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Spy thrillers, killer grannies, and Cinderella on a rampage: Russia's film fest has it all

Spy thrillers, killer grannies, and Cinderella on a rampage: Russia's film fest has it all

Russia Today19-04-2025

The 47th Moscow International Film Festival (MIFF) opened on Thursday, continuing a legacy that dates back to 1935 – making it one of the oldest film festivals in the world. In recent years, the festival has expanded its scope, spotlighting not just feature films but also television series across competition and themed sections. MIFF offers audiences a rich cinematic experience, from time-honored classics to groundbreaking independent projects from around the globe. While the main competition results are under wraps until the winners are announced, here's a look at some standout selections from this year's lineup.
At any film festival, the opening and closing selections tend to draw special attention, and this year is no exception. In honor of the 80th anniversary of victory in World War II, MIFF appropriately opened with a wartime drama: 'His Name Was Not Listed', a screen adaptation of the novella by celebrated Soviet author Boris Vasilyev.
Vasilyev is best known for his poignant wartime stories, including 'And the Dawns Here Are Quiet' and 'Tomorrow Was the War' – which have been adapted for screen numerous times. These two are cemented as Soviet cinema classics. Interestingly, 'His Name Was Not Listed' had never been made into a film during the Soviet era, although it was staged at Moscow's iconic Lenkom Theatre and later adapted for television. Now, at last, this deeply human story reaches the silver screen.
The film follows young Lieutenant Kolya Pluzhnikov, who arrives at the Brest Fortress on June 21, 1941 – just one day before Nazi Germany launches its surprise invasion of the Soviet Union. The crowded station and bustling crowds offer no hint of the horrors to come. Eager and optimistic, Kolya is still trying to report to his unit when, at 4 a.m., the bombs begin to fall, and war explodes into his life.
The festival closes with 'What We Wanted to Be', a romantic melodrama from Argentine director Alejandro Agresti. The story centers on a man and woman who meet every Friday at the same café to share who they might've become in a different life. Spanning decades, their imagined selves evolve alongside their real lives, offering a tender meditation on love, dreams, and the quiet power of tradition.
With this year marking eight decades since the defeat of Nazi Germany, MIFF is honoring the occasion with a series of war-themed films. Beyond the premiere of 'His Name Was Not Listed', the retrospective sections shine a light on both iconic and early-career works by legendary Soviet filmmakers.
Among the most anticipated screenings is Tatyana Lioznova's 'Seventeen Moments of Spring', a 12-part espionage drama from 1973 that has become a cultural touchstone in Russia. Originally made for television, the series will be shown in its entirety over six days – a rare chance to see it on the big screen. For generations of Russians, its hero isn't just Colonel Maxim Isaev from Yulian Semyonov's novels, but rather his on-screen alias, Otto von Stierlitz. This is a prime example of a screen adaptation eclipsing its literary source.
Set in 1944, the series follows Stierlitz as he works to derail secret peace negotiations between Nazi Germany and the Western Allies – talks that could sideline the USSR in postwar power dynamics. The show's cultural impact was immense, sparking widespread use of its quotes and even inspiring an entire subgenre of dry, absurdist 'Stierlitz jokes.'
What's more, the historical premise isn't purely fiction. In 1943, Allen Dulles – then head of the US Office of Strategic Services – stepped up contact with German officials, concerned about how the war would end and what the postwar order might look like. By early 1945, Dulles and SS General Karl Wolff had met twice to discuss Germany's conditional surrender. When Soviet leadership got wind of it, tensions flared between Stalin and Roosevelt. Eventually, on April 29, 1945, the German surrender was signed – with Soviet representatives present, and the process managed by military officers rather than intelligence agents.
MIFF also turns the spotlight on student films by two giants of Russian cinema. The first, 'There Will Be No Dismissals Today', is a collaboration between Andrei Tarkovsky and Alexander Gordon. The film tells the story of a buried German munitions depot, dormant for 15 years yet still deadly. A team is assigned to disarm the volatile cache, risking their lives to prevent disaster.
Nikita Mikhalkov's student film 'A Quiet Day at the End of the War' transports viewers to 1944, as the front edges westward. In one village, the fighting has ceased, but peace hasn't yet arrived. Soldier Andrei Komarov and a young Kazakh woman named Adalat discover artwork inside a ruined church, a brief but beautiful reprieve that draws them together. Featuring future Soviet film legends – Lev Durov, Sergey Nikonenko, Natalia Arinbasarova, Alexander Kaidanovsky, Yuri Bogatyrev, and Alexander Porokhovshchikov – the film offers a glimpse of greatness in its early stages.
MIFF's retrospective offerings also include mid-century American masterpieces – films that long ago became cornerstones of global cinema and are always worth revisiting.
Audiences will get to see Charlie Chaplin's final silent films, 'City Lights' and 'Modern Times', on the big screen. While talkies had already taken hold in the 1930s, Chaplin remained loyal to silent cinema until his full transition with 1940's 'The Great Dictator'. 'City Lights' premiered in 1931, still squarely within the silent era, but by the time 'Modern Times' debuted in 1936, the writing was on the wall. Though Chaplin penned dialogue for the film, he ultimately decided not to give voice to his Little Tramp – making 'Modern Times' a poignant farewell to an era.
Billy Wilder's 'Sunset Boulevard' (1950) adds another layer to this conversation. The noir classic captures the tragedy of faded fame in the dawn of sound cinema. A down-and-out screenwriter stumbles into the reclusive world of a forgotten silent film star, whose delusions of a comeback unravel into heartbreak and madness. It's a haunting meditation on Hollywood's ever-turning wheel.
No MIFF would be complete without its fan-favorite 'Wild Nights' section – a showcase for the bold, bizarre, and genre-defying. This program is all about breaking boundaries and challenging audiences.
Among the standouts is the Canadian throwback 'Vampire Zombies... From Space!', a loving spoof of 1950s sci-fi horror. Set in 1957, it follows a ragtag group trying to foil Dracula's interstellar scheme to turn a sleepy town into his undead army. The film is made even more fun by cameos from cult icons Judith O'Dea (Night of the Living Dead) and Lloyd Kaufman, founder of Troma Entertainment.
South Korean director Min Kyu-dong returns to thrillers after a 20-year detour into romantic comedies. His latest, 'The Old Woman with the Knife', features a sixty-something hitwoman who takes out society's worst while wrestling with her own past. Min's breakout horror film Memento Mori (1999) marked him as a talent to watch – and now, he's come full circle.
Norwegian director Emilie Blichfeldt makes her feature debut with 'The Ugly Stepsister', a twisted reimagining of Cinderella from the villain's point of view. Here, stepsister Elvira wages a violent, bloody campaign to become the belle of the ball and seize the legendary glass slipper for herself.
Finally, Argentina's 'Play Dead' dives deep into classic horror territory, echoing The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and The Hills Have Eyes. A young woman wakes up in a basement, injured and surrounded by corpses. Realizing she's been abducted, she fakes death to survive as a horrifying ritual unfolds above.

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