Everything Will Be Fine!

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Everything Will Be Fine!
Mikhail Ulyanov
CinematographyYuri Vorontsov
Edited byNina Dushenkova
Music byAleksandr Pantykin
Production
companies
Nikola-film
Fora-film
Lenfilm
Release date
April 13, 1996 (1996-04-13)
Running time
100 min.
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian

Everything Will Be Fine! (Russian: Всё будет хорошо!, romanizedVsyo budet khorosho!) is a 1995 comedy film directed by Dmitry Astrakhan.[1]

Plot

Quiet and measured life in an old residence of a provincial town are waiting for fun change in the lives of the main characters of the film Kolya, Olya and Petya and other hostel residents. It all starts with the return of Nikolay (Kolya) from the Army; he prepares for his wedding with Olga. At the same time, the city comes to businessman Konstantin Smirnov, who once lived in this hostel. Naturally, he visit his first love (Kolya's mother). Konstantin's son, Pyotr (Petya), a young genius, winner of the Nobel Prize, falls in love with Olya and meets reciprocal feelings. Olya makes a painfully difficult choice in favor of the groom. Peter comes to the wedding to wish happiness to the young couple, but runs away with the bride. Olga and Pyotr live happily abroad, and Kolya finds a job at the plant.

Cast

  • Anatoly Zhuravlyov as Kolya Orlov
  • Olga Ponizova as Olga
  • Mark Goronok as Pyotr Smirnov
  • Aleksandr Zbruyev as Konstantin Petrovich Smirnov
  • Valentin Bukin asSemyon Petrovich, Olya's father
  • Mikhail Ulyanov
    as Grandpa
  • Valentina Panina as Natasha
  • Irina Mazurkevich as Aunt Katya, Kolya's mother
  • Vladimir Kabalin as Uncle Vova
  • Andrey Fedortsov as Kolya's friend
  • Arthur Vakha as administrator
  • Valery Kravchenko as Andrey Samsonov
  • Dmitry Astrakhan as mathematician

Awards

  • 1995 — Grand Prix Love is Folly (Varna)[2]
  • 1995 — Kinotavr — Nomination: Greater Grand Prix competition[3]

References

  1. ^ Полная продюсерская версия фильма
  2. ^ "Телепрограмма "Тайны нашего кино" — Всё будет хорошо". Archived from the original on 2014-12-17. Retrieved 2016-07-09.
  3. ^ "Энциклопедия отечественного кино". Archived from the original on 2018-05-06. Retrieved 2016-07-09.

External links