8 Best Dates

8 Best Dates (Russian: 8 лучших свиданий, romanized: 8 luchshikh svidaniy) is a 2016 Russian romantic comedy directed by Maryus Vaysberg. It is a sequel to the 2015 film 8 New Dates. The film stars Vera Brezhneva and Volodymyr Zelensky.[2] Initially, the film was planned to be released on December 31, 2015, but the date was later postponed.[3]

8 Best Dates
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMaryus Vaysberg
Produced by
  • Ekaterina Gordetskaya
  • Andrey Radko
Written by
  • Yuri Stukalin
  • Andrey Yakovlev
  • Mikhail Savin
Starring
Music byBryan Carr
CinematographyBruce Allan Green
Production
company
Release date
  • March 3, 2016 (2016-03-03) (Russia)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian
Budget$1 million
Box office$2 480 653[1]

Plot

Having learned from the doctors that he has only a few weeks to live, Nikita makes the courageous decision to transfer his family and work to decent hands. An employee of the Ministry of Emergency Situations named Ilya becomes a candidate for a replacement, a decent man all around. Nikita makes every effort to “introduce” Ilya as soon as possible into his life and unexpectedly succeeds in this. Soon, Ilya becomes an excellent father for Nikita's children, an indispensable employee at the clinic and, most importantly, a very appealing man for Masha, Nikita's beautiful wife. However, the real test of this is only beginning, because Nikita soon realizes that the doctors were wrong, and in fact he will not die at all in the near future. Now he has to win back his place in the family and at work, and it turns out to be much more difficult than it seems at first glance.

Cast

  • Vera Brezhneva - Maria Igorevna (Masha)
  • Volodymyr Zelensky - Nikita Andreevich Sokolov
  • Vladimir Epifantsev - Ilya
  • Evgeny Koshevoy - Senya, driver of the protagonist
  • Sergey Kazanin - leader of the music competition
  • Nino Kantaria
  • Victor Schur
  • Maria Gorban - Elena Vasilyevna, Secretary
gollark: Were they *also* him?
gollark: I thought the ozone issue was from chlorofluorocarbons™.
gollark: The difference is that graphene is a bunch of stacked 2D sheets (graphene) in a nice hexagonal pattern, diamonds have a giant tetrahedral thing going on.
gollark: As much as a diamond anyway.
gollark: No, it *is carbon*.

References

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