IMDb RATING
7.7/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Following three lifelong friends who return to Moscow after military service, we see their aspirations juxtaposed against everyday life in 1960 Soviet Union.Following three lifelong friends who return to Moscow after military service, we see their aspirations juxtaposed against everyday life in 1960 Soviet Union.Following three lifelong friends who return to Moscow after military service, we see their aspirations juxtaposed against everyday life in 1960 Soviet Union.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 1 nomination
Valentin Popov
- Sergey Zhuravlyov
- (as V. Popov)
Nikolay Gubenko
- Nikolay 'Kolya' Fokin
- (as N. Gubenko)
Stanislav Lyubshin
- Slava Kostikov
- (as S. Lyubshin)
Marianna Vertinskaya
- Anya
- (as M. Vertinskaya)
Zinaida Zinoveva
- Olga Mikhaylovna Zhuravlyova
- (as Z. Zinovyeva)
Svetlana Starikova
- Vera Zhuravlyova
- (as S. Starikova)
Lev Prygunov
- mladshiy leytenant Aleksandr Zhuravlyov
- (as L. Prygunov)
Tatyana Bogdanova
- Lyusya Kostikova
- (as T. Bogdanova)
Lyudmila Selyanskaya
- Katya Yermakova konduktorsha
- (as L. Selyanskaya)
Aleksandr Blinov
- Kuzmich
- (as Sasha Blinov)
Lev Zolotukhin
- otets Ani
- (as L. Zolotukhin)
Pyotr Shcherbakov
- Pyotr Chernousov
- (as P. Shcherbakov)
Gennadi Nekrasov
- Vladimir Vasilyevich
- (as G. Nekrasov)
Nikolay Zakharchenko
- Drug
- (as N. Zakharchenko)
Pavel Finn
- Gost
- (as P. Finn)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFinal film of Tamara Bogdanova.
- Alternate versionsZastava Ilyicha (restored version)
- ConnectionsEdited into Moskovskaya elegiya (1990)
Featured review
I've always thought that a lot of films that were made in the Soviet Union got overshadowed by Eisenstein and Tarkovsky, not to mention by European films from France, Italy, by Bergman, by Kurosawa and many others from Japan. I feel sad when I think about that, because there are so many great films that were made there that the general film loving public did not and does not get to see. The only two films that may have broken out of this "embargo", so to speak were The Cranes are Flying and Ballad of a Soldier. Criterion has been doing some good deed and releasing a few of such great films I speak of in the Eclipse Series and I only hope they keep releasing them because there are just too many to list that others must see.
I Am Twenty is one of those films. It was made during the de-Stalinization period, otherwise known as the Krushchev thaw where people had a short period of freedom of speech, which Hutsiev, the film's director utilized in making of this film, where the story centers on three friends in their 20's going through a sort of a quarter-life crisis in the Soviet Union, worrying about such things as where to live, means of getting money, and exactly what to do with their lives - which at the time was unheard of - one of the reasons for which Krushchev condemned this film during the end of the thaw (when it was being released) and most certainly which contributed to this film's censorship.
This undoubtedly is the kind of film that speaks the universal language, which I hope would be an intriguing watch for people who can track this film down and watch it (there are English subtitles for it, I checked)
Shot beautifully, flows poetically, and definitely leaves a mark.
I loved it [07-22-2011, 08:23 PM]
I Am Twenty is one of those films. It was made during the de-Stalinization period, otherwise known as the Krushchev thaw where people had a short period of freedom of speech, which Hutsiev, the film's director utilized in making of this film, where the story centers on three friends in their 20's going through a sort of a quarter-life crisis in the Soviet Union, worrying about such things as where to live, means of getting money, and exactly what to do with their lives - which at the time was unheard of - one of the reasons for which Krushchev condemned this film during the end of the thaw (when it was being released) and most certainly which contributed to this film's censorship.
This undoubtedly is the kind of film that speaks the universal language, which I hope would be an intriguing watch for people who can track this film down and watch it (there are English subtitles for it, I checked)
Shot beautifully, flows poetically, and definitely leaves a mark.
I loved it [07-22-2011, 08:23 PM]
- TermlnatriX
- Jan 1, 2012
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Imam dvadeset godina
- Filming locations
- Red Square, Moscow, USSR(May 1st demonstrations)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime3 hours 9 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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