The Life of Klim Samgin
The Life of Klim Samgin | |
---|---|
Directed by | Viktor Titov |
Written by |
Viktor Titov Alexander Lapshin |
Starring | Andrey Rudensky |
Music by | Nikolai Martynov |
Cinematography | Vladimir Ilyin |
Edited by | Anna Babushkina |
Production company | |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 960 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
The Life of Klim Samgin (Russian: Жизнь Клима Самгина) is a 14-part TV film director Viktor Titov on the novel by Maxim Gorky. The series premiered on television in March–April 1988.
Plot
The film describes the life of the Russian intelligent, reluctant revolutionary, in the background Klim Samgin grandiose panorama of Russian life from 1877 to 1917.[1]
Cast
- Andrey Rudensky as Klim Ivanovich Samgin
- Sergey Fufaev as Klim Samgin (in childhood)
- Yelena Solovey as Vera Petrovna, mother Klim
- Ernst Romanov as Ivan Akimovich Samgin, father Klim
- Armen Dzhigarkhanyan as Timofei Stepanovich Varavka, stepfather Klim
- Sergey Koltakov as Dr. Konstantin Makarov, each Klim
- Svetlana Kryuchkova as Lubov Somova
- Mikhail Gluzsky as Yakov Akimovich Samgin, uncle Klim
- Natalya Gundareva as Marina Petrovna Zotova (Premirova)
- Andrei Boltnev as gendarme Colonel Popov
- Larisa Guzeeva as Elizaveta Spivak
- Yevgeniya Glushenko as Maria Ivanovna Nikonova
- Alexander Kalyagin as Ivan Mitrofanov / Yakov Kotelnikov, an agent of the secret police
- Igor Vladimirov as Andrey Sergeyevich Prozorov
- Sergei Makovetsky as Dmitri Samghin, brother Klim
- Andrey Kharitonov as Igor Turoboev
- Victor Kostetskiy as Georgy Gapon
- Valentin Gaft as Valery Trifonov, officer-drunk
- Vladimir Soshalsky as Valentin Bezbedov
- Vsevolod Shilovsky as Zahar Petrovich Berdnikov, businessman
- Aleksei Loktev as Grigory Popov
- Irina Rozanova as Tosya
- Lyubov Sokolova as Anfimovna
- Viktor Bychkov as beekeeper
- Irina Kupchenko as lady on reception at the lawyer
- Aleksandr Galibin as Diomidov; Nicholas II of Russia
Awards
- Honorary Diploma Manson spesial 4th episode of Province. 1886 at the International Film Festival in Monte Carlo (1989).
- Professional Award Lenfilm studio in 1988 the artist Yuri Pugach (1989).
References
External links
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