the traveler's resource guide to festivals & films
a FestivalTravelNetwork.com site
part of Insider Media llc.
For the 10th consecutive year, New Yorkers can see some of the best in modern Russian movies through The Russian Film Week which takes place in Manhattan and Brooklyn from December 3rd through December 9th, 2010. From screenings to meet-and-greets with casts and directors of the 15 films being presented.
Throughout its decade-long run, the Russian Film Week has become a unique celebration of culture and artistic expression from the Great Bear of Europe. The event’s diverse audience – ranging from foreign cinema fans to Russian expats to students looking for a thought-provoking experience -- is a testament to the value of crossing cultural and language boundaries.
Organized by the New York-based Global Advertising Strategies and the Russian-based TV Studio Clotho, the event is endorsed by the Russian Federation's Ministry of Culture as well as by leading political figures and organizations from Russia and the US. Supported by Fox Studios in Hollywood, the Russian-American Cultural Center, as well as Film Movement and international film distributor Kino International, the event has partnered with the New York Institute of Technology, the School of Visual Arts and the New York University.
This year’s selection is diverse in genre and style –from intellectual narratives, provocative art-house films and docs — and so are the directors, who range from veterans to complete newcomers.
The film that kicks off the week is Nikita Mikhalkov’s Burnt by the Sun 2, a follow up to his Oscar-winning war drama of 1994, Burnt by the Sun.
Among other films selected by Program director and film critic Oleg Sulkin are:
In line with the nature of a film festival, the Week provides a unique opportunity to meet cast and directors of each film. Renowned actor Yuriy Stoyanov will present Man by the Window -- a film in which he plays the lead. Alexey Serebryakov, who plays the main character in the action film Zolotoe Sechenie, will share his experience of working in Cambodia where the film was shot. Garik Sukachev, a veteran rock musician with a cult-like following, will present his feature film debut The House of Sun and may even sing for his audience.
For more info on the film schedules go to: http://russianfilmweeknyc.com/en