The Age of Innocence | |
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![]() Poster | |
Directed by | Vladimir Rogovoy |
Written by | Edward Topol |
Starring | Vladimir Letenkov Stanislav Zhdanko Leonid Kayurov Pavel Nikolai |
Cinematography | Inna Zarafyan |
Edited by | Olga Katusheva |
Music by | Rafail Khozak |
Production company | |
Release date |
|
Running time | 84 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
The Age of Innocence ( Russian: Несовершеннолетние, romanized: Nesovershennoletnie, also called Minors) [1] [2] is a 1976 Soviet film directed by Vladimir Rogovoy and written by Edward Topol. It is not based on the novel The Age of Innocence, instead being a juvenile delinquency film set in the contemporary Soviet Union. [3]
Russian teenager Zhenya Prokhorov returns home from military service and his friend Kostya from a corrective labor colony. They try to stay out of trouble and find a place in the world.
The Soviet journal Cinema Art gave The Age of Innocence a negative review. [4]
It was the highest-grossing film in the Soviet Union for 1977, with 44.6 million tickets sold. [5] [6]
The Age of Innocence | |
---|---|
![]() Poster | |
Directed by | Vladimir Rogovoy |
Written by | Edward Topol |
Starring | Vladimir Letenkov Stanislav Zhdanko Leonid Kayurov Pavel Nikolai |
Cinematography | Inna Zarafyan |
Edited by | Olga Katusheva |
Music by | Rafail Khozak |
Production company | |
Release date |
|
Running time | 84 minutes |
Country | Soviet Union |
Language | Russian |
The Age of Innocence ( Russian: Несовершеннолетние, romanized: Nesovershennoletnie, also called Minors) [1] [2] is a 1976 Soviet film directed by Vladimir Rogovoy and written by Edward Topol. It is not based on the novel The Age of Innocence, instead being a juvenile delinquency film set in the contemporary Soviet Union. [3]
Russian teenager Zhenya Prokhorov returns home from military service and his friend Kostya from a corrective labor colony. They try to stay out of trouble and find a place in the world.
The Soviet journal Cinema Art gave The Age of Innocence a negative review. [4]
It was the highest-grossing film in the Soviet Union for 1977, with 44.6 million tickets sold. [5] [6]