Lost (Nests) is a Soviet television feature film , shot in 1966 by director Semyon Tumanov , according to the script of Perm writer Yuri Petukhov (according to his eponymous story).
| Lost (Nests) | |
|---|---|
| Genre | drama |
| Producer | Semyon Tumanov |
| Author script | Yuri Petukhov |
| In the main cast | Nikolay Kryuchkov , Lidia Smirnova , Klara Luchko |
| Operator | Igor Chernykh |
| Composer | Vladimir Rubin |
| Film company | Mosfilm , Telefilm Creative Association |
| Duration | 1:12:19 |
| A country | |
| Tongue | Russian |
| Year | 1966 |
The television premiere took place on April 1, 1966. January 16, 1967 was released.
Content
Creation History
The film was initiated by Nikolay Kryuchkov [1] [2] . He read the story of the Permian writer Y. Petukhov “Lost”. Being impressed by the plot of the story, Kryuchkov achieved its adaptation. The film was put on television under the name "Nests" in 1966. A year later, the film came out on a wide screen called "Lost."
Story
In the difficult post-war years, the carpenter Yevsey ( Nikolai Kryuchkov ), returning from the front, did not want to work in his own ruined collective farm and, leaving his family, went to the city. There he created a new family with barmaid Nyura. However, after many years, the hero began painfully experiencing separation from his native places and family. A chance meeting with his grown son during the seeing off in the army leads Eusebius to the decision to establish relations with his first family. Not immediately Pelagia forgave the unfaithful husband, but for the sake of the children humbled a proud disposition. Fate continued to test her: Eusei found out that Nyurka went to prison for embezzlement and two orphans remained. What will Pelagia do?
Here is how contemporaries recall the appearance on the screens of the movie Lost:
The film’s appearance on the TV screen created a sensation, which, perhaps, no one foresaw. Conversations, disputes about him, just an exchange of opinions could be heard in the subway, in trolleybuses and electric trains, in shops - everywhere where it was a little crowded. Eusebius and Pelagia became the heroes of the day. And although in the conversations of these they were more often called not by their proper names, but by “Kryuchkov”, “Lidia Smirnova”, it was as if the speakers themselves forgot about the artists themselves, as if it was not a film, but a kind of “direct transmission” from the very of life. [3]
Cast
- Nikolay Kryuchkov [4] [5] - Eusebius
- Lidia Smirnova - Pelagia
- Klara Luchko [6] - Nyura
- Larisa Barabanova - Lyusya
- Ivan Zhevago - Anatoly Ivanovich
- Claudia Khabarova - Dasha
- Anatoly Chaliapin - Grisha
- Olya Zalygalova - Katya
- Alyosha Efremov - Venka
- Georgy Millar - collective farmer - charioteer
- Vera Altai - Pelagia's friend
- Valentin Grachev - Tolik
- Victor Uralsky - Stepan
- Valentina Ananyina - Pelagia's girlfriend
- Iya Marx - Klimovna
- Nikolay Pogodin - Nikolay - harmonist
- Victor Markin - paramedic
- Alexandra Danilova - Maroussia
Links
Sources
- Clara Luchko. I am a happy person: Prose. Memoirs (memoirs). M .: Vagrius, 2007. ISBN 978-5-9697-0366-7 .
- Leo Parfyonov. Russian Cinema: Actor's Encyclopedia, Volume 1. 2002. ISBN 5-85646-062-6 .
- Tatyana Ivanova, Vladich Nedelin. Nikolay Kryuchkov. M .: Art, 1984, p. 191-197.
Notes
- ↑ Lev Parfyonov. Russian Cinema: Actor's Encyclopedia, Volume 1. 2002. p. 72.
- ↑ “For the film“ Nests “I myself found both a theme and literary material,” says N. A. Kryuchkov. - The script is based on the story of Perm writer Yuri Petukhov “Lost”. A very interesting writer ... He sits in Perm and writes good stories, plays. With real living people, whole characters, genuine conflicts. ” see Tatyana Ivanova, Vladich Nedelin. Nikolay Kryuchkov. M .: Art, 1984. p.191
- ↑ see the book Tatyana Ivanova, Vladich Nedelin. Nikolay Kryuchkov. M .: Art, 1984, p. 191-197
- ↑ According to film critics, the role of Kryuchkov in the film Lost Ones is one of the actor’s best roles .
- ↑ In Klara Luchko’s book I am a happy person, there is a fragment telling how he and Kryuchkov rehearsed a scene with a slap in the face on the set of the film Lost.
- ↑ By the 90th birthday of Klara Luchko , the film Lost Television Channel “Culture” was shown on the Culture Channel