The Warrior (2015 film)
The Warrior | |
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Directed by | Alexey Andrianov (rus) |
Written by | Adapted Story: Ilya Tilkin Original Story: Cliff Dorfman Gavin O'Connor |
Based on | Warrior by Gavin O'Connor |
Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Vladislav Opelyants |
Edited by | Dmitriy Golovin |
Music by | Fedor Fomin Artyom Vasilyev |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Lionsgate Central Partnership |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | Russia |
Language | Russian |
Budget | $1.5 million[1] |
Box office | $3,187,750[2][3] |
The Warrior (Russian: Воин, romanized: Voin) is a 2015 Russian sports drama film directed by Alexey Andrianov, starring Sergey Bondarchuk Jr. and Vladimir Yaglych.[1][4]
The film tells the story of two brothers, professional mixed martial arts athletes and their father, a fighting coach. The picture's plot bears strong similarity with the 2011 American film of the same name.[5][6]
The film was released in Russian rental on October 1, 2015 by Central Partnership. The film received three nominations for the Golden Eagle Award: Best Cinematography, Best Film Music and Best Film Editing.
Plot
The film tells the story of two brothers - Roman and Slava, who decide to play in the bouts of the MMA series: Roman wants to help financially the family of his deceased colleague, who was shot by Somali pirates, and Slava is driven by a number of reasons: because of the plight of the family, his wife works as a stripper, and his wages for the utilization of cars are not enough to feed the family and cure a sick daughter who urgently needs an expensive operation.
Slava received a severe trauma to the skull as a child, and if he is hit in the head, he may die. Roma asks his father to become his coach, despite their difficult relationship, due to his alcoholism.
In the ring, Roma and Slava win victories one after another, and become even in the final battle. Slava uses a stifling technique, forcing Roma to surrender. In the final scene of the film Slava's daughter boxes with him, which gives hope that the necessary operation has been performed on her and she is healthy, that all the members of this family are communicating.
Cast
- Sergey Bondarchuk Jr. as Roma Rodin (Russian: Рома Родин, romanized: Roma Roden), younger brother
- Vladimir Yaglych as Vyacheslav 'Slava' Rodin (Russian: Вячеслав «Слава» Родин, romanized: Vyacheslav «Slava» Rodin), elder brother
- Fyodor Bondarchuk as Andrey Rodin (Russian: Андрей Родин, romanized: Andrey Rodin), father of Roma and Slava
- Svetlana Khodchenkova as Ekaterina 'Katya' Rodina (Russian: Екатерина «Катя» Родина, romanized: Yekaterina «Katya» Rodina), Slava's wife
- Ulyana Kulikova as Natasha Rodina (Russian: Наташа Родина, romanized: Natasha Rodina), Katya and Slava's daughter
- Yury Yakovlev-Sukhanov as Kostya (Russian: Костя, romanized: Kostya), trainer
- Aleksandr Novin as Tosha (Russian: Тоша, romanized: Tosha), Slava's trainer
- Aleksandr Baluev as Kulikov (Russian: Куликов, romanized: Kulikov), TV presenter
- Batu Khasikov as cameo
- Kamil Hajiyev as cameo
- Vladimir Sychev as businessman
- Mikhail Vodzumi as Vaughn (Russian: Вон, romanized: Von)
- Maria Andreyeva as Dana (Russian: Дана, romanized: Dana)
- Vladimir Selivanov as Amundsen (Russian: Амундсен, romanized: Amundsen)
- Alla Yuganova as Masha (Russian: Маша, romanized: Masha)
- Aleksey Faddeev as sergeant
Production
Regarding the comparison of the film with the 2011 American film Warrior, Fyodor Bondarchuk answered:
It seems to me that these are two different films, two different souls. But we understand that there will be comparisons, and we went for this experiment. In addition, it is an explosive mixture of various literary materials collected around the world.
According to the film's producer Dmitriy Rudovskiy, the plot film is close to the American film Warrior, but is based on the original script “Taste for Blood” by David Frigerio, the rights to which were bought by the movie company Art Pictures Studio.[7]
Filming
Filming took place in Kaliningrad and the surrounding area (Baltiysk, Yantarny, Svetlogorsk), as well as in Moscow.[1]
The film was shot in 33 days. Eight battles of the tournament were filmed in four days.[1]
Release
The film was released in Russia on October 1, 2015 by Central Partnership.[8]
References
- ^ a b c d Anastasia Anushevskaya (2 October 2015). "О чём фильм "Воин"?". Argumenty i Fakty (in Russian).
- ^ "Воин". KinoBusiness (in Russian).
- ^ "The Warrior (2015)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved March 27, 2020.
- ^ "Воин". VokrugTV (in Russian).
- ^ Korsakov, Denis (October 4, 2015). "Федор Бондарчук спродюсировал фильм "Воин" и сыграл в нем отца" [Fyodor Bondarchuk produced the film The Warrior and played his father in it]. Vedomosti (in Russian).
- ^ Kartsev, Nikita (October 2, 2015). "Рецензия: "Воин" с Федором и Сергеем Бондарчуками" [Review: The Warrior with Fyodor Bondarchuk and Sergey Bondarchuk Jr.]. The Hollywood Reporter (in Russian).
- ^ "Воин на сайте "The Hollywood Reporter"" [The Warrior at The Hollywood Reporter]. THR Russia (in Russian).
- ^ Vdovin, Grigoriy (October 1, 2015). "Большая премьера: в широкий прокат выходит художественный фильм "Воин"" [Big premiere: the feature film The Warrior goes on sale]. Vesti.ru (in Russian).
External links
- The Warrior at IMDb
- 2015 films
- Films directed by Alexey Andrianov
- 2010s action drama films
- 2010s sports drama films
- Mixed martial arts films
- Russian action drama films
- Russian sports drama films
- 2015 martial arts films
- 2015 action drama films
- Films about alcoholism
- Films about brothers
- Films about dysfunctional families
- Martial arts tournament films
- Remakes of American films
- Films involved in plagiarism controversies
- Films produced by Fyodor Bondarchuk
- 2010s Russian films
- Lionsgate films
- Films shot in Moscow