#my friend ivan lapshin
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Happy Birthday one of the greatest Soviet actor, Andrei Aleksandrovich Mironov🥳🎉
#andrei mironov#андрей миронов#friedrich engels#the diamond arm#Бриллиантовая рука#gennadiy kozodoyev#figaro#Достоя́ние респу́блики#property of the republic#my friend ivan lapshin#Мой друг Иван Лапшин#A Man from the Boulevard des Capucines#Человек с бульвара Капуцинов#Ostap bender#12 chairs#12 стульев#Берегись автомобиля#Голубой щенок#Невероятные приключения итальянцев в России#Unbelievable Adventures of Italians in Russia#Beware of the Car#fan art#digital art#andrey mironov
106 notes
·
View notes
Text
Andrey Boltnev & Andrey Mironov as Ivan Lapshin & David Khanin in My Friend Ivan Lapshin (1985) dir: A. German, screenplay: E. Volodarsky (x)
#Мой друг Иван Лапшин#My friend ivan lapshin#Soviet kino#sovkino#The Only Mironov Film Ever to me 😔👆
12 notes
·
View notes
Text
Are they scared?
On the Romanov Princesses taking pictures of their servants.

There are thousands of photographs taken by Tsar Nicholas II and his family, especially his daughters. Like children do, they photographed at random, in an awkward and personal way. Most of it came out smudged, crooked.
Against my will I am forced to think about the labor-intensive process of developing film, of storing it, transporting the archives with you wherever you go. Who was doing all of this? Who was paying for it? These pictures are not ‘professional’, they are smudged, the horizon is crooked. A lot of them seem accidental, like showing part of an empty doorway. I remember running around with a camera my parents gave me when I was a child. The pictures I took then were similar. These photos probably serve no purpose other than entertaining the whims of a child. Unlike most of their subjects, the Romanovs had the money and the time for such an expensive hobby.*

All of these photos were originaly uploaded to imgur by a user named Andrei Goncharik. Thank you Andrei.
According to the imgur uploader, these photos were taken between 1908 and 1917. The Empire was sending its half-literate populace to die in a war, tearing itself apart internally with hunger and political violence. But these images do not feel entirely peaceful either. They are somehow stuck, purgatory like, a sort of oblivion. Maybe it’s the blindingly white sky, or the endless plain, perfectly even as far as the eye can see. Everyone is always impeccably dressed, in white skirts and sailor’s caps, so white they sometimes dissolve in the sky above them.
The world is overblown and soft. It feels like a hot summer day on a plain, coveted by warm winds. Winds throwing white dust into the air. A day when you don’t have to do anything, a day that feels like it will never end.


The camera angles feel personal. We get up close, we look from below, we twist and turn between adult bodies trying to get a better look. We are a royal child — one aristocrats don’t have to notice and servants have to tolerate.
What do we see? An endless repetition of military parades and banquets. The aristocracy, the servants and the soldiers.

Most aristocrats look so bored. They lean on walls; they hide their faces from the sun. They stand, with nothing to put their hands to. The faces of the entourage are indistinguishable from one another, while the soldiers are a row of black rectangles with white dots for their heads, lining the horizon. Officers on horseback, in full regalia, ride on past them into nothing, with absent looks on their faces. ‘We are all very used to doing this’, they say.
Some people pose for the photos. The aristocrats look annoyed, knowing a child probably won’t take a good picture. Or they grimace, happily playing along. But the soldiers and the maids look startled. It all feels awkward, like when you take a picture of someone without asking them first. Are they scared? Unable to say no?

Positioned on the sidelines of the frame, in passing, the servants look directly into the camera. In the movies of Alexey German, certain side characters, mostly the children and the ‘feeble minded’, notice the camera moving among them, and follow it with a look, but never an action. They are the ones not (yet) firmly rooted in reality, in living itself, and so they observe reality from afar, with a certain detachment, and notice ‘history’ moving among them.
Boy looks directly into the camera in Alexey German's 'My friend Ivan Lapshin'
I think the servants are confused as to why they are being photographed. What for? Who would ever look at thousands of these pictures? Did the Grand Duchess imagine herself revisiting them after getting married off to some faraway country, flipping through them to remember her childhood? Did she think about this at all? I know I didn’t, when I ran around with a camera in my grandmother’s backyard.


It all — all of this, has the air of an extensive apparatus, a many-armed, many-legged machine of servants, maids-of-honor, officers, horses, cooks, all moving in stellar formations from place to place, from one mansion to another, under a blinding sun, doing nothing, or nothing but their duty, dying of a sweet kind of boredom and looking very good.
The living, the painful colliding of the masses, knotted stomachs and outstretched tongues, mingling together trying to create something new, tearing at each other in different directions, all of that is happening somewhere else entirely, if happening at all.
And when they finally break in, as a record of time passing, their clothes dripping with snow, and sticky, viscous dirt of a reddish color, they will look around and see all of it, and then — who can blame them?
Here's a link to one of these photos.
*I want to note that I'm not entirely sure if all of these were taken by children, but certainly a large number of them were. The uploader grouped them based on whose album the pictures were found in. Sometimes the same picture appears in two different albums, one belonging to the child and the other belonging to some adult companion of the Romanovs.
13 notes
·
View notes
Text
Andrei Mironov (07.03.1941 – 16.08.1987)
Tatyana Klevantseva: 'He was thought an ideal actor possessing power over all genres of cinema and theater. He was so tremendously popular during his lifetime, that even years after his death his birthdays remained a major event of Moscow's cultural life.' 'Many actors frankly confess that Andrei Mironov was simply the best. As time goes his legend continues to grow.'
A minor planet 3624 Mironov, discovered by Soviet astronomers Lyudmila Karachkina and Lyudmila Zhuravleva in 1982 is named after him.
movies in the post:
'The Twelve Chairs' (1976), dir. Mark Zakharov
'Heavenly Swallows' (1976), dir. Leonid Kvinikhidze
'The Straw Hat' (1974), dir. Leonid Kvinikhidze
'The Diamond Arm' (1969), dir. Leonid Gaidai
'My Friend Ivan Lapshin' (1985), dir. Aleksei German
'An Ordinary Miracle' (1978), dir. Mark Zakharov
'Property of the Republic' (1971), dir. Vladimir Bychkov
'Three Plus Two' (1963), dir. Genrikh Oganesyan
'The Story of Voyages' (1983), dir. by Alexander Mitta
'Three Men in a Boat' (1979), dir. Naum Birman
#soviet cinema#userkino#dailyactors#filmgifs#cinemaspam#filmedit#sovietcinemaedit#dailyworldcinema#dailykino#dailyflicks#andrei mironov#андрей миронов#my gifs#aamedit#happy birthday andrei aleksandrovich#birthday
58 notes
·
View notes
Text
best films of 2023
new releases
may december (todd haynes)
pacifiction (albert serra)
showing up (kelly reichardt)
master gardener (paul schrader)
trenque lauquen (laura citarella)
knock at the cabin (m. night shyalaman)
afterwater (dane komljen)
music (angela schanelec)
jawan (atlee)
in our day (hong sang-soo)
discoveries
o'er the land + the illinois parable (deborah stratman, 2009/2016)
the grapes of wrath + my darling clementine + forte apache + wagon master (john ford, 1940-1950)
history lessons + from the clouds to the resistance + the return of prodigal son + these encounters of theirs (jean-marie straub + danièle huillet, 1972/1979/2003-2006)
colossal youth + horse money (pedro costa, 2006-2014)
gang of four + up down fragile (jacques rivette, 1989-1995)
pine flat + PODWORKA (sharon lockhart, 2006-2009)
the sunchaser (michael cimino, 1996)
way of gaucho (jaqcues tourneur, 1952)
city of hope + lone star (john sayles, 1991/1996)
detours (katya selenkina, 2021)
at sea + three landscapes (paul b. hutton, 2007-2013)
public housing (frederick wiseman, 1997)
11x14 + el valley centro + los + sogobi (james benning, 1977/1999-2002)
here and elsewhere (jean-luc godard, 1976)
walking and talking (nicole holofcener, 1996)
my friend ivan lapshin (aleksey german, 1984)
angel dust (gakuryu ishii, 1994)
acto da primavera (manoel de oliveira, 1963)
love me tonight (rouben mamoulian, 1932)
wild side (donald cammell, 1996)
trois ponts sur la rivière + saltimbank (jean-claude biette, 1999-2003)
public enemies (michael mann, 2009)
blue diary + the joy of life (jenni olson, 1997/2005)
+ full list on letterboxd 💌
27 notes
·
View notes
Text


«My Friend Ivan Lapshin», directed by Aleksey German, 1985
1 note
·
View note
Text



Khrustalyov My Car (1998) was co-written and directed by Aleksey German. Ali was born in what is now St Petersburg, Russia, and had six director credits 1968-2013. This is his second entry on the TSPDT list, after My Friend Ivan Lapshin. at 621.
0 notes
Photo
Aleksei German, {1985} Мой друг Иван Лапшин (My Friend Ivan Lapshin)
#photos in films#film#aleksei german#Мой друг Иван Лапшин#my friend ivan lapshin#nina ruslanova#andrei mironov#1985#soviet cinema#black and white#interiors#people#women#portraits#soviet union#cccp#male filmmakers#1980s#films#wallpapers
22 notes
·
View notes
Photo







My friend Ivan Lapshin (1985)
13 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Aleksei Yuryevich German - My friend Ivan Lapshin, 1985.
#aleksej german#my friend ivan lapshin#moy drug ivan lapshin#1985#screencaps#soviet movies#mой друг Иван Лапшин
68 notes
·
View notes
Photo









My Friend Ivan Lapshin (Russian: Мой друг Иван Лапшин, Moi drug Ivan Lapshin), 1985, directed by Aleksei German.
#Andrei Mironov#Nina Ruslanova#Andrei Boltnev#My Friend Ivan Lapshin#Aleksei German#80s#1980s#bw#Black and White#film#movie cinema#ussr#russia#soviet union#soviet#soviet film#soviet movie#caps#screenshot#screencaps#capture
81 notes
·
View notes
Photo
My Friend Ivan Lapshin (Aleksey German, 1985)
1K notes
·
View notes
Text



15 notes
·
View notes
Photo
My Friend Ivan Lapshin (1985, dir. Aleksei German)
154 notes
·
View notes
Text

Aleksei German, July 20, 1938 – February 21, 2013.
My Friend Ivan Lapshin (1985).
13 notes
·
View notes
Photo
my friend ivan lapshin (aleksey german, 1984)
8 notes
·
View notes