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This film was Sokurov's first feature at Lenfilm.It was roughly based on a short story by the contemporary Soviet writer, Grigory Baklanov.Baklanov asked that his name be removed from the credits because the only motif that was adopted from Baklanov's work was the scene of the transitional period from power to subordinance.
Yuri Sardarov is half-Georgian and half-Armenian; he moved to the United States at age two as a refugee.[5] [6] His parents and grandparents were musicians. [6]Sardarov was named after his grandfather, with whom he is very close, and they have matching Cyrillic tattoos. [6]
For the film, Sokurov, as often, selected a single motif from the work of inspiration – in this case, it was the sickness of a woman. It was produced as the graduation work of S. Sidorov from the VGIK. At that time Sokurov was not allowed to work on his own films, and saw this as an opportunity to continue work in the field.
Mournful Unconcern (Russian: Скорбное бесчувствие, translit. Skorbnoye beschuvstviye) is the third produced film by Alexander Sokurov, completed in 1983, but the fourth released one, as it was banned by Soviet authorities until perestroika in 1987.
Sam Altman (L), US entrepreneur, investor, programmer, and founder and CEO of artificial intelligence company OpenAI, and the company's co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, speak ...
— Valeriya Novodvorskaya, 2000. According to Novodvorskaya, it was Russian governmental policies in Chechnya that turned Shamil Basayev into a terrorist. In response, Alexei Venediktov, the editor-in-chief of the liberal radio station Echo of Moscow, banned her from appearing on their programs. Novodvorskaya accused the Russian government of murdering Polish president Lech Kaczyński in a ...
Reader, I Married Him: Stories Inspired by Jane Eyre is a 2016 anthology of short stories, edited by Tracy Chevalier, inspired by the line "Reader, I married him" from Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë, at the beginning of Chapter 38. [1]
Ilya Frank, physicist, Nobel Prize (1958) [88] Yakov Frenkel, physicist [89] Vitaly Ginzburg, physicist, Nobel Prize (2003) [90] Emanuel Goldberg (1881–1970), pioneered Microdots and microfilm retrieval technology [91] Alexander Gorodnitsky, geologist and oceanographer, Soviet and Russian bard and poet; Vladimir Gribov, physicist [92]