Captive (2008 film)

Captive (Russian: Пленный, romanized: Plenyy) was a Russian-Bulgarian film by Alexei Uchitel on the novel by Vladimir Makanin Caucasian Captive. The working title of the film was also Caucasian Captive.[1]

Captive
Movie Poster (In Russian)
Directed byAlexei Uchitel
Produced byAlexei Uchitel
Screenplay byVladimir Makanin
Timofei Dekin
StarringVyacheslav Krikunov
Peter Logachev
Irakli Mskhalaia
Yulia Peresild
Raisa Gichaeva
Music byLeonid Desyatnikov
CinematographyYuri Klimenko
Production
company
TPO Rock
Camera Studio
Release date
2008 (Russia)
Running time
80 minutes
CountryRussia
Bulgaria
LanguageRussian
Chechen

Premiere of the film took place September 5, 2008 in St. Petersburg.[2] The Russian film movie came out September 11, 2008.[3]

Plot

The film takes place in the summer of 2000, during the Chechen War. Two Russian soldiers are instructed to call for help for the army column that fell under fire and left unattended. During the assignment, they take a prisoner of the Chechen youth Jamal. Apparently unadapted for the burdens of war, the young man evokes sympathy from the elder of the soldiers, Rubakhin. As a result of a failed exchange of prisoners of war in a Chechen village, soldiers are forced to hide in thickets surrounded by companies of militants seeking Jamal, and Rubakhin is forced to strangle a Chechen boy to stop his attempts to attract attention.

Awards and nominations

Among other awards and nominations in international film festivals, the film was nominated for the Crystal Globe at the 43rd Karlovy Vary International Film Festival and Alexei Uchitel won the Best Director Award for it.

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gollark: > Many other programming languages, such as Ruby and Python, are implemented in C and you get those for free too.Don't lots of these also reply on a lot of system-specific stuff which isn't just "C"?
gollark: There actually *is* an alternative compiler, as far as I know, but it doesn't do borrow checking, so it isn't much use for real stuff.
gollark: Yes. Concurrency lets you get higher performance, generally.
gollark: > Safety. Yes, Rust is more safe. I don’t really care.COMPLETE bees.

See also

References


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