Marlen Khutsiyev
Known for: Directing
Marlen Martynovich Khutsiev (Russian: Марле́н Марты́нович Хуци́ев; 4 October 1925 – 19 March 2019) was a Georgian-born Soviet and Russian filmmaker best known for his cult films from the 1960s, which include I Am Twenty and July Rain. He was named a People's Artist of the USSR in 1986. Khutsiev studied film in the directing department at the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography (VGIK), graduating in 1952. He worked as a director at the Odessa film studio from 1952 to 1958, and worked full-time as a director at Mosfilm from 1965 onward. Khutsiev's first feature film, Spring on Zarechnaya Street (1956), encapsulated the mood of the Khrushchev Thaw and went on to become one of the top box-office draws of the 1950s. Three years later, Khutsiev launched Vasily Shukshin "as a new kind of popular hero" by starring him in Two Fyodors. His two masterpieces of the 1960s, however, were panned by the authorities, forcing Khutsiev into something of an artistic silence. In 1978, Khutsiev began teaching film directing master classes at the VGIK.) His 1991 film Infinitas won the Alfred Bauer Prize at the 42nd Berlin International Film Festival.
Filmography
Series
To Remember
Narrator
1993
Film
Khutsiev. Action Starts!
2015
Film
Andrei Tarkovsky: Hard to Be a God
Self
2019
Film
The Gift
Self
2019
Film
Intervention
Главнокомандующий
1987
Film
Alexander Belyavsky. Fox's Personal File
Self - Режиссер
2012
Film
Shine, Shine, My Star
Third 'cuckoo' player (prince)
1969
Film
On the Day of the Holiday
Ramzes
1978
Film
VGIK: Teachers and Students Talk About the Profession
1979
Film
People of 1941
Narrator (voice)
2001
Film
Into_nation of Big Odesa
Himself / Narrator
2018
Film
Abderrahmane Sissako: Beyond Territories
Self
2017
Film
The Cinema Language of an Era: Marlen Khutsiev
Self
2023
Film
A Georgian Toast
Self
2020