“Victory” is a Moscow cinema located on 17a Abelmanovskaya Street . Opened in 1957 . 2 halls with 304 seats.
| Cinema | |
| Victory | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| City | Moscow |
| Project Author | Zholtovsky, Ivan Vladislavovich |
| Build Date | 1957 year |
| Status | |
| Site | pobeda-kinozal.ru |
Content
Location
Pobeda Cinema is located in the Central Administrative District of Moscow, 1.5 km from Taganskaya Square on Abelmanovskaya Street , connecting Rogozhsky Val Street , Nizhny Novgorod Street , Volgogradsky Prospekt and 3rd Krutitsky per. , 200 meters from the metro stations Proletarskaya and Krestyanskaya Zastava .
Transport
Ground transportation
On foot: from the metro - 200 meters.
Nearest underground station
Nearest metro: Krestyanskaya Zastava / Proletarskaya .
Phone: (495) 670-0321 (answering machine); 670-0719 (ticket reservation)
E-mail: cinema@pobeda-cinema.ru
History
Cinema “Victory” was built in 1957 according to the standard project of the honored architect of the USSR, Stalin Prize laureate Ivan Vladislavovich Zholtovsky (another movie theater - “ Glory ” was built in Moscow on the same project). The cinema is a separate building of a rectangular shape, with columns along the facade. The project is based on the palace from the city of Vicenza, the architect of the 16th century Palladio , and is a monument of architectural style, known as the "Stalin Empire". Initially, the cinema had 2 halls with 420 seats each. The box office and spectator foyer was decorated with original massive wrought iron chandeliers and stucco molding (by the way, the chandeliers participated in Bondarchuk's Oscar-winning film “War and Peace”). In the basement of the cinema there was a shooting gallery.
Reconstruction
In June 2000, the Pobeda cinema was closed for repairs. The builders and restorers were given the task: to preserve the original architectural and interior stylistics of the Stalin era, painting the gloomy Stalin building with southern Palladian air, combining it with modern solutions in the field of design, materials and technical support.
Present
Since November 1, 2000, in the completely reconstructed and converted Pobeda cinema, there are two cinema halls - Red and Blue. Each hall has a capacity of 304 seats and is equipped with sound equipment in the DOLBY DIGITAL format, sound-absorbing panels, a 10 × 4.5 m pearl screen, comfortable armchairs with cup holders for drinks, and air conditioning. In the spectator foyer area of 350 sq.m. located: - coffee bar (60 seats) - fast-food snack bar - round stage with a diameter of 3.5 m, equipped with theater lighting and sound. There is a wardrobe in the cash desk. In the cinema building there is a Pinta beer restaurant. Near the cinema - parking for cars. Since 2014, a puppet theater has been located in the building of the Pobeda cinema. They wanted to give the building to the theater completely, but thanks to the protests of the residents of the district, the theater and cinema coexist in the same building. The blue hall was given to the puppet theater, and the red hall - to the cinema itself. The coffee bar and snack bar closed.
Interior Design
The interior design was developed by a famous Russian designer, theater and film artist, fashion designer, producer Pavel Kaplevich . His most famous projects: theatrical performances “Woe from Wit” by O. Menshikov; “3 comrades”, “Pygmalion”, “Cherry Orchard” (Contemporary); The Taming of the Shrew, Khlestakov by V. Mirzoyev (Stanislavsky); films: "Anna Karamazoff" R. Hamdamova; “Taxi Blues”, “Lunapark” by P. Lungin; “Mom”, “Limit” D. Evstigneev; store design: Tsarskaya Okhota (Okhotny Ryad shopping center); “Chain mail”, “Depot”, restaurants “Old attic”, “Zoo” and much more.
Design work
Design work was carried out by theatrical production workshops under the direction of Leonid Kerpek .
Wall Painting
Under the leadership of Pavel Parkhomenko and Alexey Shaboldaev. Restoration of the original chandeliers was made in the center of art restoration in Moscow .
Notes
List of cinemas in Moscow