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Born in the USSR: 21 Up

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Director
  
Sergei Miroshnichenko

Music director
  
Ilya Demutsky

Duration
  

Language
  
English

8.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Documentary

Cast
  
James McAvoy

Country
  
U.K.

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Release date
  
2005

Initial release
  
November 29, 2005 (United Kingdom)

Screenplay
  
Sergei Miroshnichenko, Jemma Jupp

Similar movies
  
28 Up (1984)

Born in the USSR: 21 Up is a 2005 British documentary, directed by Sergei Miroshnichenko.

Following in the tradition of the original UK Up Series, this documentary revisits a group of Russian children at seven-year intervals to track their development against a backdrop of social and political change. Following the success of the UK original, this film looks at life for a group of young people from the former Soviet Union. The adults here, all introduced to viewers at the age of seven and seen again at 14, were born in a country that no longer exists. Their stories provide an insight into the break-up of the former Soviet Union as well as a reflection of what life has become without Communism.

Since filming started 14 years ago, some of the youngsters have left the former USSR to go to Israel or the United States, some have stayed in their family home, but all have had their lives changed. Archival footage of them at the ages of seven and 14, and now new material at 21, shows life in a society that was once shut off from the world.

The documentary was followed by Born in the USSR: 28 Up in 2012.

Russian Edit

A version edited by Miroshnichenko totaling 3 hours was shown on TV channel "Russia" in June 2007. It was the film first run on Russia's National Television and the former-Soviet Union. The documentary is divided into two parts: "Confusion of tongues" and "Mountain of Megiddo". This longer and more thorough version will include all the children from the previous documentaries and not only the selected children featured in the UK version. However, because of the agreement with the distributor company, this version cannot be shown outside the former Soviet Union. A similar version has been shown to selected audiences when Miroshnichenko visited the United States in April 2007.

In 2008 the film became a winner of three awards in Russian Cinematograph: Nika, Zolotoi Orel and Stalker.

References

Born in the USSR: 21 Up Wikipedia
Born in the USSR: 21 Up IMDb


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