Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Aleksandr Rogozhkin

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Years active
  
1980 - present

Role
  
Film director

Name
  
Aleksandr Rogozhkin


Born
  
3 October 1949 (age 74) (
1949-10-03
)
Leningrad, Soviet Union

Occupation
  
Film director Screenwriter

Spouse
  
Yulia Rumyantseva (m. 1998–2011)

Education
  
Saint Petersburg State University, Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography

Awards
  
Nika Award for Best Film, Nika Award for Best Director

Shows
  
Streets of the Smashed Streetlights

Movies
  
Peculiarities of the National, Peculiarities of the National, The Cuckoo, The Chekist, Transit

Similar People
  
Viktor Bychkov, Aleksey Buldakov, Semyon Strugachyov, Ville Haapasalo, Sergey Russkin

The Chekist (1992) Aleksandr Rogozhkin's hard-to-find masterpiece


Alexander Rogozhkin (Russian: aleksándr Vladímirovich Rogózhkin, born October 3, 1949 in Leningrad) is a prolific Russian film director.

Contents

Selected filmography

In 1990, he directed Karaul, which won the Alfred Bauer Prize at the 40th Berlin International Film Festival.

Rogozhkin's film The Chekist was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival.

Abroad, he is famous for his acclaimed 2002 film The Cuckoo (Kukushka), which won the Golden Eagle Award for Best Picture. The film was also entered into the 24th Moscow International Film Festival where he won the award for Best Director.

Rogozhkin was also one of the first filmmakers addressing the Chechen War with his 1998 Blokpost war drama.

Rogozhkin's most renowned television work are episodes of the Streets of the Smashed Streetlights - Russia's most popular police procedural TV series.

He also directed a series of popular Russian-language screwball comedies "Peculiarities of National...": Peculiarities of National Hunt (1995), Peculiarities of National Fishing (1998), Peculiarities of National Hunt in Winter Season (2000), and Peculiarities of National Politics (2003). These and the one in a similar vein, Operation Happy New Year, are basically lots of vodka and the related adventures and stunts.

Rogozhkin's film Transit (Peregon) was released in 2006. It is a "wartime tragicomedy" about the relationship between Soviet soldiers in the Far Eastern outpost in Chukotka and the American female pilots who bring them U.S.-made airplanes from Alaska through the lend-lease program. As in The Cuckoo, Rogozhkin cast a number of amateur actors for Peregon.

Subsequent films are:

  • Igra (The Game) (2008)
  • Vopros chesti (The question of honour) (2010)
  • Afrodity (Aphrodites) (2012)
  • Oruzhiye (The Weapon) (2012)
  • His wife, Yulia Rumyantseva, a 42-year-old editor and film producer, committed suicide by jumping from a 14th floor elevation on April 28, 2011.

    References

    Aleksandr Rogozhkin Wikipedia