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Muzhiki!

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Muzhiki!
Directed byIskra Babich
Written byIskra Babich
Vadim Mikhajlov
StarringAleksandr Mikhajlov
Pyotr Glebov
CinematographySergei Zajtsev
Edited byLyubov Butuzova
Release date
  • 1981 (1981)
Running time
94 minutes
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Muzhiki! (Russian: Мужики!) is a 1981 Soviet drama film directed by Iskra Babich. It was entered into the 32nd Berlin International Film Festival, where it won an Honourable Mention.[1]

Plot

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Pavel Zubov (Aleksandr Mikhajlov) lives and works in arctic Nikel. He came there thirteen years ago, just after the army, without even a glance at the road leading to his native village, where his bride Nastya was waiting for him. The fact is that at the end of the service, Pavel got a letter from his mother, from which he learned that Nastya had cheated on him and is expecting a child whose father is not known. That is why he did not come back home and stayed to work in the North.

A letter informing Pavel that his father is seriously ill forces him to visit the parents. It turns out that everything is fine with his father (he just used the letter as a trick to force his son to visit). But Nastya died recently. Pavel learns that his mother was wrong when she sent the unfortunate letter about her. Nastya loved Pavel and it was from him that she gave birth to a girl named Polina. Later, after marrying a drunkard artist, Anastasia gave birth to a son named Pavlik and also adopted Styopka, a child from a maternity hospital. Everyone thinks that Styopka is mute from birth, even though he hears perfectly, understands everything and has no physical defects which prevent him from talking. The father of Pavlik became a chronic alcoholic, and has long since left the family. The children do not have adult able-bodied family members and foster care is not given to Pavel's parents because they are elderly.

It is not easy for Pavel to decide if he can assume responsibility for the fate of not only of his biological daughter but also of the two boys.

Cast

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References

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  1. ^ "Berlinale: 1982 Prize Winners". berlinale.de. Retrieved 13 November 2010.
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