Yelena Yatsura

Yelena Yatsura (Russian: Елена Яцура; born January 23, 1968 in Krasnodar, Russia) is an independent film producer. She has collaborated with “Slovo”, “Non-Stop Production”, “Bogwood Kino” and “Filmocom” film companies. At the moment she works with “Trikita Entertainment”. Yelena Yatsura had won the Best Producer of the CIS and Baltic Countries award at the Open Film Festival “Kinoshok” in 2003. She is a two-time winner of the “Nika” Russian National Film Award as the Best Fiction Film Producer (“Our Own”, 2004 and The 9th Company, 2005) and the winner of the “Golden Eagle” National Film Award as the Best Fiction Film Producer of 2005 (“9th Company”).[1]

Yelena Yatsura

Her resume contains 15 debut works by various directors including: Philipp Yankovsky (In Motion, 2002) and Fedor Bondarchuk (The 9th Company, 2005); the prize winners of the A-class international film festivals – Alexey German-jr. (The Last Train, 2003) and Ilya Khrzhanovsky (4,2004); and symbolic representatives of Russian artistic circle Konstantin Murzenko (April, 2001) and Renata Litvinova (The Goddess: How I Fell In Love, 2004).

In 2008 Sergei Dvortsevoy with Tulpan, an ethnic film about Kazakh nomads that received international awards including "Un Certain Regard Award" in Cannes and outstanding reviews[2]

Films

  • To Love Like Russians Do - 2 (1996, directed by Evgeniy Matveyev)
  • American Bet (1997, directed by Dmitry Meskhiev)
  • Tests For Real Men (1998, directed by Andrey Razenkov)
  • Women's Property (1999, directed by Dmitry Meskhiev)
  • To Love Like Russians Do -3. The Governor (1999, directed by Evgeniy Matveyev)
  • April (2001, directed by Konstantin Murzenko)
  • The Sky. The Plane. The Girl. (2002, directed by Vera Storozheva)
  • In Motion (2002, directed by Filipp Yankovsky)
  • Black Ice (2002, directed by Mikhail Brashinskiy)
  • Diary Of A Kamikaze (2002, directed by Dmitry Meskhiev
  • The Last Train (2003, directed by Alexey German-jr.)
  • Honey Baby (2004, directed by Mika Kaurismyaki)
  • Our Own (2004, directed by Dmitry Meskhiev)
  • Goddess. How I Fell In Love (2004, directed by Renata Litvinova)
  • 4 (2004, directed by Ilya Khrzhanovskiy)
  • The Wonderful Valley (2004, directed by Rano Kubayeva)
  • Russian Dolls (2005, directed by Cedrik Klapisch)
  • 9th Company (2005, directed by Fedor Bondarchuk)
  • La Traductrice (2006, directed by Elena Khazanova)
  • 9 months (2006, directed by Rezo Gigineishvili) 8-episodes TV-series
  • Red Pearl Of Love (2008, directed by Andres Puustusmaa)
  • Tulpan (2008, directed by Sergei Dvortsevoy)
  • The Concert (2009, directed by Radu Mikhaelianu)
  • Cadences (2010, directed by Ivan Savelyev)
  • Brothel Lights (2011, directed by Alexander Gordon)
  • Dumpling Brothers (2013, directed by Gennadiy Ostrovskiy)
  • Little Bird[3] ('Ptichka') (2015, directed by Vladimir Beck)
  • The Hit (2015, directed by Rita Mikhailova) – post-production
gollark: ++magic py `await ctx.send("@Finianb1#0001 is bees")return None`
gollark: Wondrous.
gollark: ++magic py await ctx.send("<@263493613860814848> is bees")
gollark: ++magic py ctx.send("<@263493613860814848> is bees")
gollark: Ah. Hmm.

References

  1. "Russian Film Symposium". Rusfilm.pitt.edu. Retrieved 2016-05-20.
  2. "Tulpan". rogere bert. rogere bert.
  3. "'Little Bird' ('Ptichka'): Rome Review". The Hollywood Reporter. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/little-bird-ptichka-rome-review-834718?mobile_redirect=false. Retrieved 2015-11-09. External link in |publisher= (help)

Further reading

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