A Hunting Accident

A Hunting Accident

Russian poster
Directed by Emil Loteanu
Written by Emil Loteanu
Anton Chekhov
Starring Galina Belyayeva
Oleg Yankovskiy
Kirill Lavrov
Leonid Markov
Svetlana Toma
Grigore Grigoriu
Music by Eugen Doga
Cinematography Anatoli Petritsky
Edited by L. Knyazev
Production
company
Release dates
  • 1978 (1978)
Running time
105 minutes
Country Soviet Union
Language Russian

A Hunting Accident (Russian: Мой ласковый и нежный зверь, translit. Moy laskovyy i nezhnyy zver, My Affectionate and Tender Beast) is a 1978 Soviet romantic drama directed by Emil Loteanu. It was entered into the 1978 Cannes Film Festival.[1] It is adapted from Anton Chekhov's "The Shooting Party."

Plot

The film is set in the end of the 19th century and takes place at an aristocratic estate in the forests of central Russia. The daughter of a forester, Olga Skvortsova (Galina Belyayeva) is a beautiful nineteen year old woman. Three middle-aged men who live in the manor and the surrounding area fall in love with her: a 50-year-old gloomy widower Urbenin (Leonid Markov), an even more senior in age but youthful and lighthearted Count Karneev (Kirill Lavrov) and the stately, handsome, 40-year-old court investigator Kamyshev (Oleg Yankovsky). Olga wanting to escape poverty marries the nobleman Urbenin without love. On the day of her wedding she runs away from the celebration and declares her love to Kamyshev but refuses to leave with him. Kamyshev erupts with passion and jealousy and he secretly hopes that he can persuade Olga to be with him. She is under the impression that Kamyshev is rich and that with him she will be able to break out of poverty but soon finds out in what lowly conditions her lover lives. After this disappointment she becomes a mistress of the jovial Count Karneev, while her lawful husband Urbenin slowly ruins himself with drink and degenerates in the city.

During the autumn hunt and picnic an intense argument happens between Olga and the fiercely jealous Kamyshev and after a few minutes under mysterious circumstances Olga receives a gunshot wound in the depths of the forest thicket. The young woman dies a few days later from severe blood loss without informing the investigators who attacked her at the shooting party. Her husband Urbenin is the main suspect and he is exiled to Siberia and four years later sentenced to death. Tormented by pangs of conscience Kamyshev writes a story about the dramatic events and submits it for publication in a journal. After reading the story by Kamyshev it becomes clear to the astute publisher (Olegar Fedoro) who was Olga's real murderer.

Music

The wedding waltz composed for the film by Eugen Doga became famous world-wide. Ronald Reagan called it "the waltz of the century" when he visited Moscow.[2][3] The music was used at the opening ceremony of the 2014 Olympic Games in Sochi.[4] In 2014 the waltz was chosen by UNESCO as the fourth musical masterpiece of the 20th century.[5][6][7]

Cast

References

External links

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