Jump to content

Farewell, Doves: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 5: Line 5:
| caption =
| caption =
| director = [[:ru:Сегель, Яков Александрович|Yakov Segel]]
| director = [[:ru:Сегель, Яков Александрович|Yakov Segel]]
| producer =
| producer = Alexander Yablochkin
| writer = [[:ru:Сегель, Яков Александрович|Yakov Segel]]
| writer = [[:ru:Сегель, Яков Александрович|Yakov Segel]]
| starring = {{Plainlist|
| starring = {{Plainlist|

Revision as of 09:15, 5 November 2021

Farewell, Doves
Russian: Прощайте, голуби!
Directed byYakov Segel
Written byYakov Segel
Produced byAlexander Yablochkin
Starring
CinematographyYuri Ilyenko
Edited byL. Rodionova
Music byMark Fradkin
Production
company
Yalta Film Studio
Release date
1960
Running time
97 min.
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Farewell, Doves (Russian: Прощайте, голуби!, romanizedProshchayte, golubi!) is a 1960 Soviet drama film directed by Yakov Segel.[1][2][3] Film gained recognition with two international film festivals:[4][5] Locarno Film Festival in Switzerland (1961) and Melbourne International Film Festival in Australia (1962). In fact with the results of Locarno Film Festival (1961) film "Farewell, Doves" got the reward FIPRESCI from International Federation of Film Critics.[6]

Plot

Genka Sakhnenko studies at the school and works. But he, practically an adult and independent person, has one secret: after work, he climbs onto the dovecote. He has had a passion for pigeons since childhood. Genka is pleased with the work (he will even outwit his colleague, master Maxim Petrovich, who loves to take from tenants for work), but one day, having injured his hand, he ended up in the hospital, where he became friends with nurse Tanya. However, after a while, on the Komsomol voucher, Genka had to leave to work in another city, and he presented his pigeons to the first grader.[7]

Cast

Film Shooting

Shooting took place in Kyiv Khreschatyk Street and Maidan Nezalezhnosti (back then Kalinin Square). Many of the scenes were filmed in Kyiv’ microdistrict Chokolivka, namely Aviaconstructor Antonov Street, Umanska Street and Chokolivsky Boulevard.

References