Alexander Rodnyansky

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Alexander Rodnyansky
Rodnyansky in July 2019
Born
Oleksandr Yukhimovich Rodnyansky

(1961-07-02) July 2, 1961 (age 62)
Kyiv, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
CitizenshipUkraine
Alma materKyiv National I. K. Karpenko-Kary Theatre, Cinema and Television University
OccupationFilm producer
Years active1982–present
SpouseValeriya Rodnyanskaya

Alexander Yefimovych Rodnyansky (

NASDAQ.[4]

During his career, Rodnyansky has produced over 30 films and more than 20 television series. Some of his most notable projects including

.

Films produced by Rodnyansky many times won top prizes at the Cannes Film Festival. Among the awards won by his films – Golden Globe Award for Leviathan, Grand Prix of Un Certain Regard program for Unclenching the Fists and César Award for Loveless.[5] Rodnyansky won GQ Man of the Year (producer) three times. He is a member of the European Film Academy and Asia Pacific Screen Awards.[6]

Rodnyansky is a Member of The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, four of his films were nominated for an Oscar in the Best Foreign Film category: A Chef in Love,[7] East/West, Leviathan and Loveless.

Among other films that Alexander Rodnyansky produced are

1+1 and for seven years was the CEO of a Russian media company CTC Media
.

Variety500 index names Alexander Rodnyansky as one of the 500 most influential business leaders shaping the global media industry.[9]

Family and Education

Rodnyansky was born in

1+1 TV Channel and built the Hilton hotel in Kyiv.[17][18] Irina Rodnyanskaya [ru], Alexanders aunt-cousin, was a prominent Russian critic and literary historian, laureate of the Pushkin Prize and the Solzhenitsyn Prize. His cousin once removed Lazar Rodnyansky [ru] was a Soviet engineer, laureate of the Lenin Prize for creation of the Myasishchev M-4 bomber.[19][20]

Due to the busy schedule of his parents, Alexander was raised by his grandfather and given his surname. Rodnyansky graduated from Kyiv's

Career

Documentaries

In 1983 Rodnyansky started his career at

At that time he was making documentaries on ecology and politics. He directed 10 feature short motion pictures which won him over 40 prestigious awards both at home and abroad. For the documentary Raoul Wallenberg's Mission he was awarded the highest award for a documentary filmmaker in the USSR – the Russian National Film Award NIKA as well as the European Film Award (for Best Documentary).[11]

In 1990 Rodnyansky was invited to 'Innova Film', founded by Germany ZFD channel.[11] His 1991 film Last farewell USSR was awarded the Gran Prix of Cinema Jove Film Festival in Valencia, Russian National Film Award NIKA, Special Jury prize at the Festival International de Cinema Nyon and the Best Documentary prize at the Duisburg Film Festival.[22]

From 1990 till 1994, he worked as a producer and film director at the German television channel ZDF.[21]

TV

When

UA:First. The channel was in a poor state then, it was unprofitable and had only 7% of the audience.[11][25] Under new management, in two years 1+1 became the leader of the television market in Ukraine. Rodnyansky served as CEO and was a co-owner of the company together with Central European Media Enterprises (CME).[26] On January 1, 1997, 1+1 started broadcasting on the UT-2 Ukrainian State Channel [pl]. In 1997, Rodnyansky sold his 30% of shares in 1+1 to CME for $22 mln.[27] Later, in 2005–2008, CME bought 100% of shares.[28]

In 2002 Peter Gerwe asked Rodnaynsky to head the American company Story First Communication (later renamed

CTC. Rodnaynsky started buying licenses on Western TV series and shows and produced their localisation for Russia. Under his leadership the company transformed into an international television powerhouse with five channels in three countries.[21]

Rodnyansky led CTC Media to become the first ever Russian media company with an IPO on NASDAQ. In 2002 the CTC Channel had a market value of approximately $40 million; when Rodnyansky left CTC Media in 2008, the company's market capitalization was over $4 billion;[29] CTC doubled its audience share and became the fourth most popular channel in Russia.[11][23]

Later Business

In 2009 Rodnyansky founded A.R. Films and purchased 51% of shares of Sergey Melkumov's

20th Century Fox on domestics releases. It also produced and distributed Non-Stop Production's movies and TV series.[33] Also in 2011 Alexander Rodnyansky's A.R. Films purchased 51% of Berlin-based A Company Consulting and Licensing, one of the biggest film licensing and distribution outfits in Central and Eastern Europe.[34]

In 2015 'A Company' declared bankruptcy, Rodnyansky withdrew €10 mln shortly before. The bankruptcy supervisor Tornsten Martini sued A.R. Films for €2 mln, in March 2018 the Berlin court ordered A.R. Films to pay, however, the order wasn't executed. In 2019 the second sue followed, $3.8 mln were added to the previous fine.[33] Later, the producer settled all legal issues with opponents and sold his part to AR Films.[35]

In 2018 Rodnyansky announced the establishment of a new, Hollywood-based company AR Content to work on international projects.[36][37]

Cinema and TV Series

In 2011 Alexander Mindadze's film Innocent Saturday produced by Alexander Rodnyansky premiered in competition at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival and received a Golden Eagle for Best Script in 2012.[38] In the same year, Andrey Zvyagintsev's Elena, also produced by Rodnyansky, won The Special Jury Prize in the Un Certain Regard category at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival.[39] In 2012, Elena won four Golden Eagles for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Cinematography and Best Supporting Actress.[40] In the television mini-series category, Dostoevsky, produced by Rodnyansky's Non-Stop Production, won three Golden Eagles, for Best Television Drama and for Best Actor and Best Supporting Actress in a TV Drama.[41]

Ray Stevenson.[42]

In 2012, Rodnyansky partnered with director

Frank Miller. Cloud Atlas, directed by The Wachowskis and Tom Tykwer, and co-produced by Alexander Rodnyansky, was released in 2012 in Russia by A Company and grossed $16.5 mln.[43]

In 2013 Alexander Rodnyansky produced with his partner Sergey Melkumov an epic war drama

Fedor Bondarchuk. Stalingrad has opened to $8.3 million in China on 7,136 screens, including 123 in Imax 3D making it the best-ever start for a non-Chinese and non-Hollywood film in the country.[44]

After 2013 Rodnyansky decided to specialize in art house cinema genre.[45][46]

In 2014

The Best Screenplay and was picked up for US distribution[50] by Sony Classics.[51][52]

In 2016 The Duelist directed by Aleksey Mizgirev and produced by Alexander Rodnyansky was screened at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival.[57]

In 2016 Alexander Rodnyansky was invited to the Jury[58] of the Caméra d'Or program of the Cannes Film Festival. In June 2016 he became the member[59] of The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

In 2017

Requiem for Mrs. J directed by Bojan Vuletić was nominated by Serbia as their entry into the Oscar race.[63]

In 2018

Natasha Merkulova and produced by Alexander Rodnyansky premiered at the 75th Venice International Film Festival. It won the Best Actress Award at the Horizons (Orizzonti) section.[64]

In 2019

The Rolling Stone.[74] Former US president Barack Obama named Beanpole among his favourite films of 2020.[75]

Variety included Alexander Rodnyansky in its Variety500 index of the 500 most influential business leaders shaping the global entertainment industry. In 2021 his AR Content production company signed a first look deal with Apple TV+.[76]

In 2021 Unclenching the Fists, directed by Kira Kovalenko and produced by Alexander Rodnyansky became the first Russian film in history to win the Grand Prix of Un Certain Regard program in 2021 Cannes Film Festival.[77][9] Also in 2021 Vladimir Bitokov's movie Mama, I'm Home was included into the Orizzonti Extra program of the 78th Venice International Film Festival.[78][79][80]

After the beginning of Russian war in Ukraine, Rodnyansky publicly announced[81] that all of his Russian projects are put on hold or closed. Following the invasion, he will focus on his American company AR Content, which develops English-language and multi-lingual feature films, documentaries and television shows, including Khan[82] with FOX Entertainment and Red Rainbow, to be directed by Emmy-winning director Andrij Parekh.[83]

Public and political views

As a Kyiv-born Ukrainian, Alexander Rodnyansky never held a Russian passport despite working in Russia for over 20 years. He holds a Ukrainian passport and has numerous friends and relatives in Ukraine, though his own family is Russian-speaking.[84] In a 2014 interview he explained his point of view of the Crimea annexation. According to Rodnyansky, losing the Crimea in 1992 was perceived by the Russian society as the deepest psychological injury in recent history, and in public perception the annexation was inevitable. He recalled that in 1995 Aleksei Balabanov explained this to him and that during the years of its independence, Ukraine did nothing to the Crimea. Rodnyansky was sure though, that a war between Russia and Ukraine is impossible.[85] In 2015 he explained that he sees deep flaws in both political systems, and expressed regrets, that Ukrainian culture and TV is controlled by the government as much as it is in Russia .[86]

In a 2019 interview, Rodnyansky criticized self-censorship in Russia and its growing trend for self-isolation.[37]

In April 2020 Rodnyansky's Non-Stop Production was excluded from the official register of the Russian State Cinema Committee [ru] which meant that they could no longer receive government fundings for their movie projects.[45]

From the first day of war, Alexander Rodnyansky publicly opposed the

Russian invasion of Ukraine. He gave multiple anti-war interviews to both film industry publications - Variety ,[87] Deadline[88] and Screen International[89]
as well as international media.

Alexander Rodnyansky turned his personal Instagram account into an anti-war media, documenting for his largely Russia-based audiences the atrocities of war in Ukraine, including the massacre of Bucha and other war crimes perpetrated by the Russian army.

Jerusalem Post first reported that In the first hours of war Rodnyansky was instrumental in getting a Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich to help broker a peace process.[90] This was later confirmed by UK and US media, including Sky News[91] and Financial Times.[92]
Rodnyansky confirmed to FT his involvement. He said that Abramovich's influence over the Kremlin “was limited” but added that the billionaire was the only Russian figure who had agreed to help.

For his public anti-war position Minister of Defence of the Russian Federation Sergey Shoigu made a request to Minister of Culture Olga Lyubimova to eliminate "Rodnyansky from cultural agenda of Russia". In a letter leaked to a Russian publication Insider,[93] Rodnyansky was named alongside Ukrainian president Vladimir Zelensky.[94] Rodnyansky responded, that he is independent and does not need state money, but he is deeply troubled that the directors that he worked with - Zvyagintsev, Balagov, Kovalenko - might also suffer and their films might be «excluded from the cultural agenda».[95] Rodnyansky speaks up publicly not only against the war and the Putin regime, he also published an opinion piece in Financial Times[96] urging the West not to isolate Russians, who oppose Putin, who were either forced to leave the country or trapped under Putin's regime.[97]

A public pro-war group that lists «national traitors that pose threat to Russian interests» branded Alexander Rodnyansky as an «enemy» of the Russian state.[98]

On October 21, 2022, Alexander Rodnyansky was declared to be a "foreign agent" by the Russian Ministry of Justice.[99] A so-called “foreign agents” law, passed in 2012 and repeatedly expanded, allows the Justice Ministry to label groups or individuals “foreign agents,” exposing them to fines and harassment that stymie their work.[100]

On May 17, 2023, the

Russian army.[101] There had been no previous reports of a criminal case against Rodnyansky.[101] According to the court's press service, Rodnyansky, who is outside Russia, will be arrested once Russian authorities manage to detain him or to get him extradited.[102]

Personal life

Alexander Rodnyansky is married to Valeria Rodnyansky (née Miroshnichenko), the couple have a daughter, Ellen, and a son, Alexander.[20][103][104][105]

In 2019, Alexander Rodnyansky Junior was assigned Principal Economics Advisor of Ukrainian government.[106][107]

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