Title of film : Poor Relatives
Director Name : Pavel Lungin
Cast & crew :
Producer : Pavel Lungin,Olga Vasileva
Editor : Sophie Brunet
Cast :
Synopsis : 1. Entrepreneur Edik Letov brings USSR-born foreigners, who are searching for their relatives, to a small provincial town in the former USSR. In truth, he bluffs them into meeting totally random people, sometimes from entirely different places. This time the group arrives to the town of Golotvin, which its Mayor agrees to rename as Golutvin for the duration of the visit, for a price. 2. The movie takes place at the present day, in a small Southern town in the former USSR. The protagonist, Edik Letov, helps people search for relatives. He finds then in Canada, Israel, Switzerland… For Edik, it's business, and a failure-free one at that. If he can't find real relatives, he arranges for substitutes. And his little firm runs smoothly, it seems.But as his clients are lonely people, they pour so much love and warmth on their foreign guest that those can't even think about their ostensibility, and start to reciprocate their feelings.
Director Bio : Pavel Semyonovich Lungin (born July 12, 1949) is a Russian film director. He is sometimes credited as Pavel Loungine (as in the American release of Tycoon). Born 12 July 1949 in Moscow, Lungin is the son of a scriptwriter and linguist. He later attended Moscow State University from which he graduated in 1971. Lungin worked primarily as a scriptwriter until given the opportunity to direct Taxi Blues at age 40. Lungin was awarded the Best Director Prize at 1990 Cannes Film Festival for the film Taxi Blues starring Pyotr Mamonov. That same year he took up residence in France, while making films in and about Russia with French producers. Two years later, his next film Luna Park would also compete at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival. In 1993 he was a member of the jury at the 18th Moscow International Film Festival. He was the librettist for Nikolai Karetnikov's opera Till Eulenspiegel (written 1983) and Karetnikov's oratorio The Mystery of St. Paul. In 2006 he directed the religious film The Island which also starred Mamonov. The film closed the 63rd Venice International Film Festival and was praised by the Russian Orthodox Church leader Alexis II. Lungin was awarded the distinction People's Artist of Russia in 2008. In 2009 he was the President of the Jury at the 31st Moscow International Film Festival. In March 2014 he signed a letter in support of the position of the President of Russia Vladimir Putin on Russia's military intervention in Ukraine.
Filmography :