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Famine-33

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Famine-33
Голод-33
Film poster
Directed byOles Yanchuk
Written bySerhiy Dyachenko
Les Taniuk
Produced byOleksiy Chernishov
CinematographyVasyl Borodin
Mykhailo Kretov
Music byViktor Patsukevych
Mykola Kolondionok
Distributed byDovzhenko Film Studios
Release dates
Running time
90 minutes
LanguageUkrainian

Famine-33 (Ukrainian: Голод-33, Holod-33) is a 1991 Soviet drama film by Oles Yanchuk about the Holodomor famine in Ukraine, and based on the novel The Yellow Prince by Vasyl Barka. The film is told through the lives of the Katrannyk family of six. The film was made on a voluntary basis. The main producer of the film was the Transcarpathian bank "Lisbank", which was to receive a share of rental income. However, after watching the finished film, the producers were so moved that they decided to refuse to return the money, and insisted that as many people as possible see the film.[1]

Synopsis

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"In an early scene, the members of an impoverished farming family solemnly take turns dipping their ladles into the single bowl of watery soup that is their only meal of the day. Later in the film, scores of villagers numb with despair and hunger huddle silently in the pouring rain outside a Government office until a truckload of armed soldiers arrives to disperse them. In the most poignant scene, a little boy who has lost his parents calls for his mother as he wanders, panic-stricken, through a snowy woodland where the trees are outnumbered by crosses marking the dead."[2]

Cast

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  • Halyna Sulyma as Dariya Katrannyk
  • Heorhiy Moroziuk as Myron Katrannyk
  • Oleksiy Horbunov as Bilshovyk
  • Maksym Koval
  • Olenka Kovtun
  • Kostyantyn Kazymirenko
  • Neonila Svitlychna
  • Leonid Yanovsky
  • Petro Beniuk
  • Leo Okrent — episode
  • Oleh Isayev
  • Tetiana Slobidska
  • Svetlana Romashko
  • Larysa Kadyrova
  • Alidzhan Soluyan
  • Ivan Bondar — an episode
  • С. Gordienko — episode
  • Oleksandr Dubovych — episode
  • Yuriy Dubrovin — episode
  • Maksym Kondratiuk — episode
  • Natalia Kononova — episode
  • Myroslav Makoviychuk — episode
  • Ihor Slobidskyi — episode
  • Olena Yanchuk — episode

Awards

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1991 — 1st All-Ukrainian Film Festival in Kyiv — Main Prize.

2009 — the main prize of the Vincennes Film Festival — the Henri Langlois Prize.

Facts

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The film was made on a voluntary basis. The main producer of the film was the Transcarpathian bank Lisbank, which was supposed to receive a share of the profits from the distribution. However, after watching the finished film, the producers were so moved that they decided to refuse to return the money and insisted that as many people as possible see the film.

The film was broadcast on television on the UT-1 channel on the eve of the All-Ukrainian referendum on December 1, 1991, which resulted in Ukraine's independence.[3]

The voice-over at the end of the film "Children, it's the last hour! For you have heard that the antichrist is coming, and now many antichrists have arisen... They came out of us, but they did not belong to us" - a quote from the Bible (John 2:18-19)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Національна спілка кінематографістів України". 2018-03-02. Archived from the original on 2018-03-02. Retrieved 2022-04-19.
  2. ^ Holden, Stephen. "A Family's Struggle In Stalin's Man-Made Famine: Famine-33 Film Review." The New York Times. 15 December 1993
  3. ^ Про вечір до 25-річчя фільму Олеся Янчука «Голод-33». НСКУ, 19.12.2016
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