Volga-Volga
Volga-Volga is a Soviet musical comedy directed by Grigori Aleksandrov, released on April 24, 1938. It centres on a group of amateur performers on their way to Moscow to perform in a talent contest called the Moscow Musical Olympiad. Most of the action takes place on a steamboat travelling on the Volga River. The lead roles were played by Alexandrov's wife, Lyubov Orlova, and Igor Ilyinsky.
According to Orlova, the name of the film is taken from a popular Russian folk song, Stenka Razin, that Alexandrov sang while rowing with Charlie Chaplin in San Francisco Bay. Chaplin jokingly suggested the words as a title for a movie, but Alexandrov took it seriously and named his new film Volga-Volga.
The feature was said to be Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin's favourite film. Nikita Khrushchev in his memoirs says that in the pre-World War II period Stalin laughed at him since he resembled a character from the film.
In 2006, a colorization of the original black-and-white film began. The colorized version premiered on the Russian First Channel on February 14, 2010.Cast
- Igor Ilyinsky - Ivan Byvalov, head of management at a small handicraft industry in the city Melkovodsk
- Lyubov Orlova - Dunya Petrova, letter carrier
- Vladimir Volodin - old pilot
- Pavel Olenev - Kuzma Ivanovich, water carrier / chef
- Andrey Tutyshkin - Alesha Trubyshkin, accountant
- Sergey Antimonov - janitor Okhapkin
- Anatoly Shalaev - young composer
- Maria Mironova - Zoya, secretary of Byvalova
- Nikita Kondratyev - Philip Ivanovich, waiter
- Vsevolod Sanayev - bearded lumberjack / member of the symphony orchestra
- Aleksey Dolinin - policeman
- Ivan Chuvelev - chairman of the jury of the Olympics
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