- Source: Vadim Abdrashitov
Vadim Yusupovich Abdrashitov (Russian: Вадим Юсупович Абдрашитов, Tatar: Вадим Йосыф улы Габдерәшитов; 19 January 1945 – 12 February 2023) was a Russian film director. He was internationally renowned as one of Russian cinema's most notable independent directors, with awards from the Berlin and Venice Film Festivals, and was a People's Artist of Russia.
Early life and education
Abdrashitov was born in Ukraine to a Tatar father and a Russian mother. He moved all over the Soviet Union with his father's military assignments.
Abdrashitov was so impressed with the space flight of the first Russian cosmonaut that he left his parents and moved to Moscow to study nuclear physics at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology. Around that time, he developed an interest in amateur filmmaking, and transferred to the Мendeleev University of Chemical Technology because it was equipped with a film studio for students. His cultural and artistic interests developed during the "Thaw".
After graduation as an engineer, he worked as a manager at the Moscow Electric-Vacuum Industry, which was making colour TV tubes.
From 1970 to 1974, Abdrashitov studied film directing at the Moscow Institute of Cinematography (Gerasimov Institute).
Career
Abdrashitov's directorial debut was Stop Potapov! (1974), a satirical comedy based on the screenplay by Grigori Gorin. In 1975 Abdrashitov met with then unknown writer Aleksandr Mindadze, beginning a collaboration that lasted for the next 12 films over 30 years.
His 1997 film Time of a Dancer was shown in the Stalker Human Rights Film Festival's regional presentation in Rostov-on-Don in 2010, where he engaged in discussion with the audience.
Themes and style
Abdrashitov's films are often characterized by protagonists delving into self-exploration. His films have uncomfortable, challenging and intellectual themes; however, the director avoids depiction of graphic violence in all his films. Instead, misery is alluded to in more creative and at times surrealist ways.
Other roles
In 1990, he was a member of the jury at the 40th Berlin International Film Festival.
In 2016, he became a member of the board of trustees for the Fazil Iskander International Literary Award.
Abdrashitov also acted as the president of the Russian Guild of Film Directors and the Stalker Human Rights Film Festival.
Personal life and death
Abdrashitov was married to artist Natella Toidze, a member of the Russian Academy of Arts.
Abdrashitov died on 12 February 2023, at the age of 78, from COVID-19, during the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia.
Awards and honours
People's Artist of Russia
1987: President of the Italian Senate's gold medal at the 44th edition of the Venice Film Festival, for Plumbum, or The Dangerous Game
1989: Alfred Bauer Prize at the 39th Berlin International Film Festival, for The Servant
1991: USSR State Prize, for The Servant
1995: Silver Bear at the 45th Berlin International Film Festival, for A Play for a Passenger
1996: Several Nika Awards as well as the Grand Prix at Kinotavr, for Time of a Dancer
2003: Nika Award, Best Director for Magnetic Storms
Selected filmography
Speech for the Defence (1976)
The Turning Point (1978)
Fox Hunting (1980)
The Train Has Stopped (1982)
Planet Parade (1984)
Plumbum, or The Dangerous Game (1987)
The Servant (1989)
A Play for a Passenger (1995)
Time of a Dancer (1998)
References
External links
Vadim Abdrashitov at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Seniman Rakyat Rusia
- Mosfilm
- Vadim Abdrashitov
- Vadim
- Stalker (film festival)
- List of Tatars
- Turning Point
- Federico Fellini
- The Train Has Stopped
- Chulpan Khamatova
- Speech for the Defence
- 2023 in film