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Village Detective

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Village Detective
Directed byIvan Lukinsky
Written byVil Lipatov
Irina Mazuruk
Produced byMikhail Kapustin
StarringMikhail Zharov
Tatyana Pelttser
Natalya Sayko
Lidiya Smirnova
CinematographyAnatoly Buravchikov
Igor Klebanov
Vladimir Rapoport
Edited byKsenia Blinova
Music byAnatoly Lepin
Production
company
Release date
  • March 15, 1969 (1969-03-15)
Running time
87 minutes
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Village Detective (Russian: Деревенский детектив, romanizedDerevensky detektiv) is a 1969 Soviet crime comedy film directed by Ivan Lukinsky and based on the novella of the same name by Vil Lipatov. Lyrical detective lives of rural local policeman Aniskin.

Later on the screens came two sequels: Aniskin and Fantomas (1973)[1] and Aniskin Again (1978).[2]

The film tells the story of a rural policeman who employs wit and community insight to solve the theft of an accordion, uncovering a tangled web of jealousy, mischief, and romance in a quiet village.

Plot

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The plot centers on Gennady Nikolayevich Pazdnikov, the head of a rural cultural club, whose expensive accordion is stolen. Solving this significant crime, the most notable in the village since 1948, falls to the local policeman, Aniskin. After inspecting the crime scene and speaking with Pazdnikov, Aniskin learns that on the evening before the theft, Pazdnikov had spent time with Evdokiya Pronina, the shopkeeper of the village store. Suspicion initially falls on Pazdnikov’s romantic rival, Grigory Storozhevoy, as both men are vying for Pronina’s affections. Aniskin speaks with Grigory and Evdokiya but refrains from drawing any immediate conclusions. Later that evening, Aniskin encounters the Pankov brothers, known troublemakers, loitering near the club. That night, Aniskin and Pazdnikov conduct an experiment on the outskirts of the village, hoping to lure the thief into revealing themselves by tempting them to play the stolen accordion. This clever tactic leads Aniskin to deduce where the instrument might be hidden and clears Grigory of suspicion.

Aniskin ultimately realizes that the accordion was stolen by the Pankov brothers. They intended to frame Storozhevoy, who had previously clashed with the unruly siblings, knowing he would likely be the first suspect. Instead of formally prosecuting the brothers, Aniskin warns them that if they continue causing trouble, he will ensure they face justice. He confides the truth only to their mother, Praskovya Pankova, while publicly claiming to have found the instrument abandoned in the forest. Meanwhile, Aniskin takes it upon himself to address Evdokiya Pronina’s romantic prospects. He arranges a meeting between her and Storozhevoy, which ends with the two leaving together, suggesting a potential resolution to their romantic entanglements.

Cast

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Awards

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The film won the award for Best Comedy at the All-Union Film Festival in Minsk.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Анискин и Фантомас. kinopoisk.ru
  2. ^ И снова Анискин. kinopoisk.ru
  3. ^ "ВКФ (Всесоюзный кинофестиваль)" (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2011-01-07. Retrieved 2014-01-26.
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