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Dogs' Feast

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Dogs' Feast
Russian: Собачий пир
Directed byLeonid Menaker
Written byViktor Merezhko
Produced byMark Rudinstein
Starring
CinematographyVladimir Kovzel
Edited byIrina Rudenko
Music byAndrei Petrov
Production
company
Release date
1990
Running time
100 min.
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Dogs' Feast (Russian: Собачий пир, romanizedSobachiy pir) is a 1990 Soviet drama film directed by Leonid Menaker.[1][2][3]

Plot

Drunk, downcast Zhanna, dreams of finding a prince, starting a new life. On New Year's Eve, at the train station, where she works as a cleaner, she meets Arkady, sitting dejectedly at the station. Boredom brings him home, and then it turns out that Arkady does not drink. He doesn't drink, and the reason is in his past. This is followed by the usual pictures of permanent alcoholism for Zhanna. Arkady in all these scenes shows the features of a mysterious man from nowhere, holding himself with unprecedented dignity and refusing alcohol. Zhanna also retains something human in her eyes, despite constant swearing and drunkenness. Everything becomes clear when they visited Leningrad together. There Arkady a former alcoholic and hard worker, who was in prison for a fight - learns that his wife and children have abandoned him. He gets drunk, and Zhanna carefully takes him back and begins to nurse him. In the end, desperate and realizing that Arkady had not discovered her inner world, did not see in her a person capable of love and compassion, she turned on the gas before lying down next to him.[4]

Cast

References