
Anna Karamazoff
Anna Karamazoff is a 1991 Soviet drama film directed by Rustam Khamdamov. It was entered into the 1991 Cannes Film Festival.
Plot
In 1949, a woman (her name is not revealed, referred to as Anna) returns from a labor camp to Leningrad. A young man, covered in liquid clay and wearing a women's purse on his belt, shoots at her with an imaginary bow. On the train, the heroine keeps a diary and reflects on her uncertain future. She arrives at her apartment, but it is already inhabited by three Uzbek women. One of them (Tatiana Drubich) tries to pull a milk tooth from a child. Anna goes to a communal apartment where her documents were once hidden. There, a child speaks from behind a door, claiming to be alone and unable to open it. Anna is about to leave but is recognized and let in. Inside, there are three people: two men (Pyotr Mamonov, Alexander Feklistov) and a woman (Svetlana Nemolyaeva), who was pretending to be the child. The chest with the documents has been burned.
More details
author | Rustam Khamdamov |
---|---|
director | Rustam Khamdamov |
editor | Inessa Brozhovskaya |
genre | drama |
keywords | bury claim cleaning lady eat flood german shepherd how to impoverish kill labor camp military officer pass poison rabbit costume retire wait young man |
musicBy | Alexander Vustin |
producer | Serge Silberman |
publisher | Mosfilm |