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Kirill Serebrennikov Movies

 
2009  
R  
Five Russian filmmakers tell stories of love, both witty and serious, in this anthology feature. "Infamy," directed by Boris Khlebnikov, concerns a young reporter (Alexander Yatsenko) living in a shabby apartment block who is confused by the alternately sweet and sour attentions of one of his neighbors (Ilya Sherbinin). Ivan Vyrypaev shares a tale of bitter envy between two lovers (Alexei Filimonov and Karolina Gruszka) in "To Feel." A man working in a shoe repair shop (Ivan Dobronravov) falls for a woman after seeing no more than her feet in Pyotr Buslov's "Emergency Repair." In "Kim" by Alexey German Jr., a violent madman (Karim Pakachakov) locked away in a mental hospital falls in love with the doctor (Anna Ekaterininskaya) in charge of his case. And Kirill Serebrennikov directs the comic finale "Kiss The Shrimp," in which an eccentric man (Yuri Chursin) hired to promote a seafood restaurant takes his orders a bit too literally when he's told people need to love their crustacean mascot. Korokoye zamikaniye (aka Crush: 5 Love Stories) was an official selection at the 2009 Venice International Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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2008  
 
A self-centered artist finds her life is turned upside down when one of her loved ones vanishes in this drama from director Kirill Serebrennikov. Lyubov (Ksenyia Rappoport) is a successful opera singer who has decided to leave Russia for Europe; before she leaves, she decides to pay a final visit to the small coastal town where she was born, with her twenty-something son Andrei (Roman Shmakov) tagging along. While Andrei maintains a cynical attitude about the trip, it's evident that he would prefer to stay in Russia, while Lyubov is seemingly oblivious to the fact the village has fallen on hard times, and many of the locals seem to resent the presence of the wealthy and successful former resident. Lyubov takes a short nap while visiting the seashore, and when she wakes, Andrei is nowhere to be found. Concern gives way to panic when Lyubov can't find her son and the police tell her there's little they can do; she decides to stay until Andrei is found, and in time Lyubov can hardly be recognized as the sophisticated singer star she once was as she takes up the hard-living ways of her neighbors. Yuri's Day received the grand prize at the 2008 Warsaw Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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2006  
 
A college student who earns his living by portraying the victims in police crime-scene reenactments discovers that something is rotten in Russia when his deceased father appears before him claiming that he was killed by his still-living wife, who is having an affair with her detestable brother-in-law, in director Kirill Serebrennikov's adaptation of a darkly comic play by the Brothers Presnyakov -- which was in turn loosely based on William Shakespeare's Hamlet. Valya (Yuri Chursin) travels to crime scenes with the ill-tempered chief detective (Vitaly Khaev) and incompetent camerawoman Lyuda (Anna Mikhalkova) in order to re-create the infractions as described by the perpetrators and eyewitness accounts. When the vengeful specter of Valya's late father appears before the aimless boy claiming that his death wasn't quite the accident that it appeared to be, the stage is soon set for the most realistic crime scene that Valya has participated in to date. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Yuri ChursinVitaly Khaev, (more)