Maschenka (1987 film)

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Maschenka
Directed byJohn Goldschmidt
Screenplay byJohn Mortimer
Based onMary
by Vladimir Nabokov
Produced byManfred D. Heid
StarringCary Elwes
Irina Brook
Freddie Jones
Michael Gough
Lena Stolze
Jean-Claude Brialy
CinematographyWolfgang Treu
Edited byTanja Schmidbauer
Music byNick Glowna
Distributed byGoldcrest Films
Release date
1987
Running time
103 minutes
CountriesWest Germany, United Kingdom, France, Sweden
LanguageEnglish

Maschenka (Russian: Машенька, Mashen'ka; English: Mary) is a 1987 international film adaptation of the debut novel by Vladimir Nabokov, first published under his pen name V. Sirin in 1926. The film was directed by John Goldschmidt from a screenplay by John Mortimer and stars Cary Elwes as Ganin and Irina Brook as Maschenka.

Plot[edit]

The story, said by Nabokov to be semi-autobiographical, is of Lev Glebovich Ganin, a Russian émigré who has been displaced by the Russian Revolution. Now living in a boarding house in Berlin, Ganin discovers that his long-lost first love, Maschenka, is the wife of the rather unappealing boarder next door, Alfyrov, and that and she is on her way to rejoin her husband. This knowledge, combined with the incessant recitation of his memories of old Russia by another boarder, Podtyagin, sends him into a state of reverie. Ganin contrives a complex scheme in order to reunite with Maschenka, who he believes still loves him.

Cast[edit]

Actor Role
Cary Elwes Ganin
Irina Brook Maschenka
Sunnyi Melles Lilli
Jonathan Coy Alferov
Freddie Jones Podtyagin
Michael Gough Vater
Jean-Claude Brialy Kolin
Lena Stolze Klara
Vernon Dobtcheff Yasha
Constantine Gregory Pyotr

Production[edit]

The motion picture was filmed on location in West Berlin, West Germany and in Helsinki and Katajanokka, Finland. For the sequence depicting Maschenka's arrival by train the producers rented the Russian Imperial Finnish train that once belonged to the Romanov family.

The filming was shadowed by the Chernobyl disaster. Actor Cary Elwes later recounted,

I recall a crew meeting being called on a set in a place called Katajanokka, in Helsinki, ... and being told that there was nothing to fear because the winds were in our favor and that the fallout was likely to be blown in another direction. We were warned, however, that as a precaution we probably shouldn't drink the local milk. At least not until it had been declared safe. Like a good many of the others on the crew, I went back to work, scratching my head, wondering if we shouldn't be taking the whole thing more seriously. We were, after all, only eight hundred miles away from the accident. All I can say is that insurance policies for the film industry back then were not as sophisticated as they are now, so shutting down production wasn't really an option. [emphasis in original][1]

Awards[edit]

Goldschmidt won the Cine De Luca Award for Directing at the Monte Carlo TV Festival.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Elwes, Cary; Layden, Joe (2014). As You Wish: Inconceivable Tales from the Making of The Princess Bride. Touchstone Books. p. 15.

External links[edit]