Ivan Dykhovichny
Ivan Vladimirovich Dykhovichny (Russian: Иван Владимирович Дыховичный, 16 October 1947 – 27 September 2009)[1][2] was a Russian film director and screenwriter.
Ivan Dykhovichny | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 27 September 2009 61) | (aged
Occupation | Film director Screenwriter |
Years active | 1970—2009 |
He directed ten films between 1984 and 2009. His film Music for December was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1995 Cannes Film Festival.[3]
His father Vladimir Abramovich Dykhovichny (1911–1963) was a well-known Soviet song writer, mother Alexandra Iosifovna Sinani was a ballerina. Dykhovichny was a close friend of Vladimir Vysotsky, who dedicated a long poem to him.
Filmography
- Moscow, My Love (1974) — actor
- Sunday Walks (1984) — actor
- Ispytatel (1985) — director
- The Black Monk (1988) — director, screenwriter
- Prorva (1992) — director, screenwriter
- Women's Role (1994) — director, screenwriter
- Music for December (1995) — director, screenwriter
- Krestonosets 2 (1997) — director, actor
- The Kopeck (2002) — director, screenwriter
- Inhalation-Exhalation (2006) — director
- Europe-Asia (2009) — director
gollark: You could just say that. It would probably be clearer.
gollark: Most of these things are in the Apiaristics Division building, not dedicated complexes, but still.
gollark: We have to manufacture messiahs *somewhere* and it's really rather hard without a centralized facility.
gollark: It *may* also have been retroactively self-causing.
gollark: I suspect it came from the human collective unconsciousness itself.
References
- "Скончался режиссер Иван Дыховичный". lenta.ru. Retrieved 29 September 2009.
- Moscow bids farewell to Ivan Dykhovichny
- "Festival de Cannes: Music for December". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 6 September 2009.
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