Makarov (film)
Makarov (Russian: Макаров) is a 1993 Russian drama film directed by Vladimir Khotinenko.[1][2][3] The film won the Nika Award for Best Picture of the Year in 1994.
Makarov | |
---|---|
Russian: Макаров | |
Directed by | Vladimir Khotinenko |
Produced by | Vladimir Khotinenko |
Written by | Valeri Zalotukha |
Starring |
|
Music by | Aleksandr Pantykin |
Cinematography | Evgeniy Grebnev |
Edited by | Svetlana Tarik |
Country | Russia |
Language | Russian |
Plot
The film tells about the poet Alexander Sergeyevich Makarov, who received a pistol from the system of his namesake, which radically changed his life and relations with people around him.[4]
Cast
- Sergey Makovetsky as Aleksandr Sergeyevich Makarov
- Elena Mayorova as Natasha, his wife (as Yelena Majorova)
- Irina Metlitskaya as Margo
- Vladimir Ilyin as Vasya
- Sergei Parshin
- Leonid Okunyov
- Evgeniy Steblov
- Viktor Smirnov
- Ilya Rutberg
- Ivan Agafonov[5]
gollark: It's more like Java than C++.
gollark: That's PascalCase.
gollark: Oh, and instead of writing `"tick-instances1.csv"` all over the place maybe make it a constant.
gollark: Looking at MainApplication.py:> objects = []This is not a very descriptively named thing. There should probably be a comment.> `def populate(self):`Arguably, it isn't very good design to make the code responsible for display *also* directly handle directly loading CSVs and such. Maybe this should be separated out more.> `def increment(self):`This does not appear to save anywhere, although I may have missed that bit.
gollark: Also also also, the ` ticks_count = 0 # this is supposed to hold the number of ticks we have instanced an object for` on the `Tick` class is not used anywhere.
References
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