Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

The Tango of Our Childhood

The Tango of Our Childhood
Մեր մանկության տանգոն
Directed byAlbert Mkrtchyan
Written byAlbert Mkrtchyan
StarringFrunzik Mkrtchyan
Galya Novents
CinematographyRudolf Vatinyan
Music byTigran Mansuryan
Distributed byArmenfilm
Release date
  • October 1984 (1984-10)
Running time
89 min
CountrySoviet Union
LanguagesArmenian
Russian

The Tango of Our Childhood (Armenian: Մեր մանկության տանգոն, Russian: Танго нашего детства) is a 1984 Soviet-Armenian tragicomedy film written and directed by Albert Mkrtchyan and starring Frunzik Mkrtchyan (his brother) and Galya Novents. Novents' performance as a mother who struggles to raise her children during post-World War II Armenia was awarded Special Mention at the Venice Film Festival. Mkrtchyan dedicated the autobiographical story to his hometown of Gyumri.[1][2] The filming locations highlighted the historic buildings of Gyumri which were marked for preservation as the Kumayri Reserve in 1980.[3] The New York Times described Novents' performance as that of "a kind of Anna Magnani earth mother who acts at the top of her lungs."[4]

Plot

The film is set in Leninakan (now Gyumri) in the aftermath of World War II.[5] Novents portrays a wife whose husband has left her and their three children for his wife's best friend.

Cast

  • Galya Novents as Siranush
  • Frunzik Mkrtchyan as Ruben
  • Elina Agamyan as Vardush
  • Azat Gasparyan as Mesrop
  • Narine Bagdasaryan as Ruzan
  • Samvel Sarkisyan as Armen
  • Ashot Gevorkyan as Gagik
  • Artashes Nalbandyan as Ashot
  • Artashes Gedikyan as Serob
  • Margarita Karapetyan as Arpenik
  • Nona Petrosyan as Knar
  • Ruben Mkrtchyan as Yeghish
  • V. Movsisyan as Svasyan
  • Aleksandr Oganesyan as Zarzand
  • Vrezh Hakobyan as Melkonyan
  • Kadzhik Barsegyan as investigator

References

  1. ^ Galstyan, Siranush (August 2016). "Armenian Cinema in the Post-Soviet Era". KinoKultura: New Russian Cinema (Special Issue 17).
  2. ^ Mirzoyan, Gayane. "Albert Mkrtchyan". Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity. auroraprize.com. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
  3. ^ Melik-Avakian G. Applause after Silence (The Tango of Our Childhood) // Communist Magazine, May 30, 1985
  4. ^ Nan Robertson, "Film Series Salutes the Soviet Republics", The New York Times, October 10, 1986.
  5. ^ "Giumri 21"[usurped], Armenian Heritage, accessed 6 September 2017.