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Golden Eagle Award For Best Motion Picture
The Golden Eagle Award for Best Motion Picture () is one of twenty four award categories presented annually by the National Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences of Russia. It is one of the Golden Eagle Awards, which were conceived by Nikita Mikhalkov as a counterweight to the Nika Award established in 1987 by the Russian Academy of Cinema Arts and Sciences. Each year the members of the academy choose five nominees. The first film to be awarded was '' The Cuckoo'', a comedy film about the Winter War between Finland and the Soviet Union during World War II. The most recent award was given to ''Air'', in 2024. Nominees and winners ;Key 2000s 2010s 2020s References External links * {{Golden Eagle Awards (Russia) Picture An image or picture is a visual representation. An image can be two-dimensional, such as a drawing, painting, or photograph, or three-dimensional, such as a carving or sculpture. Images may be displayed through other media, includi ...
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Golden Eagle Award (Russia)
The Golden Eagle Award () is an award given by the National Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences of Russia to recognize excellence of professionals in the film industry, directors, actors, and writers. Modelled after the American Golden Globe Awards, the formal ceremony at which the awards are presented is one of the most prominent award ceremonies in Russia, alongside the Nika Award. The national Russian award is given out in 24 categories each January for motion pictures and TV series produced in Russia during the previous year. The awarding statuette is a silver eagle, originally made from copper with a jade pedestal, and was designed by sculptor Viktor Mitroshin. The design was later altered by the Spanish company Carrera y Carrera. The award was conceived by Nikita Mikhalkov as a counterweight to the Nika Award established in 1987 and run by the Russian Academy of Cinema Arts and Sciences in Moscow. History The Golden Eagle Award was founded on 4 March 2002 by the N ...
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War (2002 Film)
''War'' (, translit. ''Voina'') is a 2002 Russian war film by Aleksei Balabanov about the Second Chechen War, starring Aleksei Chadov and Ian Kelly. Plot The story is told from the perspective of former conscript Ivan Yermakov ( Alexei Chadov), a defendant in a pre-trial detention facility who is giving an interview to a journalist. As he begins recounting his story, the film cuts to Chechnya in the summer of 2001, during the Second Chechen War. Being held captive by Chechen warlord Aslan Gugayev ( Georgy Gurguliya), Ivan serves as a domestic slave and Aslan's communications specialist, since Ivan graduated from a computer school and speaks English. One day, Aslan also captures two actors from England: John Boyle ( Ian Kelly) and his fiancée Margaret Michaelsen ( Ingeborga Dapkūnaitė). After a while, Ivan and the actors are transported to another village and put in a dungeon, where they meet Captain Medvedev ( Sergei Bodrov, Jr.), paralyzed as a result of a shrapnel wo ...
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Alexei Popogrebski
Alexei Petrovich Popogrebsky (; born 7 August 1972) is a Russian film director and screenwriter. His 2010 film '' How I Ended This Summer'' was nominated for the Golden Bear The Golden Bear () is the highest prize awarded for the best film at the Berlin International Film Festival and is, along with the Palme d'Or and the Golden Lion, the most important international film festival award. The bear is the heraldic an ... at the 60th Berlin International Film Festival, and won Best Film at the 2010 London Film Festival Awards. Filmography * '' Roads to Koktebel'' (2003) * '' Simple Things'' (2007) * '' How I Ended This Summer'' (2010) Television * ''The Optimists'' (2017; original title: Оптимисты) References External links * 1972 births Living people Russian film directors Russian screenwriters Russian male screenwriters Writers from Moscow {{Russia-film-director-stub ...
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Boris Khlebnikov
Boris Igorevich Khlebnikov (; born August 28, 1972) is a Russian film director, screenwriter and film producer, producer. Filmography As director * ''Roads to Koktebel'' (2003) * ''Free Floating'' (2006) * ''Help Gone Mad'' (2009) * ''Crush (2009 Russian film), Crush'' (2009) * ''Cherchill'' (2010) * ''Bez svideteley'' (2012) * ''Till Night Do Us Part'' (2012) * ''A Long and Happy Life'' (2019) * ''Hot and Bothered'' (2015) * ''Arrhythmia (film), Arrhythmia'' (2017) * ''Snegir'' (2023) As screenwriter * ''Roads to Koktebel'' (2003) * ''Free Floating'' (2006) * ''Help Gone Mad'' (2009) * ''Crush'' (2009) * ''Till Night Do Us Part'' (2012) * ''A Long and Happy Life'' (2019) * ''Arrhythmia (film), Arrhythmia'' (2017) * ''Heart of the World (2018 film), Heart of the World'' (2018) * ''Snegir'' (2023) References External links

* 1972 births Living people Russian film directors {{Russia-bio-stub ...
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Roads To Koktebel
''Roads to Koktebel'' () is a 2003 Russian adventure drama film directed by Boris Khlebnikov and Aleksey Popogrebskiy. Plot A Boy with his Father go to the sea. They come in a freight car in the trucker's cabin. They go from house to house, by forest, by field. In Moscow they have nothing left. And there, by the sea is hope of a new happy life beginning. For the Father, the road is an attempt to regain faith in himself, and the friendship and trust of his son. The Boy's target objective is the Koktebel village, where in the hills near the sea a wind is constantly blowing, where the albatross soars. Cast * Gleb Puskepalis as The Son * Igor Chernevich as The Father * Evgeniy Sytyy as Railway inspector * Vera Sandrykina as Tanya * Vladimir Kucherenko as Mikhail * Agrippina Steklova as Kseniya * Aleksandr Ilin as Truck driver * Anna Frolovtseva as Tenant Awards It was entered into the 25th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Special Silver St. George. It also wo ...
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Dmitry Lesnevsky
Dmitry Anatolyevich Lesnevsky (b. February 2, 1970) is a Russian-British-Israeli entrepreneur and producer in television, film, publishing and online media. Early life Dmitry Lesnevsky was born in a Jewish family. He graduated from Moscow State University with a degree in Journalism. Career In 1991 he co-founded REN TV, one of the first privately held, independent TV production companies in Russia. It produced over twenty programs, all ranked among the highest in the country. In 1997 Lesnevsky co-founded and served as CEO and General producer (through 2005) of REN-TV Television Network - the second biggest independent TV channel in Russia. REN-TV was particularly renowned for its independent news. In 2005, Lesnevsky and Iren Lesnevsky sold their shares in REN-TV to RTL Group. In 2008, Dmitry left Russia and bought German TV network Das Vierte - an independent national TV channel in Germany - which he acquired from NBC Universal. In 2013, Das Vierte was sold to The Walt Di ...
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Andrey Zvyagintsev
Andrey Petrovich Zvyagintsev (, ; born 6 February 1964) is a Russian filmmaker. His film '' The Return'' (2003) won him a Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival. Following ''The Return'', Zvyagintsev directed '' The Banishment'' (2007) and '' Elena'' (2011). His film '' Leviathan'' (2014) was nominated for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film in 2014 and won the Best Film award at the Asia Pacific Screen Awards. His most recent film '' Loveless'' won the Jury Prize at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival, and was among the nominees for Best International Feature Film at the 90th Academy Awards. He also won the Achievement in Directing award for this film at the 2017 Asia Pacific Screen Awards. Life and career Zvyagintsev was born in Novosibirsk, Siberia. At the age of 20 in 1984, he graduated from the theater school in Novosibirsk as an actor. Since 1986, he has lived in Moscow where he continued his studies at the Russian Institute of Theatre Arts until 1990 ...
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The Return (2003 Film)
''The Return'' () is a 2003 Russian coming-of-age drama film directed by Andrey Zvyagintsev and released internationally in 2004. It tells the story of two Russian boys whose father suddenly returns home after a 12-year absence. He takes the boys on a holiday to a remote island on a lake that turns into a test of survivability of almost mythic proportions. It won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival (as well as the award for the best first film) and was nominated for the Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film. The film was also selected as the Russian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 76th Academy Awards, but it didn't make the final shortlist. It received widespread critical acclaim. Plot In contemporary Russia, Ivan and his older brother Andrei have grown a deep attachment to each other to make up for their fatherless childhood. Both their mother and grandmother live with them. After running home after a fight with each other, the boys are shocked to ...
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Igor Maslennikov
Igor Fyodorovich Maslennikov (; 26 October 1931 – 17 September 2022)
was a Soviet and Russian film director.


Biography

Maslennikov was born in Nizhny Novgorod. In 1954 he completed his education in the department of journalism of the Leningrad University and worked as an editor, script writer, and cameraman on Saint Petersburg, Leningrad television. In 1965 he entered the Higher Directors' Courses of Lenfilm (Grigori Kozintsev's workshop), at end of which he became the director of this motion picture studio. In the cinema, Maslennikov made his debut at the end of the 1960s with a film about a senior pupil: the ''Personal Life of Kuzyaev Valentin''. He directed children's films (''Tomorrow'' and ''3 April''), movies about sports (''Racers''), historical costume-dramas (''Yaroslavna, the Queen of France''). He worked on the joint Soviet-Nor ...
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Karen Shakhnazarov
Karen Georgievich Shakhnazarov (; born 8 July 1952) is a Soviet and Russian filmmaker, producer, and screenwriter. He became the director general of Mosfilm in 1998. Biography Shakhnazarov is the son of a Georgy Shakhnazarov, a politician of Armenians, Armenian descent, and a Russians, Russian housewife, Anna Grigorievna Shakhnazarova. Shakhnazarov is one of several living descendants of the famous Melik-Shahnazarian princely family from Nagorno-Karabakh. The Melik-Shahnazarians ruled Nagorno-Karabakh's province of Varanda in medieval and modern times. His 1987 film ''Courier (film), Courier'' was entered into the 15th Moscow International Film Festival, where it won a Special Prize. In 2002 he was a member of the jury at the 24th Moscow International Film Festival. Since 2005 he has been a member of the Public Chamber of Russia. His 2012 film ''White Tiger (2012 film), White Tiger'' was selected as the Russian entry for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, Best F ...
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Nikolai Lebedev (film Director)
Nikolai Igorevich Lebedev (; born 16 November 1966) is a Russian film director, screenwriter and film producer. Born in Kishinev, Moldavian SSR, Soviet Union (now Chișinău in Moldova). He is best known as the director, writer, and producer of ''Wolfhound (2006 film), Wolfhound'' (2007) and ''Legend № 17'' (2013), both of which became well grossing films in Russian cinema. Other films include the critically lauded drama ''The Star (2002 film), The Star'' (2002), the drama film ''Soundtrack of Passion'' (2009), and the disaster film ''Flight Crew (film), Flight Crew'' (2016). Filmography References External links

* 1966 births Living people Russian film directors Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography alumni Russian screenwriters Film people from Chișinău {{Russia-film-director-stub ...
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The Star (2002 Film)
''The Star'' (, Transliteration, translit. ''Zvezda'') is a 2002 Russian film directed by Nikolai Lebedev (film director), Nikolai Lebedev, a large modern project of Mosfilm. It is based on a short story of the same name by Emmanuil Kazakevich, about a group of Soviet scouts working behind enemy lines during Operation Bagration in World War II. The story had previously been made into a 1953 The Star (1953 film), film of the same name. Aleksei Kravchenko (actor), Aleksei Kravchenko won a government award for his role in this film. Plot A team of Soviet scouts is sent behind enemy lines to find the location of the German armor forces. The Soviets wait until night, and open up with an artillery barrage. As the guns fire, the team advances. The team successfully slips behind enemy lines. Many dramatic scenes follow. In one, a German soldier is captured and interrogated. In another, the team calls an airstrike on German positions, causing great damage and casualties. One man even ...
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