration mixup. Things are rough in present-day U.S.S.R., and when Yasha (Gerard Darmon) decides to take advantage of an open emigration visa to Israel being offered by the Russian government, and though his father and family are at first upset at the prospect of losing him, they finally accept the good sense of his decision. While accompanying his brother to the airport, younger stepbrother Merab (also Gerard Darmon) briefly holds Yasha's papers while he goes into a store to buy some things for his trip. Somehow, Merab winds up on the airplane to Vienna, minus luggage or any money. He tries to straighten things out at the Russian embassy, but gets treated as an imposter. So he flies on to Israel, where he tries the same thing. There, they think he is a KGB agent who is testing them, and once again he is sent away. With no other options, he gets involved in some shady dealings in Israel. Meanwhile, his now-desperate family is attempting to persuade the Israeli government to return this, the "wrong" boy, and have kidnapped an American tourist as a hostage. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
GĂ©rard DarmonNatalya Gundareva, (more)
 
1990  
 
The grim lives of Russians living with alcoholism and its aftermath is the subject of this drama. In the story, Arkady (Sergei Shakurov) has just come out of an involuntary stay at an alcohol rehabilitation clinic. As a result of his drinking, he has lost his wife and children. It is New Year's Eve, and as he exits a train at a stop near Leningrad, Jeanne (Natalya Gundareva), an inebriated celebrant, picks him up for an evening's companionship. He takes pity on her alcoholic inability to get in to work the next day and goes in to do her job for her. Meanwhile, he's really more attracted to a single mother living in the apartment next door to Jeanne's, which is why he didn't sleep with her the night before. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Natalya GundarevaSergei Shakurov, (more)
 
1989  
 
Fans of Russian history will particularly enjoy this satirical political analogy, by director Sergey Ovtcharov which has been compared to earlier film classics such as Repentance and Zelig. Those without the requisite background may be somewhat mystified by it. The story is based on an 1870 novel by Mikhail Saltykov-Schtchedrin, which uses a long and involved tale about the history of one town as an allegory for the Russian nation as a whole. The entire story of the novel is retained in this film, which updates it by including similarly meaningful events in the village from 1870 through to the present. One highlight of the film is the performance of Rolan Bykov as Piotr Ferdystchenko, one of the town's mayors, who undergoes three metamorphoses symbolizing respectively Lenin, Stalin and Khruschev. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Rolan BykovNatalya Gundareva, (more)
 
1986  
 
A light drama, this unpretentious story unveils the past and present of a modern dance instructor living in Moscow. Back in the 1950s in Gagra, unknown to his current pupils, the teacher was a celebrated tap dancer who once performed on stage with his five-year old daughter. The laurels of his past were left behind when he came to Moscow to work. But when a television show airs footage of the coach in his heyday, his students and colleagues decide to do something to honor his past (and present) accomplishments. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Yevgeni YevstigneyevAlexander Pankratov-Chyorny, (more)